Lying in God’s name Print E-mail
Written by Okey Ndibe   
Monday, 08 September 2008
Lying in God’s name
By Okey Ndibe
Those who wangled Umaru Musa Yar’Adua into office through the backdoor constructed an elaborate myth about the man’s honesty. Mr. Yar’Adua has, it seems, undertaken to demystify himself. Since assuming office through questionable means, he has gone about the task of unmasking himself. Perhaps he is doing so in a perverse spirit of honesty.

In the early days of his “presidency,” Yar’Adua impressed some people by acknowledging that his (s)election was marred by irregularities. Some people mistook this confession as evidence of candor and honesty on his part. For some of us, it was actually a mark of an unattractive quality. Forgive me for asking, but when was the definition of honesty expanded in the dictionary or ethics to include a man who keeps stolen goods?

Besides, Mr. Yar’Adua’s ostensibly honest admission was modified by a patently false claim, namely, that he would still have emerged winner of the presidential polls with or without rigging. This was an absurd claim, for electoral observers even concluded that Yar’Adua’s handlers had to resort to hanky panky to be competitive in his home state of Katsina - where he just finished two terms as governor!

The day he was sworn in, Yar’Adua read a speech in which he committed himself to electoral reforms, promised to pursue a seven-point agenda, and pledged to be a servant-leader. Within twenty-four hours, the man had blissfully forgotten what it would take to institute real electoral reforms. He’d erased the seven-point agenda from his memory, and if servant-leader means anything concrete to him, he has yet to let Nigerians know.

Yar’Adua quickly morphed into a master-ruler. A servant-leader doesn’t leave his duty post without telling his employers or fellows where he is headed, or what he is up to. A servant-leader does not set out to deceive or mislead his people. Yet, Yar’Adua left the shores of Nigeria for more than two weeks to attend to his deteriorating health in Saudi Arabia. Instead of looking Nigerians in the face and telling them the truth, he permitted his office to issue a statement that he was off to make religious observances.

There’s no way to mitigate what transpired: Yar’Adua’s handlers lied in God’s name. And one must assume that the lie was told at his behest, or, at minimum, with his permission. Of course, his office could claim that the statement that he was gone on a minor pilgrimage is technically “true.” Perhaps he did tread on one or another of Islam’s holy sites while in Saudi Arabia. But here’s one claim the man and his image launderers can’t truthfully make: that the primary purpose of his trip was to observe the lesser hajj.

It’s bad enough to bracket God into one’s lies. It’s worse to cling desperately to such a lie long after anybody with half a brain can see through the falsity of it. And yet, Yar’Adua’s ministers and party henchmen continued to engage in a marathon of lies and deceptive gymnastics. Even after Yar’Adua’s sickness necessitated the cancellation of a state visit to Brazil, his Abuja relay team of liars maintained the fiction that he had simply extended his religious visit to Jeddah. When he missed several speculated deadlines for his return, and his fibbing team grudgingly admitted that he was receiving treatment, the lie was nevertheless allowed to stand in the way of the truth. The narrative was only slightly modulated to leave the impression that, while engaged in matters of religious solemnity, Yar’Adua had a health hiccup and was quickly seen by Saudi doctors.

Mr. Vincent Ogbulafor, the chairman who has served notice that the ruling party intends to stand astride the Nigerian carcass and gorge on its entrails for at least sixty years, delivered one of the facile lines in this sordid game of invoking God’s name in a lie. Two weeks plus into Yar’Adua’s absence from Abuja, Ogbulafor joined a small group of party chieftains who traveled to Saudi Arabia to appraise the condition of a man they alleged to be “hale and hearty.” Apparently, the visitors found new ways to renew the lease on the original deception. According to Thisday of last Saturday, September 6, Ogbulafor told the paper: “We had breakfast with the President this morning. He’s responding positively to treatment. Don’t forget he’s also a human being.”


It’s interesting that the PDP chairman would adopt such a pedantic tone. One didn’t know that some Nigerians had fallen into the error of viewing Yar’Adua as a god. But thank goodness that there’s an Ogbulafor to exercise his intellectual wizardry to guide the erring, who had carried Yar’Adua off to the Olympian height of the gods.

On a serious note, though, it’s the likes of Ogbulafor, John Odey, Ojo Maduekwe and other handlers who behaved as if Yar’Adua were of divine stature. Those of us who believed from the first day that Yar’Adua was an ailing man know that he is, like the rest of us, all too human. When we questioned the official narrative that he was deepening his faith in Saudi Arabia, instead of reviving his body, we implied that there should be no shame in admitting the obvious fact of the man’s sickness.

Perhaps, then, Yar’Adua and his cronies nursed a secret design to sell him as some divine creature. Perhaps that’s why they went to absurd lengths to sustain a manifestly false and implausible script. In recognition of his own mortal character, Yar’Adua should have instructed his publicity people to tell Nigerians the simple truth: that he was sick and was going to Saudi Arabia to seek medical treatment. To mask his medical trip as an occasion of religious pilgrimage is to pretend to be beyond sickness. If he had to lie to anybody about the reason for his Saudi trip, it should never be Nigerians. What’s the sense in lying to Nigerians who foot the bill each time he flies out for treatment?

Last Saturday Mr. Yar’Adua finally returned to Nigeria. The manner of his arrival spoke volumes about his instincts and, indeed, character. He sneaked into Abuja at 3 a.m., under the cover of darkness. After all the tension and sense of drama that built up around his absence, his reentry into the Nigerian space was anti-climactic. As I write, I don’t believe he’s made any public appearances.

Secrecy and a retreat to the shadows have become the hallmarks of the Yar’Adua style. A servant-leader would seek to relate with his people as openly as possible; Yar’Adua is a master at concealment, not communication. His mode of operation bespeaks a man who lacks the courage of his convictions. Barring a medical miracle during the trip to Saudi Arabia, one suspects that Yar’Adua is going to become even more of recluse, a man too enervated by illness and political illegitimacy to offer Nigerians the clarity of vision and vibrancy of strength they have never been fortunate to find in a leader, but desperately need.

Yar’Adua health crisis has served to deepen Nigeria’s political cum economic malaise. Nigeria can’t afford for this physically beleaguered man to remain in an ill-acquired office. Those who hold him most dear ought to sit him down and persuade him to unbind himself, and Nigeria, from this disaster-in-progress. If this would be an incentive, the National Assembly could enact a bill guaranteeing that his medical bills will continue to be picked up by Nigerians. In the event that he is not sold on this idea, one hopes that the justices of the Supreme Court would have the spine to invalidate the electoral charade that hoisted Yar’Adua on Nigerians.

The old argument that Nigeria would come to a halt if Yar’Adua weren’t there has expired. If there was a positive fall-out from Yar’Adua’s prolonged sojourn in Jeddah, it is this: that Nigeria will continue to function, and fare no worse, without Yar’Adua. I’d even suggest: fare much better!


RobotRobot is offline 
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 # 1

Lying in God’s name
By Okey Ndibe


Those who wangled Umaru Musa Yar’Adua into office ...Read the full article.

Posted by Robot| 08.09.2008 20:07

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bobbob is offline 
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 # 2

talking of recluses. perhaps abacha's refusal to leave aso rock was because of ill health. he kept his energies to secure his regime, (and a little dilly-dallying on the side). he left filling the potholes to the dogs.
umya has left filling the potholes to the dogs. he never could figure out how to go about that in the 17months. now he is going to hunker down in aso rock to resist being pushed aside.

Posted by bob| 08.09.2008 22:46

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Ochi DabariOchi Dabari is offline 
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 # 3

Nigeria is a very unfortunate entity. When we have seemingly healthy rulers, like Obasanjo, they are very active in stealing; then we are saddled with someone who is too ill to work but refuses to take a rest. For goodness sake, Yar'Adua ruled Katsina for 8 years, and should rest. He is not the only rigger in the Nigerian system, so I cannot question why he should be there on the basis of his illegitimacy. However, I do question his state of health to govern. The way he goes about it, he is forcing Nigerians to speak and write as if they are happy that a fellow human being is dying. But this is not the case; we sympathise with him in bad health, but he should please sympathise with himself and with the country, take a rest and let someone do the job. I am not sure it is Jonathan though; every time I see that one, I see someone who is just grateful to be in power - he doesn't seem like he has any clues about governance.

I don't know when we will get out of this mess. Even to free the different components of Nigeria to govern themselves, as a federation, the collection of fraudsters at Abuja will not accept that; they tie everything into a unitary state and drag it down.

ochi (going back into my shell).

Posted by Ochi Dabari| 09.09.2008 00:30

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AwakeNigeriaAwakeNigeria is offline 
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 # 4

"The likes of Ogbulafor, John Odey, Ojo Maduekwe and other handlers" are doing their jobs. To them, that is it! So, why are we troubled? Talk of 'white lies'! How many people have had the courage to resist telling 'white lies' for their employers? It is the ability to distinguish between honour and convenience/expediency that should concern us in Nigeria. After all said and done, these government officials you have mentioned, and those who played minor roles by their reticence, passive/active action/inaction (like Mr. Jonathan Goodluck, the VP, Mr. Olusegun Adeniyi, etc) are people from among us with wives, children and relatives who will come back to us to tell their version of how they fare through their biographies later in life. Remember Kingibe?

The clock of history is ticking. Posterity is today. It is not how far but how well. I have said my own!

Posted by AwakeNigeria| 09.09.2008 04:59

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allaccessallaccess is offline 
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 # 5

why are you all blaming UMYA?

He is only being a black African. In many civilized countries a politician will resign to tend to his family or poor health, not in Africa. Die in power like Mugabe and Abacha.

In saying that, shows the weakness of black Africans that we cannot even demonstrate rigorously to remove a man within half an inch of his life.

Sad, Africans are very shameful and sad weaklings

Posted by allaccess| 09.09.2008 05:14

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AwakeNigeriaAwakeNigeria is offline 
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 # 6

allaccess comments:
"He is only being a black African. In many civilized countries a politician will resign to tend to his family or poor health, not in Africa. Die in power like Mugabe and Abacha.

In saying that, shows the weakness of black Africans that we cannot even demonstrate rigorously to remove a man within half an inch of his life.

Sad, Africans are very shameful and sad weaklings"


You hit the nail on the head. Preach it louder!

However, nothing lasts forever. Africans' time will come.

Posted by AwakeNigeria| 09.09.2008 05:30

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Mikky jagaMikky jaga is offline 
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 # 7

Lying in God’s name is the very reason Nigeria is where it is today.

The moire religious we are, the more corrupt the country becomes.

Shame

Posted by Mikky jaga| 09.09.2008 06:17

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TigerTiger is offline 
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 # 8

Okey Ndibe,

I can only thank you for your candour in coming out with this article. i have a sneaky feeling that "those in power" in Nigeria sometimes glance through this website and may be too busy (looting and stealing, of course) to exercise the patience to go through your short and straight forward post. And what with having to care for a chronically sick President! Hence i decided to summarise the key points in your write-up for their quick digestion. Hopefully, it would be passed on to the ailing President.

"Those who wangled Umaru Musa Yar’Adua into office through the backdoor constructed an elaborate myth about the man’s honesty".

I pity the man Yar'adua, for his failing health. As a human being, i can feel for him. But the man Yar'adua has never been honest. True, he made some feeble claim to jonest through his much orchestrated pronouncements, but his actions to date have never backed this up.
1. Yar'adua is dishonest in the first instance by accepting to be the President of Nigeria, despite knowing his poor state of health. This is a position that requires energy and sound health which he knew he could not provide. The people of Katsina were short-changed during his years with them. He should not have carried this to the whole federation.
2. Like Okey Ndibe said, he also gladly accepted the exalted post of President on a very false and dishonest paltform - rigged elections.
3. Thirdly, knowing fully well that he is sick, he kept on lying to the Nigerian public.
4. Fourthly, he refused to be honest and open up toi the Nigerian people on the nature of his illness.
5. Fifth, he dishonestly contnued to hold on to the post, knowing fully well that he lacked the energy, health and capacity to carry out the full functions of the post.
6. Sixth, he dishonestly REFUSED to resign, even in the presence of terribly poor health and incapacity.

We have been reading of attempts by the Northern hegemony to retain power at costs in the unlikely events that Yar'adua resigns or dies in office. We all know their sustained delusion of being born to rule, even with the present chaos and obvious instability occassioned by their many decades of misrule.

The siidon look policy of late Bola Ige will not work this time around. The Nigerian intelligentsia has served notice of their intention to dismantle this shameful hold on power. They refused to take heed. The oppressed too are actively sustaining the struggle (MENDS, etc) and they still want to hold on to power. The time is overdue for the much awaited revolution. Who would spearhead it? How do we move on? It would be a shame if power leaves Yar'adua for another of the shameless oligarchy.

Posted by Tiger| 09.09.2008 06:52

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TempestTempest is offline 
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 # 9


According to Thisday of last Saturday, September 6, Ogbulafor told the paper: “We had breakfast with the President this morning. He’s responding positively to treatment. Don’t forget he’s also a human being.”



Is the man not suppossed to have been fasting?

Posted by Tempest| 09.09.2008 08:08

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bobokitebobokite is offline 
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 # 10


=Tempest;4295095604>Is the man not suppossed to have been fasting?



Sick man dey fast? Religion no reach that one abeg.

Posted by bobokite| 09.09.2008 08:27

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