Away with Iwu—now! Print E-mail
Written by Okey Ndibe   
Monday, 11 February 2008

Away with Iwu—now!   

By Okey Ndibe 
 

Nigeria is in a waiting mode as the Justice James Ogebe presidential election tribunal retreats to reflect on the weighty question of how to rule on the 2007 presidential election. The burden before the Ogebe tribunal is to pronounce on whether the said election complied with the nation’s electoral laws, and passed muster as a credible, legitimate exercise. 

The Ogebe tribunal’s task is to make its way through the maze of legal arguments, to disentangle the fine points of the law as they relate to the conduct of the presidential election. But the verdict from the streets is in, and has been in since Nigerian voters were stripped of their right prerogative to elect their leaders. That verdict, echoed by all credible international electoral monitors, is that the April 21 presidential election was one huge April Fools’ affair. It was, to borrow the language of the street, wuru-wuru at its most unabashed and repugnant level. 

Sadly, many Nigerians have since shed their outrage and shrugged their shoulders in resignation. They have blunted their sense of resistance and lulled themselves to sleep on the drug of accommodation and acceptance. That acquiescent attitude is part of the reason a landscape with the promise and prospects of Nigeria is all-too often grim and gloomy.  

Besieged by a litany of man-made woes, too many of our fellows resort to throwing their hands up in surrender. They are quick to make their peace with injustice, even the most abominable species. They tell themselves that disorder is the immutable order of their days, that there is no respite to be had from the fangs of anomie. They reason, then, that they might as well spare themselves the headache and heartache of lifting a hand to remedy their beleaguered lives. 

For many Nigerians, transformative change is not within human agency; it is something that God does. Some of us have convinced themselves that, in His good time, God is going to solve all our problems. God will one day descend from on high to pave the Sagamu-Ore-Benin expressway, turning it into a motorable highway instead of a highway to the grave for thousands of hapless passengers. God will one day create jobs for the hundreds of thousands of graduates who are both jobless and (often) bereft of hope. It is up to God to deal with Olusegun Obasanjo and Liyel Imoke as well as their cohorts who frittered away $10 billion of the nation’s cash (according to Yar’Adua) or $16 billion (according to Dimeji Bankole) to give Nigeria the most highly priced dependable darkness in the world. Ask some civil engineers and they will even tell you it’s God’s job to hold up our ineptly constructed bridges and houses to ensure they don’t collapse. If Yar’Adua was misnamed the winner of the 2007 presidential polls, it’s because his “victory” was divinely determined.  

It falls to Ogebe to disavow this puerile notion that God is an accessory to electoral fraud. I make no secret of my wish: May Ogebe waste no time in trashing the exercise in barefaced electoral robbery of last April. May Ogebe and his judicial colleagues rise to the challenge of restoring the basic right of Nigerians to choose their leaders in elections that are beyond reproach, and are seen to be so.  

It would be unfortunate should the tribunal hide behind some farfetched technicalities to uphold an electoral process that every sentient Nigerian—including Yar’Adua, the primary beneficiary—knew to be deeply marred. Such a verdict would strike Nigerians as eccentric in the worst possible sense, an assault on reason and logic, and the disingenuous conclusion of a cynical judiciary.  

There are, it is true, some reasonable people who reject my posture. One interlocutor recently pointed me to what he described as encouraging signs from Yar’Adua. He was sure that, once the albatross of an illegitimate election was removed from his neck, the man would step on the accelerator and really “move Nigeria forward.”  

First, I was unable to see Yar’Adua’s vaunted accomplishments. If he’s distinguished himself at all, it is only in the narrow arena of personal style. Where Obasanjo was crude and brusque, Yar’Adua projects a genial deportment. Where Obasanjo over-haunted the nation with his odoriferous presence, Yar’Adua has a somewhat retiring, self-effacing mien. Where the former disregarded adverse judicial rulings, the latter has made capital out of touting the rule of law. Where the one was a God-mouthing hypocrite, the other is a more reserved man who wants to sell you the jingle of his moral integrity but won’t renounce a mandate he has freely admitted as tainted.   

At a more fundamental level, my objection to the Yar’Adua “presidency” is founded on principle. For me, it is always best to resolves foggy issues by putting them through the crucible of moral principles. Legitimate elections have the effect of putting a people’s destiny in their own hands. If a people choose to elect a fool, then by all means let the fool preside over their affairs.  

One reason to embrace the principle of credible elections is that it is, in the end, our safest chance against self-serving, corrupt leadership. If we make a habit of holding legitimate elections, then the people would have the opportunity to send home a leader whose performance is substandard. But if we nudge ourselves to accept an illegitimate leader on the ground that he’s doing a good job, or has shown promise in that direction, then we make it collectively harder to weed out those who compound their theft of public office with atrocious governance.  

If Yar’Adua is the answer to Nigeria’s myriad problems, then let him make his case as fervently as he can to the Nigerian people. Thereafter, let him submit himself to the verdict of the electorate in an election conducted in an unquestionably sound manner. In that event, Yar’Adua would have his mother thank all Nigerians for the honor bestowed on him rather than the curious misadventure of sending the woman to Otta Farm to shower the former president with praises for making her son the “president.” Show me a man willing to bask in the preferment of stolen office and I will show you a man capable of all manner of devious deeds.    

I am as dismayed today as I was on April 21 when the Iwu-led electoral commission gave the world cause to view Nigeria as a nation of scam artists and fraudsters incapable of conducting elections that meet minimum standards of integrity. As a gesture of moral rejection, I decided not to address Yar’Adua as “President” for as long as he faced legal challenge.   

Left to me, the judiciary should have invalidated the entire exercise with the haste and urgency with which the Supreme Court sacked the poseur named Nnamdi Uba a mere 16 days after he sneaked into unearned office. While Yar’Adua buys time by talking volubly about electoral reforms, Nigeria’s true democratic forces ought to strategize on ways of expanding the vision and practice of democracy. We need to empower the judiciary to more efficiently discharge the tasks of auditing elections. Ideally, tribunals should hear and resolve electoral challenges in no more than three months. In the case of national offices, room for equally accelerated appeals should be granted all the way to the Supreme Court. We ought to strive to minimize the duration of time spent in offices by candidates who are illicitly smuggled into them. Imagine the calamity Mr. Uba would have wrought in Anambra had he been permitted to stay in the governor’s office for as long as six months.  

While the judiciary continues to undo the grave electoral misdeeds of last April, Nigerians should not forget that Iwu, the man who supervised the notorious elections, is still in their midst, a virus who deadens democracy. It would be nothing short of disastrous to leave Iwu in the saddle at the electoral commission as cancelled elections are conducted anew.  

If Nigerians are asked to put a face next to last April’s electoral debacle, odds are that most would think of Iwu’s face. He is the chairman of an electoral commission who inspires confidence, not in the organization of superb elections, but in the certainty that he would talk up a good game even as he gives you elections that stink to hell. Let’s give the devil his due: Iwu did not act alone. There was Obasanjo, with his do-or-die rhetoric, meddling with the commission and encouraging it to make awful decisions. The National Assembly had cause to summon Iwu when he seemed to be choreographing the elections towards failure. For some bizarre reasons, the legislators lacked the spine to tell the man that he did not cut the profile of an unbiased umpire. When questions surfaced about the source and nature of Iwu’s first degree—questions the man has, even now, not addressed in any direct manner—the National Assembly should have asked him to step aside. To their eternal shame, they didn’t. Even the press seemed inclined to ignore tell-tale signs about a man who was too quick to proclaim his readiness to die to give Nigeria good elections, but did not have the fiber to take a single decision that would have made Obasanjo frown.  

Iwu is not the only reason last year was a year of electoral disasters, but he was a large part of it. As the courts invalidate more of what Iwu passed off as elections, Nigerians who hold themselves and their nation to higher standards ought to raise a banner that reads: Away with Iwu—now!

 




RobotRobot is offline 
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 # 1

var sbtitle5662=encodeURIComponent(Away with I...Read the full article.

Posted by Robot| 11.02.2008 18:52

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Ochi DabariOchi Dabari is offline 
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 # 2

While waiting for Ogebe, I am wondering if Atiku's lawyers cannot start off another case in the regular court, to subject Iwu's performance at the tribunal to perjury tests. His answers to the questions posed by Atiku were far from the truth. To me, Iwu should not be shown the way out gently; he should end in prison. And while we are on the case of perjury, who deals with certificate forgeries? EFCC? I think the man ought to have been questioned a long time ago, wrt his credentials, but may be the EFCC did not receive such orders from their master, Obasanjo. It is for reasons like that that many doubted the intentions and achievements of the EFCC under Ribadu. A man who forges certificates, to rise to the position of a Prof is worse than the worst 419ner. A professor influences (and some times, destroys) the lives of thousands of students. Come to think of it, Iwu would have taught hundreds, who today are somewhere dispensing drugs, as pharmacists, and others teaching the trade to thousands more. While I do not condone 419, it is doubtful if any 419ner would be able to fool more than half a dozen greedy fellows.

ochi



=Robot;4294988081>var sbtitle5662=encodeURIComponent(Away with I...Read the full article.


Posted by Ochi Dabari| 11.02.2008 22:15

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NWANZANWANZA is offline 
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My prayer is that the tribunal throw out President Yar'Adua from Aso rock, and declare the whole election null & void. Hopefully, a majority of Nigerians are saying the same prayer for us to tow the part of justice and freedom.

Nigerians will not be free unless justice is done, and the cabal put in his place in history. This is a historical moment in our lives and as nation, to finally set itself free from the clutches of the devil. Ogebe has the opportunity to salvage the ship from running aground, and stand amongst men of high integrity and purpose in life.

Yar'Adua want to keep Muarice Iwu for a repeat election, but that will not happen because the legislators will throw him out through a vote of no confidence. The senate president is not likely to survive his own challenges, and will not be eligible to become acting President.

It is really a shame last week, when Yar'Adua declared Obasanjo as his leader during OBJ's sons wedding ceremony. Adedibu is back at the saddle, making all kinds of noise. These people are poised to rub this smelly stuff on the faces of the masses if this election is upheld.

It is such a turning point, and such a crucial time in our history in these coming weeks!

Posted by NWANZA| 12.02.2008 03:15

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ALORAINIDDEVILALORAINIDDEVIL is offline 
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 # 4

I dont know what they are waiting for before throwing out IWU, is it until he repeats his April 21 scam in Kogi, Adamawa and Enugu? meanwhile, ON you did not talk much about IWU's Cameroun Degree this time around. Are you now afraid to throw the PUNCH like RA?

Posted by ALORAINIDDEVIL| 12.02.2008 04:06

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ALORAINIDDEVILALORAINIDDEVIL is offline 
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Left to me, the judiciary should have invalidated the entire exercise with the haste and urgency with which the Supreme Court sacked the poseur named Nnamdi Uba a mere 16 days after he sneaked into unearned office

Imagine the calamity Mr. Uba would have wrought in Anambra had he been permitted to stay in the governor’s office for as long as six months

Prof Ndibe, Andy Uba has really suffered in your hands. is there any thing you will write without bringing Andy into the issue? there are so many other people you will use as example when writing your articles, Please leave that young Man alone until 2010.

Posted by ALORAINIDDEVIL| 12.02.2008 04:13

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KabikalaKabikala is offline 
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=NWANZA;4294988160>My prayer is that the tribunal throw out President Yar'Adua from Aso rock, and declare the whole election null & void. Hopefully, a majority of Nigerians are saying the same prayer for us to tow the part of justice and freedom.

Nigerians will not be free unless justice is done, and the cabal put in his place in history. This is a historical moment in our lives and as nation, to finally set itself free from the clutches of the devil. Ogebe has the opportunity to salvage the ship from running aground, and stand amongst men of high integrity and purpose in life.

Yar'Adua want to keep Muarice Iwu for a repeat election, but that will not happen because the legislators will throw him out through a vote of no confidence. The senate president is not likely to survive his own challenges, and will not be eligible to become acting President.

It is really a shame last week, when Yar'Adua declared Obasanjo as his leader during OBJ's sons wedding ceremony. Adedibu is back at the saddle, making all kinds of noise. These people are poised to rub this smelly stuff on the faces of the masses if this election is upheld.

It is such a turning point, and such a crucial time in our history in these coming weeks!




Nwanza,
I don't understand the basis for your optimism that Iwu will be thrown out by the National Assembly. Or did you have a secret meeting with David Mark and Dimeji Bankole? The same Iwu that led INEC to award undeserved victories to majority of them. The INEC that is now allying with them to frustrate the deluge of petitions against them at the various election petition tribunals across the country. I am almost sure that this current National Assembly will do its best to ensure that Iwu is retained to repeat what he is good at: return them to their various positions regardless of what people say. If not, why is it taking them so long to do that? Or is it not already obvious that the Iwu-supervised April 2007 elections were a disaster?

My major worry is that if Iwu or someone of his ilk conducts another election after the series of court-ordered annulments, what guarantee do we have that it will be better than the one of April 2007? Would we then start with another series of election tribunals and election appeal tribunals and further annulments? Can we afford it?

To prevent such gerrymeandering and rigmaroling, Iwu must not only be sacked, he must be prosecuted for aiding and abetting fraud, for being responsible for the death of scores of Nigerians, and for wastage of the nation's resources. That will be a good lesson for future umpires to do their job in a fair and just manner and not pandering to the wishes of some self-centred individuals.

Mr Alorainiddevil,
Please re-read Okey's piece. You will find out that he mentioned the issue of Iwu's fake degree.
And to also say that he is paying too much attention to Andy Uba is your personal view. I think he is paying too little attention to the guy, who should be serving term for money laundering and stealing but is still walking free.

Posted by Kabikala| 12.02.2008 06:24

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ALORAINIDDEVILALORAINIDDEVIL is offline 
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=Kabikala>
To prevent such gerrymeandering and rigmaroling, Iwu must not only be sacked, he must be prosecuted for aiding and abetting fraud, for being responsible for the death of scores of Nigerians, and for wastage of the nation's resources. That will be a good lesson for future umpires to do their job in a fair and just manner and not pandering to the wishes of some self-centred individuals.

Mr Alorainiddevil,
Please re-read Okey's piece. You will find out that he mentioned the issue of Iwu's fake degree.
And to also say that he is paying too much attention to Andy Uba is your personal view. I think he is paying too little attention to the guy, who should be serving term for money laundering and stealing but is still walking free.



Mr. Kabikala, I agree with you that this MBANO MAN called IWU should be sent to jail and I have said it times without Number that IWU should Visit Kuje or Kirikiri so that the next INEC chairman will respect the wishes of the people. Until that Happens, this charade/American wonder called elections will continue to repeat itself.

I have read this article again and it was only in the second to last paragraph that he talked about IWU’s FAKE degree. He did not even hit on that well. Don’t misunderstand me, I admire ON a lot for the way he writes, If you check all my posts since I joined this Honorable Square, you will find out that I am an ON fan 4life. On Andy UBA, What I am saying in essence is that he should give ANDY some breathing Space to recover, the guy is already dead like dodo in ON’s hand and there is no need attacking a dead man because that is what ANDY is presently. I expect ON to write about other thieves like Chimaroke, Udenwa and Egwu. All these bad guys I mentioned above are they better off than Andy? They all connived with Baba and Ali to loot their state treasury and became rich Overnight so ON should expose them too.

Posted by ALORAINIDDEVIL| 12.02.2008 08:36

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peterclaver2006peterclaver2006 is offline 
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Thanks for this ON. Truth is that Maurice Iwu the shameless professor of fraud must end up where he belongs; which is the deepest part of Nigerian jail. The man is an unrepentant scammer and the manner he has been going about recruiting propagandists and jinxed washermen to spill horrible jeremiad to explain away his embarrassing acts in April is shocking-to say the least. I can’t really depend on this Yar’Adua to remove Iwu nor do I depend on this National Assembly of David Mark, Smart Adeyemi et-al to remove this vessel of fraud because the National Assembly is a scammers’ heaven. I want Nigerians to rise up with one strong and fervent voice to demand that this dirty lecher should be removed and prosecuted for the open fraud he continues to infest on Nigeria. Again, I think that with the welter of electoral shams that have been voided by the tribunals, we should demand for the complete annulment of Iwu’s hemlock because truth is that the entire exercise was fraudulent, in concept and execution. Nothing, not even the scale of judicial voiding will bail it out from its putrid underpinning. I don’t honestly think anything will change with Yar’Adua. The man has refused to unbuckle the huge racketeering ring his dubious predecessor entrenched in all facets of public life in Nigeria. He is merely pretending his way through. If in doubt, check his outing in the recent fraud-wracked so-called council polls where he refused the entreaties of right-thinking Nigerians to disallow the impending fraud his party was planning in several states until the right framework for a free and fair election was put in place. He secretly urged the PDP governors on and was the first to raise a hypocritical voice against the monumental scale of the fraud these children of a scammer called Maurice Iwu brought to bear in their various states’ LG elections. He then said that he was compelled by the holidays from convening a meeting and when he eventually did in the New Year, he invited characters like Edwin Ume Ezeoke and Chekwas Okorie who has become a party unto himself, courtesy of Iwu and Yar’Adua, and Orji Uzor Kalu’s PPA to an annoying jamboree where we were told that Yar’Adua was repulsed of the degree of fraud that attended the LG scandalous elections but urged other states not to allow that to repeat. What a cheeky prank. Let the tribunals throw these impostors away and where nothing changes, let the military cleanse this augean stable. We have had enough!

Posted by peterclaver2006| 12.02.2008 10:27

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i-go-betteri-go-better is offline 
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=ALORAINIDDEVIL;4294988183>Mr. Kabikala, I agree with you that this MBANO MAN called IWU should be sent to jail and I have said it times without Number that IWU should Visit Kuje or Kirikiri so that the next INEC chairman will respect the wishes of the people. Until that Happens, this charade/American wonder called elections will continue to repeat itself.

I have read this article again and it was only in the second to last paragraph that he talked about IWU’s FAKE degree. He did not even hit on that well. Don’t misunderstand me, I admire ON a lot for the way he writes, If you check all my posts since I joined this Honorable Square, you will find out that I am an ON fan 4life. On Andy UBA, What I am saying in essence is that he should give ANDY some breathing Space to recover, the guy is already dead like dodo in ON’s hand and there is no need attacking a dead man because that is what ANDY is presently. I expect ON to write about other thieves like Chimaroke, Udenwa and Egwu. All these bad guys I mentioned above are they better off than Andy? They all connived with Baba and Ali to loot their state treasury and became rich Overnight so ON should expose them too.



Mr ALORAINIDDEVIL

If you really are in support of ON, then pick up your pen and write about Chimaroke, Udenwa or Egwu for God's sake! And, who told you Andy Uba is "dead like dodo"? He installed 99% of Members of the State House of Assembly; the Chairman of the PDP in the State; Senators and H/Reps from the State. His WEALTH is still in a very HEALTHY state. Did you not hear his Lawyer unequivocally declaring that the political war against Obi and the State is not yet over! A man of such intimidating profile can not be "dead like dodo" and we need to encourage the Ndibes of this our unfortunate generation not to fatigue rather than this fatuous advise of giving Andy Uba a breathing pace.

Posted by i-go-better| 12.02.2008 10:28

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MrOneNaijaMrOneNaija is offline 
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 # 10

THE GUILLOTINE FOR THE SCOUNDREL CALLED IWU

In a decent and law-abiding Nigeria, the following vermin would have been guillotined a long time ago: Olusegun Obasanjo, Nuhu Ribadu and Maurice Iwu. Other adjuncts of the ex-tyrant from Otta, namely, Adedibu, "Andy" Uba, Bode George and el-Rufai, would also have been prime candidates for the hangman's noose. The far-reaching consequences of the capital crimes these mafia elements inflicted on the Nigerian democratic project would take decades to erase. With that in mind, it is curious that self-proclaimed pro-democracy and human rights groups and their representatives are keeping a studied silence. To pin all our hopes on the putative redemptive authority of the judiciary may prove a major disappointment in the end. The Yar'Adua "rule of law and due process" mantra, to the extent that its delivery has tended to suffer from bouts of inconsistency and even duplicity, cannot be seen as a viable insurance. Vigilance is de rigueur. Citizens remember vividly the shameful roles played by judges during the last Obasanjo kleptocracy. As for the National Assembly, like Yar'Adua, they cannot be expected to commit 'class suicide' since a good number of its members are products of the Iwuru-wuru scheme.

Now, what about the country's media that pretends to be the moral conscience of the country, can one count on the sagacity of its printed press versions for instance? The last time around, that is in 2003, critical segments of the national press were guilty of unabashedly throwing their support behind the PDP election riggers led by the tin god known as Obasanjo. Not to be left out, civil society outfits, both secular and religious, joined the sad scramble to aid and abet the truncation or Nigerian democracy. These are sobering facts to contemplate as the nation awaits the judges' verdict on the Yar'Adua illegitimacy.

Posted by MrOneNaija| 12.02.2008 10:28

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