09

Jun

2009

Our Ribadu-El-Rufai Obsession PDF Print E-mail
By Moses Ebe Ochonu

The jury is still out on the tenures of Nuhu Ribadu and Nasir El-Rufai, but those who are jittery about history’s verdict on the duo are already out in force, rehabilitating and romanticizing them. The two men themselves suffer from delusions of heroic accomplishment. They have helped stoke an outpouring of revisionist histories that have wittingly or unwittingly fumigated their complicity in the political crimes of the recent past. Their recent actions, however, betray a more sober awareness of the gradual unraveling of their populist self-packaging. They have become vocal in defending their records, while taking cheap shots at the Yar’Adua-Waziri nightmare, which they created. El-Rufai, the more complicit of the two, is understandably more spooked by the prospect of his demystification. Ribadu, for his part, has stuck to more basic, less desperate scripts of self-recovery: the lecture circuit and passionate appeals to our patriotic pathos.

The two men have a right to speak their minds on the affairs of their country even if their commentaries come more from a deep sense of personal loss and humiliation than from a place of patriotic commitment. What is baffling is that their elaborate productions have found purchase with many Nigerians. What’s with us Nigerians? Why do we forget so easily? Why have we forgotten so soon, that we are where we are in the leadership and anti-corruption domains because these two men arrogantly made choices and engineered political outcomes that made our current predicament in the hands of Yar’Adua and Waziri inevitable?

El-Rufai’s spectacular confessions about his proactive, even fanatical, role in the Yar’Adua ascension plan should constitute the gravest, most offensive, and arrogant act of self-indictment. Instead, his revelations are being celebrated more for satisfying our appetite for political sensation than as a Freudian gift that portends poetic justice for the giver. Lost in this reception of El-Rufai’s offering is recognition that the piece, widely published in Nigeria-related media platforms, contained no contrition for the self-incriminating confessions of the former minister’s active involvement in our recent political failures. Did anyone call him out on his parenthetical attention to the Third Term disaster that inspired the alternate “third term” which materialized as Yar’Adua? Is anyone asking him to account for the many self-serving contradictions and deceptions in the write-up? He seeks exoneration not through penitence and apology but through a claim of ignorance. He claims ignorance of Yar’Adua’s proclivities as the basis of his support for his candidacy, tendencies that have now evolved into costly leadership deficits. Yet he proceeded to entertain us with tales of Yar’Adua’s troubling antecedents and ominous red flags of the unfolding leadership disaster. He claims that he fought against Peter Odili’s elevation to the vice presidential slot. Yet he endorsed Goodluck Jonathan, whose wife had been implicated by Nuhu Ribadu’s EFCC in the theft and attempted laundering of $1million. By his own haughty admission, El-Rufai’s imprint appears all over Yar’Adua’s ascension. Yet his narrative pretends that he is disappointed at the logical, predictable outcome of that imposition. What kind of arrogant self-preoccupation permits this kind of dishonesty?

The Turning Point

El-Rufai and Nuhu Ribadu were interviewed by a Nigerian newspaper together in the days in which they straddled the Abuja political arena as fanatical foot soldiers in Obasanjo’s personal army of national domination. That interview, for me, was seminal in its undressing of the duo. Like strung-out juveniles, they bullied and self-congratulated their way out of the interview.

There were two highlights—or lowlights—in that interview. The first was the duo’s forceful defense of Obasanjo’s “innocence” against proliferating accusations of corrupt enrichment at a time of considerable outpouring of damning revelations of the former president’s scandalously corrupt acts—some of them so brazen and crude in their execution that defending or rationalizing them constituted a traitorous insult on the citizenry. Their animated defense of Obasanjo’s personal probity against the grain of public evidence climaxed in El-Rufai’s infamous but deliciously revealing declaration that Obasanjo had N20, 000 to his name when he ran for president in 1999. The revelation would take on its own life as a significant, if unintended, informational offering and would become a credible baseline for gauging the magnitude of Obasanjo’s thievery.

The second was Ribadu’s school-boyish proclamation of El-Rufai as the next energy minister under the yet-to-be-inaugurated presidency of Yar’Adua, which drew a satisfied insider’s affirmation from El-Rufai.  There were two take-aways for me from that interview. Anyone who would so shamelessly defend Obasanjo’s integrity at a time when the polity was awash with embarrassing and credible evidence of his many heists had no integrity of their own; and El-Rufai’s giddy, if delusional, expectation that he would be appointed into Yar’Adua’s cabinet as Energy minister was a clear expression of his investment in the Obasanjo-Yar’Adua continuum and this severely undercuts his populist posturing, and, of course, his present-day moralizing. That interview confirmed for me what I always suspected: that El-Rufai and Ribadu were too enamored by their fleeting influence and were too wedded to the rotten system and its principal architects to change it.

I have no internal caution about passing a declarative judgment on El-Rufai. His situation, for me, is a straightforward case of a self-seeking establishment man who has been maneuvered into near-irrelevance by former partners in unpatriotic acts and is now licking his chops and seeking a backdoor entry into respectability. Moreover, his habitation of the political wilderness seems to have done little to moderate his outlandish ego or to inspire contrition. His noisemaking on the fringes of power will irritate Yar’Adua the same way that Karl Rove’s improbable critique of the Bush administration might irritate his former principal. It is just as pretentious, hollow, and hypocritical. It will do little to erase the ledger of moral misdeeds, complicities, and impunities that constitute El-Rufai’s legacy.

Ribadu’s Complexity

Nuhu Ribadu is a more complicated, if deeply complicit, proposition. I stated elsewhere that Ribadu inspires conflicting impulses. I have been cautiously impressed by some of his recent gestures and utterances. It is hard to doubt the sincerity of his recent patriotic performances and the passion of his commitment to an alternate Nigeria. Undoubtedly, some of his patriotic outrage is rooted in his recent humiliation. Nonetheless, I see the beginnings of self-reflexivity and self-critique in his recent interviews. The human ego is a stubborn entity and may stand in the way of a full repentance and apology, but certain kinds of penitence are more effective if performed, rather than verbally expressed. Ribadu seems now to be aware that he squandered a rare opportunity to become a hero of unanimous acclaim instead of the controversial, divisive figure he has become. I admire the humility and human empathy in his recent speeches, even if I still crave a full admission of his many willful failures as chairman of EFCC.

That being said, it is hard to forgive or forget the arrogant and insulting manner in which he dishonored the massive public goodwill that greeted his ascension to the EFCC chairmanship. If we are serious about ending the circle of oppression and larceny that has doomed the country, we are going to have to develop, as Okey Ndibe keeps reminding us, a long memory of the misdeeds of those who enjoyed and abused public trust and goodwill in our recent history. In that spirit, it would be wrong—and dangerous—to be seduced by the appeal of Ribadu’s current demeanor or the current political and economic gloom into giving him a pass on his active role in thrusting us into this sorry juncture.

The Betrayal

For a start, we must never forget that Ribadu’s unconstitutional intrusion into the political arena—his reckless gale of disqualifications in the 2007 election cycle—set the stage for the current PDP stranglehold on the country. That singular act poisoned the political atmosphere so irretrievably that the 2007 electoral process never recovered any integrity or inspired the confidence of the electorate or those challenging the PDP oligarchy. The brazenness with which he facilitated that agenda of restricting the political space to Obasanjo’s anointed candidates altered the electoral landscape and helped consolidate the PDP in power. Because he acted before he reflected, Ribadu failed to anticipate the broader, long-term anti-democratic implication of that authoritarian intervention. When he was forced by unsparing public outrage to defend his action, he claimed that his original list was less political, more inclusive, and that it was doctored by higher powers.

For those of us already outraged by this most undemocratic—and unconstitutional—of actions, that defense was a dagger through the heart. If there was anything worse than Ribadu’s politically motivated, Obasanjo-induced entry into the political space, it was his failure, if he truly wanted to sanitize the electoral field, to compile a truly neutral list of politicians of questionable integrity that, while riling up legal and constitutional purists, might have received popular support. Even worse was his failure to confront Obasanjo and his PDP minions about the alleged doctoring of his list.

Ribadu proved himself in that episode to be a wimpy coward at best and a sheepish errand boy at worst. With Ribadu it was one unpatriotic offense and retreat after another. Now we hear from El-Rufai that Ribadu’s betrayal was even graver. He apparently had the opportunity to save us from the impending calamity of a Yar’Adua presidency but he, once again, buckled in the face of power and his loyalty to it, bowing, we are told, to Gen. Aliyu Gusau, Obasanjo’s National Security Adviser, who, presumably acting on Obansajo’s instructions, asked Ribadu to excise Yar’Adua’s name from his list of corrupt public office holders unqualified for public office.

It is a tragedy that, as El-Rufai tells us, Ribadu succumbed to the wooly explanation of General Gusau that Yar’Adua’s corruption was not personal and that it was “productive.” A man of more steely principle and resolve would have been insulted on behalf of Nigerians at such specious distinctions. Not Ribadu. His loyalty to Obasanjo and to the continuation of his own influence eclipsed his sense of even-handed patriotism. Because of Ribadu’s cowardly capitulation, Yar’Adua’s name exited the list and he became mythologized by Obasanjo and even the duo of El-Rufai and Ribadu as a “clean” governor that fit the mold that Obasanjo and his “reformists” desired as a successor. That was the origin of the current malaise—the same malaise that Ribadu now tries forcefully to disavow.

We must also not forget that throughout his tenure, Ribadu was a serial defender of the integrity of Obasanjo, a man who has since been proven to be a thief among thieves. It was one thing to refuse to dig too deeply into Obasanjo’s many deals or to rattle his political family with zealous probes. That was understandable to a certain pragmatic degree, even if it was morally unacceptable. But Ribadu did stop there. As if to further depress Nigerians, he used every interview to defend Obasanjo’s brazen acts of corruption or to haughtily and dismissively challenge citizens to supply evidence of the former president’s corruption.

It was one thing to conveniently overlook Transcorp, the Obasanjo library shakedown, the PTDF revelations, the miraculous recovery and prosperity of the bankrupt Obasanjo Farms, the Andy Ubah cash smuggling episode, the COJA contracts, the Halliburton scandal and other evidences of Obasanjo’s corruption. But to derisively explain them away as the wild imaginings of Nigerians’ suspicious minds was almost traitorous to the national cause. Let’s not forget that the same Olabode George, former chairman of NPA, whose innocence Ribadu actively defended (“we investigated and didn’t find anything against him because he was only the chairman and didn’t sign any contracts”) is today standing trial on multiple counts of corrupt enrichment. Did Ribadu actually look, or did he, once again, refuse to buck his pattern of prioritizing Obasanjo’s wishes above his moral instincts? 

The most potent proof yet that Ribadu was a political sidekick of Obasanjo’s pretending to be a serious anti-corruption activist was his shockingly vehement opposition to the move by the Nigerian senate to remove the EFCC from the presidency and transform it into an independent crime fighting bureaucracy. Much to the chagrin of all people of conscience, Ribadu went to the national assembly and unabashedly proclaimed that it would be a mistake to make such a move and that the EFCC’s location under the president’s whim and discretion was the best arrangement. It was clear that he enjoyed being used by Obasanjo, wanted to please his political benefactor, and was clearly engaged in political posturing. Those of us who had cleared a small exculpatory space for Ribadu on the contention that he was being stifled by the presidency’s statutory control over the EFCC were proven to be naïve wishful thinkers. Partly due to Ribadu’s opposition, the measure failed despite the best efforts of then Senate President, Chief Ken Nnamani, who seemed genuinely committed to empowering the EFCC for a less politicized and more credible anti-corruption effort. The ultimate proof that Ribadu’s opposition had indeed been motivated by politics came when, with Obasanjo gone, he ran back to the National Assembly pleading vigorously to have the EFCC removed from the presidency and for the statutes governing the body to be amended to give it both financial and organizational independence---the same measures that he had, only months earlier, opposed.

Ribadu Produced Waziri

I believed in Ribadu; I wanted him to succeed, and he succeeded in tackling non-governmental financial crimes, especially the prosecution of advanced fee frauds. But his transition from the independent, apolitical world of fighting fraud to the terrain of Abuja politics corrupted his patriotic fervor. He never recovered. It was not just his selective, politicized approach to the anti-corruption effort that advertized the loss of his patriotic innocence. It was also the fact he reveled more in the headlines, the melodrama, the theatre, and the populism of his work than in its outcomes and long-term ramifications.

I argued in the past that his politicization of the anti-corruption fight actually set back the fight. It gave undeserved legal and populist platforms to corrupt politicians to allege, quite credibly, that Ribadu was abusing his office and pursuing a political agenda. Many politicians who belong in jail are today free because of Ribadu’s shoddy, politicized methods. More significantly, it emboldened yet-to-be-charged corrupt politicians with an anticipatory weapon: accusations of political victimization. Unfortunately, whether it was actually true or not in particular cases, the narrative continued to ring true and to resonate with Nigerians, buying time and sympathy for filthy politicians.

What Ribadu did, beyond the very modest success he had in intimidating and unsettling some politicians (his record on succesful prosecutions of political corruption is abysmal), was to divest the anti-corruption bureaucracy and idea of the credibility that it began with. It was a slow seepage, but gradually, the moral goodwill of the public drained away as irrefutable evidence of political meddling and Ribadu’s complicity multiplied. At the end of Obasanjo’s tenure, the EFCC had become “another Nigerian” institution, compromised, politicized, and morally defanged.

Let me even take my reading of the implications of Ribadu’s misdeeds—not mere mistakes, there is a difference—even further. Ribadu’s compromises and letdowns made Farida Waziri’s emergence possible. Obviously, if Ribadu had held his ground against the pressure from Gen. Gusau, Yar’Adua might not have emerged, stalling the appointment of the laughably incompetent Waziri. But that is a chain of counterfactual causation that is unsustainable. My contention about Ribadu enabling the rise of Waziri is more basic.

Ribadu’s derailment into politically-motivated, selective investigations and prosecutions (another good example of which was the emergency investigation of Odili to intimidate him out of the 2007 presidential race to pave the way for Obasanjo’s anointed) muddied the anti-corruption arena and undermined the pro-EFCC consensus enough to give the coalition of corrupt governors and their friend in Aso Rock a clear opening, in the absence of a unanimous national support for Ribadu’s EFCC, to execute their plan of emplacing a more malleable chairman. This coup would have been virtually impossible, even for a government as deadened to public sensibilities as Yar’Adua’s, had Ribadu not so divided and contaminated the moral loyalties of citizens. But in the atmosphere of disillusionment that only intensified with the rigged elections, Nuhu Ribadu’s populist appeal wore off in correspondence to the EFCC’s loss of moral credibility and independence, and Farida Waziri mutated from a flawed, sponsored candidate of corrupt figures to a tolerable replacement in the eyes of Nigerians who were no longer morally invested in the EFCC. This disillusionment also muted the outrage that should have followed revelations about Waziri’s curious associations with corrupt politicians. The proof of this contention is in the divided, conflicted, and morally nuanced responses to the replacement of Ribadu with Waziri. Nigerians were so sick of the EFCC’s antics in the 2007 election cycle that they mostly didn’t care who headed it. Even the debate on the replacement was conducted in the incestuous domains of intellectuals and commentators, with a decidedly indifferent and, from the government’s point of view, favorable, response coming from regular Nigeria. With Obasanjo on his way out, Ribadu rushed some arrests and initiated some overdue prosecutions in order to rediscover his crime-fighting machismo and credibility. It was too little and certainly too late for many Nigerians. It failed to atone for his recent pro-Obasanjo rascality.

A Call for Caution

Before we anoint Ribadu the patron saint of Progressive Nigeria, let us recall these serious breaches of patriotic trust. If given another chance, Ribadu may behave differently and act in a more morally decisive manner. Before that happens though, let’s not act and speak as if Ribadu had no role in the recent rot, the impact and logical outcomes of which are unfolding to devastating effects in the lives of Nigerians. We cannot keep acting as though yesterday’s political actions and inactions have no bearing on today’s unsavory outcomes. Or that complicit individuals who constitute an unwelcome presence in the today's political arrangement have by that fact alone become icons of progressive patriotic commitment.

Ribadu was courageous and incorruptible. Those qualities are foundations of heroic patriotism. But courageous and incorruptible people who allow themselves to be used by higher powers to stifle our quest for an expanded political space and full political accountability deserve to have their patriotism scrutinized. Incorruptibility and courage are desirable virtues. But they must be deployed as assets in challenging, not in consolidating, the predatory status quo—however “reformist” the rhetorical preoccupations of that status quo may be. Ribadu allowed himself to be conned by Obasanjo’s reformist rhetoric and succumbed, for good measure, to his own love of the political limelight.

In spite of my strong objection to the elevation of Ribadu to progressive sainthood, however, I see no moral parallel between him and El-Rufai. The two were united by their common loyalty to Obasanjo and to the nebulous constellation of practices called reform. They have now been reunited by common political adversity: persecution in the hands of a paranoid, illegitimate ruler. That’s where the kinship terminates. Ribadu’s courage, even if limited and constrained by misplaced loyalties, and his incorruptibility stand him apart from El-Rufai. El-Rufai is a power freak who is neither courageous nor possessing of personal integrity. Here is a man who stands accused of reckless departures from due process in the allocation of Abuja plots and of awarding plots of land to his cronies and family members but whose defense is that awarding plots of land to his wives and family members was not illegal. Has he ever heard of a quaint little concept called conflict of interest, or given a thought to the fact that what is legal may be inappropriate and immoral?

Obviously, both men are seeking an empathetic reappraisal by progressive Nigerians. In evaluating their records and those of other displaced political actors, we need to remember and recall their roles in directly or indirectly engineering the current mess. There should be no more sympathy or reward for populist grandstanding without genuine contrition and apology for past sins. The political actors of today are taking note on the self-reclamation campaigns of Ribadu and El-Rufai and on the reception we are according their performances.

The author can be reached at meochonu@gmail.com



Your Comments

Please make The Square an enjoyable experience for everyone by refraining from gratuitous ad-hominem contributions, defamatory comments and off-topic posting. Such posts will be removed.

User Avatar
RobotRobot is offline

 # 1 | 09.06.2009 19:52

The jury is still out on the tenures of Nuhu Ribadu and Nasir El-Rufai, but those who are jittery about history’s verdict on the duo are already out in force, rehabilitating and romanticizing them. The two men themselves suffer from delusions of heroic accomplishment. They have helped stoke an outpouring of revisionist histories that have wittingly or unwittingly fumigated their complicity in the political crimes of the recent past. Their recent actions, however, betray a more sober awareness of the gradual unraveling of their populist self-packaging. They have become vocal in defending their records, while taking cheap shots at the Yar’Adua-Waziri nightmare, which they created. El-Rufai, the more complicit of the two, is understandably more spooked by the prospect of his demystification. Ribadu, for his part, has stuck to more basic, less desperate scripts of self-recovery: the lecture circuit and passionate appeals to our patriotic pathos. The two men have a right to sp...Read the full article.

User Avatar
M. AkosaM. Akosa is offline

 # 2 | 09.06.2009 21:27

<="In spite of my strong objection to the elevation of Ribadu to progressive sainthood, however, I see no moral parallel between him and El-Rufai. The two were united by their common loyalty to Obasanjo and to the nebulous constellation of practices called reform. They have now been reunited by common political adversity: persecution in the hands of a paranoid, illegitimate ruler. That’s where the kinship terminates. Ribadu’s courage, even if limited and constrained by misplaced loyalties, and his incorruptibility stand him apart from El-Rufai. El-Rufai is a power freak who is neither courageous nor possessing of personal integrity. Here is a man who stands accused of reckless departures from due process in the allocation of Abuja plots and of awarding plots of land to his cronies and family members but whose defense is that awarding plots of land to his wives and family members was not illegal. Has he ever heard of a quaint little concept called conflict of interest, or given a thought to the fact that what is legal may be inappropriate and immoral? "

from the ARTICLE


In my own opinion, Nuhu is the only one among the two that really needs rehabilitation and hopefully acceptance again and support from the Nigerian political class.
Nuhu really needs to complete his education in the UK, and attain better skills and knowledge in the tasks of being a competent administrator in areas of corruption and graft control.

But as for El Rufai, he has zero place in handling governance ever again in Nigeria. If the US and Harvard people love him so much, they can have him. Good luck!!!

User Avatar
datuouwadaberechidatuouwadaberechi is offline

 # 3 | 10.06.2009 09:17

i think this is a nice article, on an agreed -over-flogged- subject.
i kinda agree with most of it and also with the first commentator.
fact is that, half measures will always be half measures.. even though, we must always bear in mind that humans arent perfect.

User Avatar
Kay Soyemi (Esq.)Kay Soyemi (Esq.) is offline

 # 4 | 10.06.2009 11:25

Mike,

You said or wrote,

"It was one thing to refuse to dig too deeply into Obasanjo’s many deals or to rattle his political family with zealous probes. That was understandable to a certain pragmatic degree, even if it was morally unacceptable."

But if you find whatever it is "understandable but morally unacceptable" in your suppositions what stops the duo of El-Rufai and Ribadu from claiming same failings?

Just as you allude to being pragmatic, so would these duo and El-Rufai more or less said this in his recent article. But let us presume for a moment, that they and their cohort, led by OBJ, goofed badly in their choice and nomination of UMYA, would you have preferred a wide-open field that would surely have been overun by all but the best candidates?

I hate to think that although the goof has produced a certain UMYA who sees and hear no evil when it comes to corruption and does absolute zilch in governance, but I shudder to think what the current scenario would be if it is the likes of Atiku, IBB or even Odili and Kalu et al holding sway at Aso Rock today.

I seek not edify either of these two gentlemen, but the PhD syndrome at play here is less than subtle. By focussing our angers at the whistleblowers, we risk glorifying the miscreants!

User Avatar
tonsoyotonsoyo is offline

 # 5 | 10.06.2009 13:25

Thank you Oga Moses for your beautifully packaged opinion. Unfortunately, I cannot finish reading it because I saw a lot unnecessary repetition and overemphasized negative rhetorics.

I see differently sir. I did not see any "willful failures" on the part of Ribadu, but rather a very daring progressive whose zeal and ability to serve was limited by the Nigerian Factor, a country where corruption is buffet-served for all by the powerful and mighty and the canterkerous boss that he served.

I saw how a serving IGP was handcuffed and humiliated for the first time, I saw how Governors and Ministers who use to steal with impunity started to run for cover for the first time in Nigeria, I saw how Nigeria ratings improved dramatically due to his efforts and I saw a man who was celebrated and invited to deliver speeches all over the world on corruption fighting. Sometimes you are what you see, I see a lot of positives where you see a lot of negatives. God bless and preserve Ribadu. I am sure if given the opportunities he would do better than he did, he is humble enough to admit to stuffs he could have done better.


I also did not see the apparent failure of Yar'Adua. What I saw like El-Rufai and most Nigerians at that time was a man who would be the first graduate to rule Nigeria with Masters in Analytical Chemistry and the best of the pack that had a chance. Utomi did not.

The alternatives were, IBB, Atiku, Buhari and a whole lot military apologists, charlatans and jokers. Even now, I will still prefer a Yar'Adua to these bunch. El-Rufai as far as I am concerned made an honest mistake.

But then his work in Abuja speaks for him. He took on the mighty and the powerful to give us a befitting national capital. He is another Nigerian that is being hounded for his refusal to
give in to lawlessness by the rogues that have hijacked this administration.

I'll rather have a Ribadu and an El-Rufai than a million untested professional critics out there. It is the easiest job of all. Anybody can criticize, by the way how as our Adam Oshiomhole fared so far as a Governor?

Talk is cheap, isn't it?

User Avatar
busangabusanga is offline

 # 6 | 10.06.2009 13:25

You sir have said all that is on my mind. El Rufai is no Ribadu, and Ribadu is no saint either. However, and a big however: We will not Forget! Need I say more?

@ Tonsoyo- your antecedents are well established when it comes to respecting the will of the people at the ballot box. Some of us just don't see it your way, and we are the true progressives. I just hope you don't hijack that term for the group of cowards that stand for nothing, and fall for anything!

User Avatar
tonsoyotonsoyo is offline

 # 7 | 10.06.2009 13:48


=busanga;362528>
@ Tonsoyo- your antecedents are well established when it comes to respecting the will of the people at the ballot box. Some of us just don't see it your way, and we are the true progressives. I just hope you don't hijack that term for the group of cowards that stand for nothing, and fall for anything!




I beg your pardon sir!
Does my avatar look like the one that may be adopted by somebody like Prof. Iwu? Check your facts again, you may be giving me too much "credit" than I deserve.

I challenge you to substantiate your above, Mr. "True Progressive". I also challenge you tell us one thing that you have done or achieve for Nigeria.

I can see that you have begin your loser's argument of trying to make this about Tonsoyo again. I will not oblige you.

User Avatar
IgboamaezeIgboamaeze is offline

 # 8 | 10.06.2009 15:34


=busanga;362528>You sir have said all that is on my mind. El Rufai is no Ribadu, and Ribadu is no saint either. However, and a big however: We will not Forget! Need I say more?

@ Tonsoyo- your antecedents are well established when it comes to respecting the will of the people at the ballot box. Some of us just don't see it your way, and we are the true progressives. I just hope you don't hijack that term for the group of cowards that stand for nothing, and fall for anything!



------------

I said it before. I say it again. The term "progressive" has assumed a Nigerian character. 100% COUNTERFEIT.

Original Taiwan...

User Avatar
IgboamaezeIgboamaeze is offline

 # 9 | 10.06.2009 16:00


=busanga;362528>You sir have said all that is on my mind. El Rufai is no Ribadu, and Ribadu is no saint either. However, and a big however: We will not Forget! Need I say more?

@ Tonsoyo- your antecedents are well established when it comes to respecting the will of the people at the ballot box. Some of us just don't see it your way, and we are the true progressives. I just hope you don't hijack that term for the group of cowards that stand for nothing, and fall for anything!



------------

I said it before. I say it again. The term "progressive" has assumed a Nigerian character. 100% COUNTERFEIT.

Original Taiwan...

User Avatar
KennKenn is offline

 # 10 | 10.06.2009 20:23

.

Ebe,

Thank you for that sobering piece. I share your sentiments wholeheartedly. Below is the duo’s appalling interview with Sam Omatseye. I was open-mouthed when I read it at the time.

http://www.ocnus.net/cgi-bin/exec/view.cgi?archive=103&num=26242



A Call for Caution

Before we anoint Ribadu the patron saint of Progressive Nigeria, let us recall these serious breaches of patriotic trust. If given another chance, Ribadu may behave differently and act in a more morally decisive manner. Before that happens though, let’s not act and speak as if Ribadu had no role in the recent rot, the impact and logical outcomes of which are unfolding to devastating effects in the lives of Nigerians. We cannot keep acting as though yesterday’s political actions and inactions have no bearing on today’s unsavory outcomes. Or that complicit individuals who constitute an unwelcome presence in the today's political arrangement have by that fact alone become icons of progressive patriotic commitment.

Ribadu was courageous and incorruptible. Those qualities are foundations of heroic patriotism. But courageous and incorruptible people who allow themselves to be used by higher powers to stifle our quest for an expanded political space and full political accountability deserve to have their patriotism scrutinized. Incorruptibility and courage are desirable virtues. But they must be deployed as assets in challenging, not in consolidating, the predatory status quo—however “reformist” the rhetorical preoccupations of that status quo may be. Ribadu allowed himself to be conned by Obasanjo’s reformist rhetoric and succumbed, for good measure, to his own love of the political limelight.

In spite of my strong objection to the elevation of Ribadu to progressive sainthood, however, I see no moral parallel between him and El-Rufai. The two were united by their common loyalty to Obasanjo and to the nebulous constellation of practices called reform. They have now been reunited by common political adversity: persecution in the hands of a paranoid, illegitimate ruler. That’s where the kinship terminates. Ribadu’s courage, even if limited and constrained by misplaced loyalties, and his incorruptibility stand him apart from El-Rufai. El-Rufai is a power freak who is neither courageous nor possessing of personal integrity. Here is a man who stands accused of reckless departures from due process in the allocation of Abuja plots and of awarding plots of land to his cronies and family members but whose defense is that awarding plots of land to his wives and family members was not illegal. Has he ever heard of a quaint little concept called conflict of interest, or given a thought to the fact that what is legal may be inappropriate and immoral?

Obviously, both men are seeking an empathetic reappraisal by progressive Nigerians. In evaluating their records and those of other displaced political actors, we need to remember and recall their roles in directly or indirectly engineering the current mess. There should be no more sympathy or reward for populist grandstanding without genuine contrition and apology for past sins. The political actors of today are taking note on the self-reclamation campaigns of Ribadu and El-Rufai and on the reception we are according their performances.





Thank you for the above. But at this point I would like to make a clarification, so that Nigerians can understand certain actions the Nigeria Liberty Forum and Respect Nigerians Coalition took recently in relation to the May 29 State of the Nation Conference in London and the reception and dinner that followed, both of which Nuhu Ribadu was invited and attended.

I was the moderator for the morning session of the Symposium/Conference and the Master of Ceremonies at the dinner. Those of us who invited Ribadu there did not do so because we thought he was a hero or a villain. That judgment is personal and I’m sure those who’ve read my views on Ribadu as EFCC Chairman know what I think of his service there. We invited Ribadu because he was based in England and considering what he’s going through in the hands of his erstwhile friends at home, it was an opportunity to get him to speak to Nigerians and for Nigerians to question him and ask him whatever question they want. Those who were there at the Conference saw that despite the partisan gawking of a section of the crowd, we the organizers never protected him. In fact, I must have been the one that annoyed him most with my comment/question. I had felt that for presumptuously titling his speech “The Future of Nigeria” and by calling on us to act as one to reclaim our country, we deserve to know there and then if he was nursing any political ambitions. But I did not ask the question directly – I had to first let him know that I was no fan of his when he was in government, precisely for the reasons you stated here.

As for Nasir el-Rufai, he contacted us before the Conference pompously insisting he wanted to come and speak. We simply told him he can come since it is a gathering of free Nigerians, but he wouldn’t be speaking as we already have our speakers. That brought him down a notch. He came on the day of the Conference, stayed briefly and disappeared. Tells you something, doesn’t it?:lol:

Anyway, the point I wish to make here is that nobody is making Ribadu “the patron saints of Progressive Nigeria”, because to even be a foot soldier, you will need to earn your spurs. Ribadu is only beginning that journey. How he progresses from here, what he says and what he does will tell us where he is going and how we should regard him. In spite of the eulogies of men like Gani Fawehinmi and Wole Soyinka, the critical core of Progressive Nigeria know that Ribadu’s tenure is one of glorified failure at the EFCC, because of the opportunities squandered, the mousey results and overall political effect on succession, including the retarded development we witness today all-round. Until Ribadu begins to carry the burdens that progressives have borne for years for the sake of a truly just nation, he can’t say he’s a member yet. The fact that he was willing to mix with people who drove Obasanjo out of town here in London is only an indication that he could be progressive. The proof of the pudding is ultimately in the eating.

Finally, let me use this opportunity to inform Nigerians that before Ribadu finishes his programme at Oxford, a delegation from Respect Nigerians Coalition will be visiting him to see firsthand what he is doing there. This will involve us looking at his academic engagement, interviewing his lecturers, collaborators and colleagues and interviewing him extensively on what he has learnt, what his regrets are, if any, and what he would do differently if he has another opportunity at public service, knowing what he knows now amongst other things. Though. I’ve told him we would be visiting him, I haven’t told him the details. So, let’s hope he would find time for us. Ebe, I will keep you posted on this because if you are free at the time, I would love for you to join us on that trip.



CHEERS!
.
 

Services : E-mail news | RSS Feeds | Podcasts
Links:   About the NVS | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Privacy & Cookies | Advertise With Us
All Rights Reserved. NigeriaVillageSquare.com