| A new free sleeping pill for Nigerians - it's called patience |
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| Written by Okey Ndibe | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Monday, 31 March 2008 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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A new free sleeping pill for Nigerians By Okey Ndibe Nigerians are already wondering how Umar YarAduas stewardship will turn out. Attentive observers can foretell: In a huge disappointment. Two weeks ago, YarAdua handed Nigerians his version of a pill that every past Nigerian leader, whether usurper or elected, has prescribed. He asked us to be patient. With patience, he pledged, we will eventually enjoy the fruits of development. That is nothing more, or less, than asking Nigerians to take a sleeping pill. Like others before him, Mr. YarAdua wants Nigerians to doze off. A people lost in deep slumber are the dream of Nigerian public officials. If citizens sleep, then they wont stand in the way of leaders whose one dependable expertise is self-service at the expense of the people. The first six months of a leaders term are often the most dynamic. Its a period when an adept leader sets the tone of his administration. It is a time when a committed and visionary leader exhibits his energy and mettle. A serious-minded leader seizes his first six months to lay the foundation for his administrations policy and programmatic keynotes. By that measure, one can surmise that YarAduas priority is to get himself and us as much sleep as possible over the next four years. If the man realizes that Nigeria is steeped in deep social and political crises, he is doing an excellent job of hiding it from the rest of us. He read a good speech at his inauguration, a speech filled with feel-good phrases and punctuated by lavish promises. He was going to declare an emergency in the power sector. Ten months later, theres no practical sign that YarAdua still recollects the speech he read. Or that he has kept the speechwriter around him to remind him of the promises to which he committed himself. In the absence of this self-awareness, it is no surprise that YarAdua wants us to swallow his sleeping pill called patienceand to wake up only four years later, or even beyond. YarAduas problem arises, one suspects, from two sources. One is that the man did not set out to be anybodys president. He was dragged into the role by a former president who considered him a manipulable Man Friday. True, he has not altogether rewarded Obasanjos investment in that regard, but he has not risen, either, to the challenge of governing a nation plagued by myriads of socio-economic problems. The other source is YarAduas burden of illegitimacy. The Justice James Ogebe verdict that unanimously upheld his election was so craven that it ended up deepening, rather than dispelling, doubts about the current resident of Aso Rock. Hampered by ill-preparation and the hanky panky that enthroned him, YarAdua is likely to be stuck, for the next four years, offering us little more than the fiction of good times in the future. If, and only if, we remain good boys and girls and lull ourselves to sleep. After all, when you sleep, you improve your odds of having fantastic dreams. Trouble is, that when we sleep, we also fall prey to nightmares. It is a perilous deal. Is there any mature Nigerian who is still fooled by such distracting appeal to be patient? Patience was also the watchword of the Shehu Shagari administration. While the majordomos of that dispensation basked in splendor and wealth, they lectured Nigerians to remember that Rome was not built in a day. Meanwhile, the big names in that government inflicted on their nation the kind of damage that could easily have destroyed Rome in half a day. In the mid-1980s, in the wake of the profound social misery unleashed on us following Ibrahim Babangidas adoption of the structural adjustment program, Nigerians received the same entreaty. Be patient, we were told, and things will be fine. Well, things were fine for Babangida and for a small circle of his friends and associates. The vast majority of Nigerians were sapped into destitution. They soon abandoned hope of receiving their own windfall, or had to cast their lot with prosperity-vending pastors and prophets. A few days ago, I was in a telephone conversation with a New York-based Nigerian friend when he said, Based on everything thats coming out about [former President Olusegun] Obasanjo, its clear that YarAdua is much better. Its an exasperating proposition. On the one hand, given the hell that Nigeria went through during Obasanjos eight years in office, it is difficult to imagine anything or anybody worse. Nigeria earned an unprecedented amount of cash during the Obasanjo years, and the man dutifully frittered it away in building 419 roads, commissioning phoney power projects, and mythically eliminating poverty from the Nigerian space. On the other hand, one must be realistic enough to say: one cant say yet. It is morning yet on YarAduas watch, but the shape of things isnt inspiring. To be sure, a determined YarAdua could easily do worse than Obasanjo. At any rate, I told my friend that, after nearly fifty years of flag independence, Nigerians should not be stuck in the language of this one is better than Obasanjo. Back in 1966, when the military first intervened in the political life of the nation, many Nigerians were ecstatic. Even those who were wary about the military in governance comforted themselves with the argument that the khaki rulers were bound to be better than the politicians they sacked. When Yakubu Gowon was deposed, and Murtala Muhammed and later Obasanjo succeeded him, the refrain was the same: Theyre better than Gowon. When former President Shehu Shagari was toppled, there was the usual expectation that the new military henchmen could never sin as much as the NPN honchos. Yet, when the duo of Muhammadu Buhari and Tunde Idiagbon cracked their whips on our collective backs, we groaned and prayed for deliverance from their yoke. After Ibrahim Babangida elbowed Buhari and co. out of the way, many of us exulted, certain that our prayers had been answered. Eight years later, with the albatross of June 12 to compound other political, social and economic woes, Nigerians took to the streets to force Babangidas exit from power. In his place came the forgettableand indeed largely forgotteninterim aberration of Mr. Ernest Shonekan. Then followed Sani Abacha, a man who for a moment won over some fans by going after profiteers from failed banks and abandoned contracts. In the end, Abacha was so artless as a thief that he simply sent vans to the Central Bank to haul away hard currency to his official residence. He lived by the dictum that a nations wealth was a military rulers private treasury. His political ambitions evolved as well. Once acclimated to the grandeur of office, Abacha was in no mood to leave. Instead, he began to design a plan to perpetuate himself. As that plan unfurled, Nigerians romance with him soured. Nigerians heaved a sigh of relief and serenaded God with gratitude after a coup from heaven took Abacha down from his perch and straight to the grave. After a brief transition overseen by Abdulsalam Abubakar, Nigerians saw Obasanjos second appearance. Recruited for the top job straight out of prison, he was sponsored by a coalition of retired and serving military officers. The rest is (still unfolding) history. The point isnt that Nigerian politicians are corrupt. There are corrupt politicians everywhere, including in the nations that are held up as exemplars of social development. The tragedy, instead, is that Nigerian politicians practice a brand of corruption that goes beyond the greed for lucre and enters the realm of evil. Let me illustrate. My family and I have spent several Christmas vacations in the Philippines. Anybody who reads Transparency Internationals annual corruption index would know that the Philippines does well in that regard; its regularly cited as one of the worlds most corrupt nations. When a big contract is awarded there, Filipino columnists and citizens assume that public officials palms were greased. The public has also come to suspect that every public contract is, in all likelihood, inflated. Still, at the end of the day, the contract is executed. By contrast, Nigerian politicians not only inflate the cost of contracts, they also arrange to share the monies with contractors with the understanding that no job (or very little) is to be done. Thats the most unforgivable aspect of the scandal of power projects initiated by Obasanjo. Official after official of government agencies told the House of Representatives, on oath, that the former president approved payments for contracts that were often at zero level of execution. How come not a single one of those officials had enough patriotic fund to resign in protest while that scam was in progress? Why did not one of them break his or her silence while Obasanjo lied to the world about his governments faithfulness to due process? If the billions of dollars wasted in that scandal had led to a noticeable improvement in the nations power supply, many Nigerians would today be willing to forgive Obasanjo. Some would even have declared him a hero. But what he did was to transfer public funds into private pockets for the sheer gluttony of it. Its evil. Worse, Obasanjo played Father Christmas with his nations resources at a time he continually hiked the price of fuel, ostensibly on the ground that the country was too poor to maintain fuel subsidies. For Obasanjo, it was okay for everyday Nigerians to bear the brunt of harsh economic policies while a few friends of the former president, foreign as well as domestic, received billion naira pay-offs. All told, ones hunch is
that, unless YarAdua receives a legitimate mandate in a credible
election, he is on track to join a parade of mediocre rulers who squandered
the promise of a nation that ought to be a splendid success story. Why was Alexander Gaadi arrested? Nigerians should be disturbed by the arrest of Dr. Alexander Gaadi, a major civic leader in Benue State who successfully sued the Federal Government for the 2001 genocidal attack on Zaki-Biam carried out by the Nigerian Army. Gaadi, whose suit resulted in a whooping N41.8b judgment, was reportedly abducted from his home by eighty armed operatives of the State Security Service (SSS). In a chilling account of the
event, The Guardian
of March 29, 2008 reported that Gaadi was picked up from his Makurdi
residence in a commando-like operation. That any citizen could
be abducted in such a vulgar display of force is an outrage. That it
should happen to Gaadi, a stroke patient who recently criticized Attorney
General Michael Aondoakaa, must alert us to the current regimes potential
for slipping into despotism. Nigerians should rise and demand an explanation
for this impunity.
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| Last Updated ( Thursday, 24 April 2008 ) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted by Robot| 31.03.2008 12:41