| Combatting a coup-in-progress |
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| Wednesday, 15 March 2006 | |||||||||||||
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Make no mistake: the ongoing effort to
hastily alter key provisions of the Nigerian constitution in order to
serve the inflated ambitions of a few men amounts, simply, to a coup-in-progress.
Every step in this illegal grab for power strikes me as carefully choreographed
by President Olusegun Obasanjos strategizing team. The charade that
passed for public hearings on constitutional amendments was part of
an elaborate scheme to lend a veneer of legality to a predetermined
outcome. When Deputy Senate President Ibrahim Mantu retreated with members
of the joint committee of the Senate and House of Representatives to
Omagwa, near Port Harcourt, purportedly to filter public sentiments
into concrete legislative proposals, no discerning observer was in doubt
that the third term clause was already etched in stone. Nigerias political firmament is darkening
by the day. A president who is scared silly of being forced to swallow
his own bitter pill after he leaves office has warned Nigerians, in
effect, that he intends to hang on to power by all means. One gets the
sense that if it means dragging the national edifice down with him,
so much the better. After Mantu led the joint committee to
gratify Obasanjos desire for an interminable lease on Nigerias
presidency, the senator testily warded off a reporter who raised uncomfortable
questions about the shadowy manner of the joint committees meetings.
With a straight face, Mantu told the reporter (and hence the world)
that the decision to extend presidential and gubernatorial tenures to
three terms of four years each reflected the deepest wishes of the majority
of Nigerians. When I related that moronic cant to a friend of mine,
he said there was a chance that a man like Mantu was pathological enough
to believe himself. Mantu also told Nigerians that his conscience was
clear, and indeed that he expected his name to be enshrined in gold
for playing a leading role to actualise a third term for the president.
I called a psychiatrist on that one. He assured me that politicians
are particularly prone to the sudden and absolute loss of their conscience,
and are also susceptible to delusions of grandeur. If Mantu is entitled to any mantle, it
is, I suggest, that of mud. The man, about whom the most true and charitable
statement is that he occupies space, has certainly written himself into
infamy. In the gallery of Nigerian politricksters, he is likely to fall
somewhere between Anthony Anenih, Obasanjos factotum-in-chief, and
the loquacious Tom Ikimi who lent his brand of odiousness to the cause
of General Sani Abacha, another mad quester after power. Unable to build a credible case for third
term on his alleged reformist agenda, the president has recruited Anenihs
wizardry as a consummate political fixer. Anenihs resume recommends
him for a job like the one at hand, an attempt to foist impunity on
a nation whose people have suffered cruelly and long. One of his stellar
feats in public office came when he served Obasanjo as Minister for
Works. His ministry was to spend three hundred billion naira on road
construction. If any roads were built, they were too cosmic to be seen
by ordinary eyes. The man also did a spectacular job when the president
entrusted him with disbursing the billions of naira that eradicated
poverty in Nigeria. Since the selling of a dud is the task,
the president could not have wished for a more astute salesman. Is it
any wonder that since Anenihs arrival at the strategic helm, the
third term agenda has gained momentum? The president and his team of
plotters have settled on two predictable and proven tools of Nigerian
politics. One is called bribery or settlement, the other intimidation
or coercion. A number of players have revealed that
the presidents men are offering lavish inducements to legislators
at the federal and state levels. As some Nigerians affect nonchalance,
the presidents men may be using their nations cash to buy him
perpetual tenancy in Aso Rock. Obasanjo, who for seven years has steadfastly
but falsely accused himself of fighting corruption, has permitted his
team to offer corrupt (and therefore cowed) governors a trade-off if
they would endorse his ambition to die in office. It has been reported
that members of the presidents inner circle have promised cooperative
governors automatic tickets to ride in the third term bandwagonbut
only if they chanted amen to the constitutional amendment. When the
penalty for rebuffing such tantalizing offers is certain visitation
by the presidents Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC),
it should surprise nobody that a number of governors with a history
of despising the president have since lined up to recite the catechism
of third term. Rendered spineless by their own monumental crimes, most
governors are reluctant to cross an all-powerful, desperate president. It falls to Nigerians to rise and resist
this imposition. And the way to do it is by outwitting the president
and his henchmen. If his team persists in seeking to buy votes, legislators
should feel free to take his money (sorry, our money) and still cast
a no vote. As for the governors who may be tempted to take solace in
the prospect of being shielded from prosecution, they should simply
beware. Once their assent enables the president to illegitimately retain
power, the cards are stacked in his favour. Their best chance may well
lie in exposing themselves and him to equal jeopardy. The presidents overweening ambition
spells peril for the nation. Attempts are afoot to reconcile Nigerians
to the crafty abduction of their collective will by drowning them in
the hollow rhetoric of continuity. Nigerians must ask themselves
what they stand to gain from a continuity of hypocrisy, a continuity
of corruption, a continuity of violence. They ought to wonder why they
should be grateful for a leader who has hijacked the legislature and
weakened the judiciary. What is attractive about a presidency that does
not observe the most elementary norms of budgetary implementation? Why
should we be interested in the continuity of a leader who lends the
police to the commission of unconstitutional acts, as in the abduction
of Governor Chris Ngige in 2003 and the sacking of Governor Ladoja in
2006? Why should a nation of sane citizens abide the diseased continuity
of a man whose ethical outlook is in tandem with that of such characters
as Lamidi Adedibu, Chris Uba and Anenih? Nigerians have spent seven years in the
democratic desert, thanks in large part to Obasanjos martial notion
of power. They have waited in vain for the dividends of their so-called
nascent democracy to be felt in greater governmental accountability,
in scrupulous obedience to judicial rulings, in the curtailing of wastages
of public resources, in the deepening of democratic habits, in the avowal
and practice of deliberative ethos, in the provision of such goodies
as roads, more reliable power supply, sound health care and revamped
educational institutions. What they have got, instead, is a menu from
hell: a hubristic president who disdains fellow citizens but bows to
foreign leaders and interests; public officials who enrich themselves
at the expense of millions of Nigerians; the decoration of known thieves
with national honours; the empowerment of rustics and thugs, and the
parade on the corridors of power of fools heady with self-aggrandizement. It is bad enough that this bumbling bunch
has for seven years wasted the promise of a nation that has run out
of time, and now stutters on borrowed time. It is tragic enough that
the president and the kind of officials installed by his party at all
levers of governance have had seven years in which to further enfeeble
a prostrate nation. To seek to perpetuate their bankrupt legacy, and
worse by methods that are more execrable than a coup, is a price the
nation cannot afford to pay. Those championing Obasanjo are welcome
to their fiction of a president who embodies the finest attributes of
leadership. Most Nigerians are unimpressed. Mantu and co, having shed
their consciences, may strive with every fibre of their being to hoist
their toxic amendment on the citizenry. It is up to Nigerians to repudiate
this macabre imposition, to repel this patently decadent notion. Nigerians
will be sorry if they lapsed into slumber, telling ourselves that the
U.S. government and the European Union wont stand for the Mantu-led
raid on the popular will. If the New York Times is a fair gauge
of Washingtons attitude, then we must know that Obasanjo is being
marketed in the U.S. as an ally as well as bulwark against the spectre
of Islamic fundamentalism. Neither the U.S. nor the European Union,
for all their widely reported umbrage at Obasanjos wacky plan of
perpetuation, is going to act decisively to stop him. That investment
is Nigerians to make. Another monumental mistake would be for some Nigerians to view the battle that has already been joined as one to be fought by the Hausa-Fulani, or by any other section of the nation bent on wresting the presidency. Such an attitude can only play into the hands of the presidents team. They are bound to thrive when the resistance can be sundered or rendered half-hearted. Nigerians cannot afford complacency in the face of this devious plot to remake a nation into the fancies of a demagogue and his inebriant drummers.
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| Last Updated ( Wednesday, 23 April 2008 ) | |||||||||||||
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Posted by Robot| 15.03.2006 15:42