A year of dishonesty Print E-mail
Written by Okey Ndibe   
Monday, 02 June 2008

A year of dishonesty
By Okey Ndibe 


One year into his questionable occupancy of Aso Rock, Mr. Umaru Yar’Adua is an illustration of the way in which language is under assault in Nigeria’s public sphere. Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka made the right call when he described May 29 as the anniversary of a farce. In Yar’Adua’s case, it was the first birthday of a dishonest dispensation.   

A little over a year ago, Mr. Yar’Adua was being sold as a man of admirable honesty. He impressed some people merely by acknowledging that the “election” that produced him was flawed. He was hailed as an uncommon kind of politician, and garlanded for his supposed stock of integrity.  

Some of us didn’t buy it. An honest man does not hold on to stolen or illicitly acquired goods. And Yar’Adua left no doubt that he intended to claim a presidential post that came by way of a scandalously rigged poll.  

Besides, he was, to put it generously, less than honest when he claimed that the irregularities of April 21, 2007 would not have made a material difference in the presidential contest. According to him, he would still have won even if the ruling party and the electoral commission had not collaborated to distort the electoral process. That contention is a scandal of its own. The one thing worse than rigging an election is to rig one when you’re assured of victory in a transparently credible competition.  

Let me illustrate: If you’re certain that a friend would happily give you an amount of cash, but you decide to steal it instead, you display a degree of contempt for your friend. Even worse, you reveal something bizarre about your own psychological disposition. Why on earth would any political party, especially one that holds the advantage of incumbency, set out to steal a mandate it insists the electorate would have freely given? 

The answer may lie, one suspects, in the falsity of Yar’Adua’s assumption of his electoral prospects. The man was a perfect recipe for a doomed candidacy. Yes, he possessed such pluses as advanced degrees, his pedigree in the ranks of Aminu Kano’s brand of progressive politics as well as the public perception that he was not corrupt.  

Even so, his negatives were overwhelming. He was not known to nurse any presidential ambitions until former President Olusegun Obasanjo, looking for a reliable “protector,” dusted him up. Anointed by a hugely despised former helmsman, Yar’Adua inherited Obasanjo’s considerable liabilities. On the campaign trails, he came across as a confounded sophomore who cowered in the shadow of the avuncular Obasanjo who spoke for him. Yar’Adua’s frail health was also a matter of public information, and was bound to count against him, despite his comical boast that he could dominate his political opponents in squash. Finally, in eight years of running Katsina, Yar’Adua had left few positive imprints. His gubernatorial resume simply did not inspire confidence that he was equipped to take on the significant challenges of governing Nigeria.  

Unless Nigerians, as a rule, are apt to make political choices that run counter to logic, Yar’Adua had everything it took to fail woefully as a presidential candidate. His party’s rigging, then, must be understood as an effort to obtain by crooked means an office that Nigerians would not have bestowed by volition. What happened in April 2007 was a monumental crime that, willy-nilly, must be answered for.  

The kind of electoral reforms envisaged by Yar’Adua is not an answer but an attempt to obfuscate the real issues. Speaking to a panel of reporters to mark the first year of his still contested tenure, Yar’Adua tried to re-tread a tired, bald falsehood: that the electoral reform panel he instituted would somehow provide a solution to the crises of rigged polls.  

There’s ample anecdotal proof that Yar’Adua is far from interested in setting Nigeria on the path to electoral sanity. One is that he buried his head in the sand as several states, including his home state of Katsina, conducted local government “elections” that could serve as manuals for how not to do elections. These were weird exercises in which the ruling party assigned itself one hundred percent of seats in contention, leaving the impression that the opposition is universally dead or moribund.   

Yar’Adua has also anchored his party’s “capture” of every re-run gubernatorial poll. A “president” who has not seen fit to address the nation’s power crisis or to focus on the deteriorating educational sector or to elaborate a plan for dealing with comatose health care system has revealed himself as a giddy campaigner. It is as if, for Yar’Adua, power is an end in itself. He seems to share the sentiment recently expressed by his party’s anointed chairman, Vincent Ogbulafor, to the effect that the evisceration of opposition parties is a laudable goal and that the ruling party intends to have an unbroken sixty-year run at the steering of the ship of state. A friend of mine, moved by the party’s modesty, asked why the party would wish to be in charge only for sixty years. The best answer I could come up with was that, after sixty years, the party would have ensured that there was no Nigeria for it or any other party to ruin.  

For me, Yar’Adua faced a simple test of honesty, and he flunked it. If this man were as honest as he was billed, he would have done the right thing: renounced his ill-gotten mandate. Had he had the ethical insight and moral courage to reject an office that was not freely given by Nigerians, Yar’Adua would have earned the status of a peerless national hero. He would then have placed himself in a position to truly sweep any make-up election if he had chosen to run as a candidate.  

Alas, he chose to put Nigerians to sleep with the false elixir of “electoral reforms.” It was, from the outset, a ploy, an exercise in political dishonesty. But while many Nigerians gorge on this nicely sautéed rogue diet, Yar’Adua and clique are consolidating their democracy-deadening machinations. As president, Obasanjo was justly berated for treating party officials shabbily, in fact, for reducing the PDP to an adjunct of the presidency. When he didn’t like the party chairman’s face, he simply ordered the man to submit his letter of resignation. He did it to Barnabas Gemade and Audu Ogbe. When it came time to elect party officials, Obasanjo did not just seek to influence the process; he dictated who took what positions. And to ensure that a single vote was not cast against his chosen, he invented an anti-democratic alternative to voting. It was choosing officials “by consensus.”  

At its last convention in March, with Yar’Adua in charge, the party still exhibited its profound allergy to democratic means. It famously resorted to the use of the crude method of “consensus” to “elect” its slate of national officers.  

Those who wonder why Yar’Adua continues to seem befuddled by the challenge of governing Nigeria ought to realize that the man is entrapped by the contradictions that produced him. The leadership of a nation calls for lofty vision and requires solid preparation. At the time he permitted himself to be drafted for the job, Yar’Adua could boast of neither. He is, then, an anomaly. After eight indifferent years in Katsina, the man might have gone into political retirement with the reputation of one who neither did dramatic good nor drastic damage. Foisted on Nigerians, he evinces the confusion that is the price of poor or non-existent preparation. And Nigerians, who have fallen so far behind and must hasten to make up for lost ground, are saddled with the price of illegitimate leadership.

 




RobotRobot is offline 
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 # 1

Posted by Robot| 02.06.2008 11:55

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NWANZANWANZA is offline 
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 # 2

He is just there to satisfy the power shift to the North according to the unwritten agreement between them and Obasanjo. We all know that they installed OBJ and that kindness was returned by Yar'Adua appointment as president. Having said all these and more, Nigeria did not elect this man...trap #1.

The election tribunal upheld his appointment because there should never be a power vacuum at the center, which is understandable. David Mark as the senate president will not be allowed to step in when his own mandate is questionable. If David is allowed to become the acting president, the military will find a loophole to cease power...trap #2.

There is plot by Obasanjo to break up the country by not investing in infrastructure, and playing in the hands of militants. If any region decides to pull out of Nigeria, the military will have a hard time making inroad to quell uprisings...trap #3.

Do not expect Yar'Adua to do anything but sustenance of the looting culture and the propaganda of the "rule of law". Nothing will be accomplished seven years from May 29, 2008.

Posted by NWANZA| 02.06.2008 13:32

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udokaamahudokaamah is offline 
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 # 3

This is a very unintelligent article written by an over-zealous and sanctimonous idealist.

The only time Okey Ndibe sees anything good with Nigeria is if it passes his moral test. And the last time i checked, not one has passed.

We all can agree that the last election in Nigeria was flawed. It issue then becomes how material the flaw was. The Court of Appeals has ruled that the flaw was not material enough to overturn the entire election. And the Nigerian judiciary has not been in bed with the PDP. Precedent supports my view on this.

Most of this article concerns itself with the internal running and organization of a political party in Nigeria (PDP). The article seems to suggest that electoral purity somehow equals good and effective governance. Cheap shot. If PDP chooses to elect her officers by election or consensus, that is their prerogative. Those matters do not lend itself to speculative commentary by busy bodies.

Referring to Yar-Adua's mandate as "stolen or illicitly acquired" is very unfortunate and a minority opinion at best. The Nigerian judiciary disagrees with him (so far, at least). And real Nigerians are off-step with him too. Nigerians went to the polls to vote, not for the sake of voting. They were indicating a willingness to breed a new direction in government in Nigeria. That ought to be the basis of any critiquing of Yar-Adua. This article failed woefully to do that.

Posted by udokaamah| 02.06.2008 13:35

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denkerdenker is offline 
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 # 4


This is a very unintelligent article written by an over-zealous and sanctimonous idealist.
The only time Okey Ndibe sees anything good with Nigeria is if it passes his moral test. And the last time i checked, not one has passed.



udokaamah, a useless animal like you is one reason i despised most black people(cowards for life)...a good reason to cut off your head...you're everything wrong in Nigeria -stupid nonentity

Posted by denker| 02.06.2008 13:44

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ozion ozumbaozion ozumba is offline 
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 # 5

Some have argued it is too early to seek clarification of where the country is headed from UMYA. I say we wait untill we enter the ditch...Nothing hurts a country like lack of direction. UMYA please save our youths, show inspiration, if you can invent one.

Posted by ozion ozumba| 02.06.2008 14:01

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olivioolivio is offline 
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 # 6

lets take a deep breath and calm down. nobody needs to lose his head

Posted by olivio| 02.06.2008 14:04

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i-go-betteri-go-better is offline 
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 # 7

ON, you forgot one of his touted credible credentials, "he never travelled outside Nigeria, except Germany for medical check-up!" Check the records and find out how many STATES of the Federation, particularly those outside core North he visited before the election campaigns.

Nigerians are very funny lot. They are falling over each other trying to rate his 1yr presidency, awarding him all pretence of percentages. How these Nigerians expect a man with these seriously "intimidating" credentials to put up assessible performance within one year leaves me gobsmacked. The frustrations and paradoxes of being a Nigerian are no doubt taking their toll on our hearts' eye for discernment.

A man, so ill-prepared, in all ramifications, to shoulder the leadership armour of the largest black Nation in the universe, but hauled into office via a rigging so unique and different that it could not be fitted into the traditional categorisation method of classification, can only be considered for percentage marks if he does anything different from nothing.

Posted by i-go-better| 02.06.2008 14:06

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OnariOnari is offline 
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 # 8

Udokaamah, this is what Wafe guy will say, fear grip me for wetin you de talk. Are you kidding or are you holding court for Nigerians?

In as much as you have a right to your opinion, it is the rightful thing not to speak for other Nigerians. This is Ludicrous! Please define Real Nigerians...it will help me understand your message better.

Posted by Onari| 02.06.2008 14:17

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ttonjottonjo is offline 
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 # 9


=denker;4295049364>udokaamah, a useless animal like you is one reason i despised most black people(cowards for life)...a good reason to cut off your head...you're everything wrong in Nigeria -stupid nonentity




'I am black and PROUD. He who is not black and proud, does not fit to live.' For a black person to publicly said: he 'despised black people for life' is a shame, a very shame indeed. God help Africa!!!:rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes:

Posted by ttonjo| 02.06.2008 14:31

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DoveDove is offline 
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 # 10

Hi all, before you succeed in skinning our president alive, do not forget that when he was the governor of his state; he usually crossed the road all by himself (without his security details)to buy kola nut. Or is this not good enough reason to concede he can perform in his current position? (laughs)

Posted by Dove| 02.06.2008 14:31

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