Free Ralph Uwazurike Now Print E-mail
Written by Okey Ndibe   
Monday, 25 June 2007

Free Ralph Uwazurike Now

By Okey Ndibe 

Some months ago, a reporter from Radio French International called to interview me. His question was what did I think about the detention of two major espousers of separatism, Ralph Uwazurike of the Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of Biafra and Asari Dokubo, a key figure in the Niger Delta struggle. I responded that the wrong persons were in the dock.  If anybody deserved to be held responsible for the rise of separatist sentiments in the country, that person, I suggested, was then President Olusegun Obasanjo. 

Today I hold that view with even greater conviction.  

On June 14, a measure of justice was served when Asari Dokubo was released on bail. He returned to Port Harcourt to a welcome worthy of a hero. He has since been garlanded with two chieftaincy titles and feted wherever he’s gone in the Niger Delta. Deplore or like him, Asari Dokubo is undeniably popular. His advocacy, if not his method, resonates in his home base and even beyond. His argument, simply, is that the people of the oil-rich Niger Delta deserve greater control of the resource. He and other militant elements in the area have combined armed attacks with a savvy propaganda campaign to give teeth to that demand. Their war has been unconventional in the main, but it has got the attention of the federal government, the oil companies and the international media.  

Uwazurike and MASSOB also enjoy great popularity among the Igbo. On at least two occasions, MASSOB demonstrated its reach and the appeal of its mission by shutting down most economic activities in the southeast. The movement proved that, when it spoke, the people listened and hearkened.  

Even though the word Biafra evokes images of bloodbath, MASSOB officially disavows violence. Even so, Obasanjo—who has promoted the fiction of being the squelcher of Biafra—saw fit to resort to violence towards MASSOB. Last year, Nigerian soldiers carried out an orgy of decimation in the name of engaging MASSOB operatives. While the assault has gone largely unreported in the Nigerian press, the horrific images of slain civilians were widely circulated on the Internet.  

Obasanjo’s regime was not wholly content to savage defenseless and unarmed civilians. It picked up Uwazurike on charges that remain nebulous. The government seemed persuaded by the logic that Uwazurike’s detention would suffice to incapacitate MASSOB. This has proved a miscalculation. Even with their leader out of commission, the organization retains a large measure of populist appeal.  

It baffles me that Uwazurike still languishes in detention. His continued incarceration is the equivalent of a crime perpetrated by the state. A state that must bring a man like Uwazurike brutally to heel is not worth the paper in which its constitution is written. What kind of polity is Nigeria when it’s so rankled by separatist rhetoric it feels compelled to crush the likes of Asari Dokubo and Uwazurike?  

{mosgoogle}Obasanjo’s violent response to activists like Uwazurike was at once unintelligent and perversely predictable. That policy was shortsighted, hypocritical and counterproductive. It ought to be abandoned.  

Asari Dokubo is a product of the economic injustices meted out on those whose lives have been devastated by Nigeria’s dependence on petrodollars. He is one of the young men whose lives have been deformed by the intersection of corporate arrogance on the part of oil companies and the greed as well as corruption of Nigeria’s small ruling elite. Asari Dokubo would have had little or no political profile if the Niger Delta had not been turned into a terrain of misery, hopelessness and bleakness. If those seduced by his message had not been reduced to destitution, they certainly would not have had use for him.  

But those who bear the brunt of oil exploration saw Obasanjo play Santa Claus with the resource beneath their feet—or underneath their waters. They watched, outraged, as oil blocks were handed out to the president’s cronies, domestic and foreign. Their soil sodden with crude and their marines coated with films of oil, they have witnessed the destruction of their means of livelihood. Their pauperization bears a direct relationship with the obscene enrichment of a few. They have no hospitals, but they knew that top government officials routinely flew to Europe or North America for medical check-ups. They have no jobs, but they read about the former president’s appetite for newer private jets and swankier helicopters. Being no fools, they recognized an incongruity in their lives. They reckoned that their misfortune was sired by the (unearned) fortune of Obasanjo’s small circle of favorites. That’s why many in the Niger Delta, including illiterates, are able to comprehend the language of resource control. That’s why Asari Dokubo was able to stir something within them.   

Ditto for Uwazurike. If his call for the resurrection of Biafra has found an attentive audience, it is precisely because the Nigerian state has shirked its responsibility for meeting its minimum obligations. The people of the southeast looked at the ghastly shape of their roads, roads that the federal government should long have repaired. They felt a deep disgust. They were aware of Obasanjo’s coziness with bad men whose patent was to make the lives of their fellows brutish, nasty and short, and they dreamed of a better place.  

They watched helplessly as hired thugs traversed the state in scores of trucks and for three days scorched government property. They saw that the police stood on the sidelines, like cheerleaders, as the arsonists carried on their fiery business. They knew those who conceived and unleashed the mayhem wished to trigger widespread violence. They knew that the intent was to create enough chaos to enable the president to declare a state of emergence. They saw that nobody, not a single criminal or sponsor, was ever brought to trial to answer for this impunity. They felt certain that the president—a man sworn to the maintenance of law and order within the polity—was complicit in this cruel visitation.  

Should anybody be surprised that such a people responded to Uwazurike’s call to renounce a nation founded on callousness and to plant its dreams in a different garden? Should a man like Uwazurike be crucified merely for denouncing a nation that hands him a stone when he asks for bread, gives him a viper when he pleads for fish?   

Last week, the Action Congress added its voice to the growing number of calls for Uwazurike’s release from detention. As far as I am concerned, a regime that epitomized lawlessness had no moral authority to arrest Uwazurike in the first place. He is, above all, a victim of human rights abuse, one of the many who suffered under the Obasanjo dispensation.  

Asari Dokubo has accused Obasanjo of “high-scale corruption” and human rights violations. He has also vowed to ensure that the ex-president is brought to trial. You won’t find too many Nigerians who disagree with Dokubo’s characterization. It’s been less than a month since Obasanjo left office, but already the facile propaganda of his so-called great reformist achievements appears spent.  

Not even Obasanjo's most shameless promoters has had the temerity to proclaim him “founder of modern Nigeria.” Instead, the final word on his legacy may belong to men like Asari Dokubo and Uwazurike. “Known criminals were in his government,” Dokubo stated last week. “Known criminals were his closest associates. I have made a contract with my God that I will fight General Obasanjo until he is brought to justice.” I can almost hear Uwazurike exclaiming “Amen to that!”




RobotRobot is offline 
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 # 1

var sbtitle2982=encodeURIComponent(Free Ralph ...Read the full article.

Posted by Robot| 25.06.2007 10:39

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katampekatampe is offline 
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Asari Dokubo is a product of the economic injustices meted out on those whose lives have been devastated by Nigeria’s dependence on petrodollars. He is one of the young men whose lives have been deformed by the intersection of corporate arrogance on the part of oil companies and the greed as well as corruption of Nigeria’s small ruling elite. Asari Dokubo would have had little or no political profile if the Niger Delta had not been turned into a terrain of misery, hopelessness and bleakness. If those seduced by his message had not been reduced to destitution, they certainly would not have had use for him.



The excerpted part of your essay makes sense, Ndibe. But Like Thomas Friedman's first law petropolitics posits - price of oil and the quality of freedom travel in opposite directions. It explains the reason why as the price of oil increases democracy suffers.

It is at the core of our national problem - it is called petrotyranny. It is what afflicts us nationwide irrespective of ethnicity or geographic region. It is what makes contractors and dealers of our political leaders whether Igbo, Yoruba or Hausa/ Fulani. Until we learn we don't need oil to get ahead and develop we will continue to have problems.

Ralph Uwazurike and Asari Dokubo are names for the issues - petrotyranny and dutch disease.

Posted by katampe| 25.06.2007 11:00

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nigeria we hail thee!nigeria we hail thee! is offline 
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I hope the powers that be will listen.

Posted by nigeria we hail thee!| 25.06.2007 11:34

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gwobezentashigwobezentashi is offline 
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 # 4

Try grabbing foreign hostages. The powers that are will listen better.

Posted by gwobezentashi| 25.06.2007 11:39

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tonsoyotonsoyo is offline 
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 # 5

Honestly, it is becoming ridiculous, there is no acceptable reason for continuing detention of this guy. It is grossly unfair, I think we should begin to make louder noises.

Although I disagree with many of the premises that Okey Ndibe based his own reasoning.

Posted by tonsoyo| 25.06.2007 12:43

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ebasainebasain is offline 
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 # 6

The militants are doing their best by kidnapping foreign oil workers. The Niger-delta

struggle, and indeeed, the whole struggle of the average Nigerian is gaining

international media attention. But why has little changed in Nigeria? It's very simple.

The militants have failed to kidnap the politicians and their surragates! Can you imagine

what will happen if scores of Senators and Ministers were to be kidnapped? Right now

the politicians are so comfortable and are even demanding more wardrobe allownance!

Until we strike the tyranny where it hurts the most, nothing will change in Nigeria. Come

2011, the electoral fraud of 2007 will look like a child's play. And the U.S governemt

will continue to insist on working with AGP, for Any Government in Power! Don't you

think we are doomed!?

Posted by ebasain| 25.06.2007 12:49

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Dr. S AdetunjiDr. S Adetunji is offline 
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=ebasain;186721>The militants are doing their best by kidnapping foreign oil workers. The Niger-delta

struggle, and indeeed, the whole struggle of the average Nigerian is gaining

international media attention. But why has little changed in Nigeria? It's very simple.

The militants have failed to kidnap the politicians and their surragates! Can you imagine

what will happen if scores of Senators and Ministers were to be kidnapped? Right now

the politicians are so comfortable and are even demanding more wardrobe allownance!

Until we strike the tyranny where it hurts the most, nothing will change in Nigeria. Come

2011, the electoral fraud of 2007 will look like a child's play. And the U.S governemt

will continue to insist on working with AGP, for Any Government in Power! Don't you

think we are doomed!?




Sure sound logical. If they must kidnap people, I think Yaradua and Goodluck seem a better option.:confused:

Posted by Dr. S Adetunji| 25.06.2007 12:56

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katampekatampe is offline 
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"Very often in petrolist states, not only do all politics revolve around who controls the oil tap, but the public develops a distorted notion of what development is all about. If they are poor and the leaders are rich, it is not because their country has failed to promote education, innovation, rule of law and entrepreneurship. It is because someone is getting the oil money and they are not. People start to think that, to get rich, all they have to do is stop those who are stealing the country's oil."




The First Law of Petropolitics

By: THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN - For The North County Times

When I heard the president of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, declare that the Holocaust was a "myth," I couldn't help asking myself: "I wonder if the president of Iran would be talking this way if the price of oil were $20 a barrel today rather than $60 a barrel."

When I heard Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez telling British Prime Minister Tony Blair to "go right to hell" and telling his supporters that the U.S.-sponsored Free Trade Area of the Americas "can go to hell," too, I couldn't help saying to myself, "I wonder if the president of Venezuela would be saying all these things if the price of oil today were $20 a barrel rather than $60 a barrel, and his country had to make a living by empowering its own entrepreneurs, not just drilling wells."

As I followed events in the Persian Gulf during the past few years, I noticed that the first Arab Gulf state to hold a free and fair election, in which women could run and vote, and the first Arab Gulf state to undertake a total overhaul of its labor laws to make its own people more employable and less dependent on imported labor, was Bahrain. Bahrain happened to be the first Arab Gulf state expected to run out of oil. I couldn't help asking myself: "Could that all just be a coincidence?

The more I pondered these questions, the more it seemed obvious to me that there must be a correlation ---- a literal correlation that could be measured and graphed ---- between the price of oil and the pace, scope and sustainability of political freedoms and economic reforms in certain countries.

I would be the first to acknowledge that this is not a scientific lab experiment, because the rise and fall of economic and political freedom in a society can never be perfectly quantifiable or interchangeable. But I think there is value in trying to demonstrate this very real correlation between the price of oil and the pace of freedom, even with its imperfections.

The First Law of Petropolitics posits the following: The price of oil and the pace of freedom always move in opposite directions in oil-rich petrolist states. According to the First Law of Petropolitics, the higher the average global crude oil price rises, the more free speech, free press, free and fair elections, an independent judiciary, the rule of law and independent political parties are eroded. And these negative trends are reinforced by the fact that the higher the price goes, the less petrolist leaders are sensitive to what the world thinks or says about them.

I would define petrolist states as states that are both dependent on oil production for the bulk of their exports or gross domestic product and have weak state institutions or outright authoritarian governments. High on my list of petrolist states would be Azerbaijan, Angola, Chad, Egypt, Equatorial Guinea, Iran, Kazakhstan, Nigeria, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Uzbekistan and Venezuela.

To be sure, professional economists have, for a long time, pointed out in general the negative economic and political impacts that an abundance of natural resources can have on a country. This phenomenon has been variously diagnosed as "Dutch Disease" or the "resource curse." Dutch Disease refers to the process of deindustrialization that can result from a sudden natural resource windfall. The term was coined in the Netherlands in the 1960s, after it discovered huge deposits of natural gas.

What happens in countries with Dutch Disease is that the value of their currency rises, thanks to the sudden influx of cash from oil, gold, gas, diamonds or some other natural resource discovery. That then makes the country's manufactured exports uncompetitive and its imports very cheap. The citizens, flush with cash, start importing like crazy, the domestic industrial sector gets wiped out and, presto, you have deindustrialization.

Beyond these general theories, some political scientists have explored how an abundance of oil wealth, in particular, can reverse or erode democratizing trends. One of the most trenchant analyses that I have come across is the work of UCLA political scientist Michael L. Ross.

Using a statistical analysis from 113 states between 1971 and 1997, Ross concluded that a state's "reliance on either oil or mineral exports tends to make it less democratic; that this effect is not caused by other types of primary exports; that it is not limited to the Arabian Peninsula, to the Middle East, or sub-Saharan Africa; and that it is not limited to small states."

First, Ross argues, there is the "taxation effect." Oil-rich governments tend to use their revenues to "relieve social pressures that might otherwise lead to demands for greater accountability" from, or representation in, the governing authority. Oil-backed regimes that do not have to tax their people in order to survive also do not have to listen to their people or represent their wishes.

The second mechanism, argues Ross, is the "spending effect." Oil wealth leads to greater patronage spending, which in turn dampens pressures for democratization. The third mechanism he cites is the "group formation effect." When oil revenues provide an authoritarian state with a cash windfall, the government can use its newfound wealth to prevent independent social groups ---- precisely those most inclined to demand political rights ---- from forming. In addition, he argues, an overabundance of oil revenues can create a "repression effect," because it allows governments to spend excessively on police, internal security and intelligence forces that can be used to choke democratic movements.

Finally, Ross sees a "modernization effect" at work. A massive influx of oil wealth can diminish social pressures for occupational specialization, urbanization and the securing of higher levels of education ---- trends that normally accompany broad economic development and that also produce a public that is more articulate, better able to organize, bargain and communicate, and endowed with economic power centers of its own.

What I am arguing in positing the First Law of Petropolitics is not only that an overdependence on crude oil can be a curse in general but also that one can actually correlate rises and falls in the price of oil with rises and falls in the pace of freedom in petrolist countries.

An Axis of Oil?

Since 9/11, oil prices have structurally shifted from the $20-$40 range to the $40-$60 range. Part of this move has to do with a general sense of insecurity in global oil markets due to violence in Iraq, Nigeria, Indonesia and Sudan, but even more appears to be the result of what I call the "flattening" of the world and the rapid influx into the global marketplace of 3 billion new consumers, from China, Brazil, India and the former Soviet Empire, all dreaming of a house, a car, a microwave and a refrigerator. Without a dramatic move toward conservation in the West, or the discovery of an alternative to fossil fuels, we are going to be in this $40-to-$60 range, or higher, for the foreseeable future.

Politically, that will mean that a whole group of petrolist states ---- with weak institutions or outright authoritarian governments ---- will likely experience an erosion of freedoms and an increase in corruption and autocratic, antidemocratic behaviors.

Consider the drama now unfolding in Nigeria. Nigeria has a term limit for its presidents ---- two four-year terms. President Olusegun Obasanjo came to office in 1999, after a period of military rule, and was then reelected by a popular vote in 2003. When he took over from the generals in 1999, Obasanjo made headlines by investigating human rights abuses by the Nigerian military, releasing political prisoners and even making a real attempt to root out corruption. That was when oil was around $25 a barrel.

Today, with oil at $60 a barrel, Obasanjo is trying to persuade the Nigerian legislature to amend the constitution to allow him to serve a third term. A Nigerian opposition leader in the House of Representatives, Wunmi Bewaji, has alleged that bribes of $1 million were being offered to lawmakers who would vote to extend Obasanjo's tenure.

Very often in petrolist states, not only do all politics revolve around who controls the oil tap, but the public develops a distorted notion of what development is all about. If they are poor and the leaders are rich, it is not because their country has failed to promote education, innovation, rule of law and entrepreneurship. It is because someone is getting the oil money and they are not. People start to think that, to get rich, all they have to do is stop those who are stealing the country's oil.

Geology trumps ideology

With all due respect to Ronald Reagan, I do not believe he brought down the Soviet Union. There were obviously many factors, but the collapse in global oil prices around the late 1980s and early 1990s surely played a key role. And lower oil prices also surely helped tilt the post-Communist Boris Yeltsin government toward more openness to the outside world and more sensitivity to the legal structures demanded by global investors.

Think about the difference between Russian President Vladimir Putin when oil was in the $20-$40 range and now, when it is $40-$60. President Bush said after their first meeting in 2001 that he had looked into Putin's "soul" and saw in there a man he could trust.

If Bush looked into Putin's soul today, it would look very black down there, black as oil. He would see that Putin has used his oil windfall to swallow (nationalize) the huge Russian oil company, Gazprom, various newspapers and television stations, and all sorts of other Russian businesses and once independent institutions.

Although we cannot affect the supply of oil in any country, we can affect the global price of oil by altering the amounts and types of energy we consume. When I say "we," I mean the United States in particular, which consumes about 25 percent of the world's energy, and the oil-importing countries in general.

Thinking about how to alter our energy consumption patterns to bring down the price of oil is no longer simply a hobby for high-minded environmentalists. It is now a national security imperative.

Therefore, any American democracy-promotion strategy that does not also include a credible and sustainable strategy for finding alternatives to oil and bringing down the price of crude is utterly meaningless and doomed to fail. Today, no matter where you are on the foreign-policy spectrum, you have to think like a Geo-Green. You cannot be either an effective foreign-policy realist or an effective democracy-promoting idealist without also being an effective energy environmentalist.

Thomas L. Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times and author of, most recently, "The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-First Century" (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2005). For more articles from Foreign Policy magazine, visit the Web site at www.foreignpolicy.com.

Posted by katampe| 25.06.2007 13:00

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tonsoyotonsoyo is offline 
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Katampe, Good job, petrol politics stinks to high heavens. This is why I think Ghana is in trouble when I learnt that they discovered oil.

I just wish thay the cursed thing dries up under our soils, so that our leaders can start to use their brains and not just effortless petro-dollars for cash and carry deals.

Posted by tonsoyo| 25.06.2007 13:06

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I Love NigeriaI Love Nigeria is offline 
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Thomas L. Friedman should have included the winks and nods offered by every American administration to undemocratic and unprogressive leaders and countries.... so long as such leaders and countries cooperate with American policies and full-throttle oil supplies.

Petrolist and petrolpolitics does have its internal and external factors.

America is best "friends" with Saudi Arabia and Kuwait... America should demand and insist on elections and reform for gender equality in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iran, Iraq etc

But so far, we only can observe a hot-pursuit of President Chavez of Venezuela and President Ahamanidajad of Iran... because of policy disagreements with America... as opposed to disagreements arising from insisting on political and economic or human rights reforms for the benefits of Venezuelans and Iranians etc

No permanent friends, only permanent interests abi?

Posted by I Love Nigeria| 25.06.2007 13:32

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