14

Apr

2006

The politics of personality PDF Print E-mail
By Reuben Abati
14 April 2006

THE reduction of Nigerian politics to the whims and caprices of individuals as well as personality differences at various moments in history, has proven to be one of the major stumbling blocks to the progress and development of Nigeria. It is the reason why personality clashes in the public arena ought to be carefully managed and contained with a sense of responsibility by those who are committed to the common good and by all persons who believe in the idea of Nigeria. The substance of personality clashes in Nigerian politics is linked to the desperation for power, greed, ego and an unconscionable discounting of moral values. Those who get involved in such fights are driven by a sense of superiority - of their own position, logic and worldview.

We have had since 1960, quite a few of such conflicts which could have produced different results, if the right emphasis had been placed on reason rather than passion, and if the supporters of the principal gladiators had demonstrated less opportunism. The role of partisan cheer-leaders, occupying the ringside and fuelling the fire of political differences has proven critical, for in due course, a minor disagreement is blown out of proportion, myths are circulated across the battle line, the principal persons are held hostage to passion by their so-called supporters and so much damage is done.

These supporters who are never in short supply in our environment are almost always agents and defenders of their own ambitions, with a sharp eye on possible gains. The more refined supporters who are usually in the minority, enter the battle for reasons of principle and idealism. But in Nigerian politics, the complex factors of ethnicity and religion have also further complicated the crisis of leadership competition. Whatever may be the complexion of the confrontation, what is projected is not the inevitability of conflict as a given fact of human existence, but the failure of Nigerian politicians to manage and resolve conflicts and their "fight-to-finish" mentality. What is seen is not the place of conflict in a democracy but the violent temper of Nigerian affairs.

It should perhaps not be surprising therefore, that the politics of the coming elections of 2007 has been reduced to that of leadership competition. The struggle for power is the strongest, and meanest impulse for human action. It can result in growth; it can produce tension and stasis as well. The fear that gnaws at the heart of the nation at the moment is the long-term effect of the polarisation of political groups along private lines, with the personal factor dominating and alienating larger ideological interests, with the result that the political landscape is now being dominated by persons who are beginning to look and sound like warlords. The language of political figures has become shrill, if not yet completely violent; what we see is the politics of personality.

Differences between General Yakubu Gowon and Lt. Col Odimegwu Ojukwu (as he then was) helped to accelerate the disembowelling of the Nigerian state in the 1967-70 civil war. Both men had tried the option of dialogue; an agreement was reached in Aburi, which was peremptorily abandoned by the Nigerian Government but throughout individual egos blocked the communication line across the battle lines that had been drawn. Ojukwu treated Gowon condescendingly. He never hid the fact that he considered him socially and intellectually inferior. Could Gowon and Ojukwu have saved the situation? Before then, the now legendary carpet crossing incident in the Western House of Assembly in 1952, is yet another instructive example of how two persons unable to resolve their differences can throw a large community into difficult circumstances. This incident deepened the existing rivalry between the leader of the Yoruba, Chief Obafemi Awolowo and Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, differences that were easily absorbed by their followers, and which till date remain part of the sub-text of the subtle intricacies of Igbo-Yoruba relations in Nigerian politics. The rivalry between Awo and Zik could be traced even farther back to the factional and ethnic wrangling in the Nigerian Youth Movement between 1937 and 1941.

For the rest of their lives, Awo and Zik treated each other with great courtesy but they were never friends. Awo's followers treated Zik and his supporters with suspicion, and for the opposite group, the contempt was mutual. The educated Yoruba elite who felt uncomfortable with Awo's politics found an easy way of asserting themselves and advertised their difference by joining Zik's political group. It is safe to conclude that if Awo and Zik had worked together, the course of Nigerian history could have been different. The same can be said of Chief Obafemi Awolowo and Chief S.L.A. Akintola. For more than 40 years, the feud between these two great Yoruba sons determined the colour of Yoruba politics. And yet both men had extra-ordinary talents. While they worked together, Western Nigeria reaped enormous benefits.

The quarrel between them not only marred Yoruba politics, it facilitated the crisis that brought the First Republic to a sad end. At the personal level, it divided their individual families and associates into camps of passion. The two families may have moved on with their individual lives but two key issues inherited from the Awo/Akintola crisis remain eternally relevant in Nigerian politics: should a Yoruba party insist on ethnic and ideological homogeneity as a basis for political affiliation or should Yoruba politics be determined by expediency, and the need to share power at the centre by all means? In the Second Republic, the feud between Chief Adekunle Ajasin and his Deputy and later political opponent, Akin Omoboriowo resulted in such conflagration that brought the Second Republic to a sudden halt. Dare Babarinsa has already described how that singular event turned not just Ondo State but the entire country into a House of War, with fatal consequences. In 1993, one of the reasons proffered for the annulment of the Presidential election won by the late Chief MKO Abiola, was that certain military officers, apart from General Ibrahim Babangida, did not like MKO's face. Because some officers did not want Abiola as President, the entire country was in turmoil for close to seven years. If Abiola had been allowed to claim his mandate, the course of recent Nigerian history will certainly have been different.

Today, in Anambra and Oyo States, this politics of personality has also proven to be costly. Nigerian leaders owe themselves a duty to learn from history. The history of Nigerian politics and its pitfalls is fairly recent. No man who is without a sense of history should be allowed to hold a position of authority in the public space. Such men are dangerous both to history and to society. They will provide the wrong example for their followers; they will inspire a devaluation of politics. Nigerian politics ought to be driven by higher moral codes, the absence of which is responsible for the elevation of the politics of personality into the central ingredient of the public policy process.

These thoughts bear special resonance in the light of the present feud between President Olusegun Obasanjo and his Deputy, Atiku Abubakar. The President has not uttered a word, in response to the public attack on his person, and his government by his own Vice-President. But his associates have more than spoken for him. And they are doing so, with so much venom and spite. When the Vice President visited Lagos last weekend, a rented crowd of party supporters laid siege on his Ikoyi house. They booed him, called him names and asked him to resign his position as Vice President. They also accosted him at the Presidential wing of the Murtala Mohammed Airport where they repeated the offensive.

The protesters breached national security, violated airport regulations and generally conducted themselves in a riotous manner in the open. Neither the SSS nor the Police deemed it necessary to disperse them for posing a threat to public order. Their leader and spokesman, Muyiwa Collins has been boasting that whenever Atiku shows up in Lagos again, he will receive the same treatment. He has not been invited by the SSS for issuing such a threat, and for leading an illegal march on the airport. The security agents who a week earlier, had stopped a meeting of anti-Third Term politicians in Abuja on the ground that no police permit had been given for the meeting found no cause to ask the pro-Obasanjo group that abused Atiku, and took over the airport, for a police permit. Should a pro-Atiku group decide to treat the President in a similar fashion now, or in the future, where would that leave us? Already, a pro-Atiku group has described the incident as "an attack on the North". It has given hints of "possible retaliation."

The President and his Deputy owe us the responsibility of managing their personal differences as statesmen. We recommend to them, these immortal words penned by Chief Obafemi Awolowo in his Thoughts on Nigerian Constitution (1966):

"...good leadership involves self-conquest, and self-conquest is attainable only by cultivating as a first step, what some applied psychologists have termed the regime of mental magnitude."

Obasanjo/Atiku rivalry should not become the main issue in Nigerian politics. Both men are distracting our attention with endless noise emanating from the Presidency and the PDP, conveying the impression of a breakdown of order at the top. Atiku may not realise his ambition of succeeding his boss. And his boss may not get the Third Term that is causing so much tension. But whatever the future holds for both men, they owe Nigerians a debt of gratitude for the opportunities that they have enjoyed in the past seven years. With both parties having made their positions clear, can we now have some decorum on all sides, please?



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RobotRobot is offline

 # 1 | 14.04.2006 02:02

THE reduction of Nigerian politics to the whims and caprices of individuals as we...Read the full article.

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DoubleWahalaDoubleWahala is offline

 # 2 | 14.04.2006 02:53

This is a beautiful article (as usual) by Abati. However, the main thrust of his arguement was somewhat marred by his decision, towards the end of the article, to adopt a quotation from the great Awo, regarding leadership skills.
This is because he had earlier shown that the same Awo he later quoted from was also suceptible to personality clashes.

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RootRoot is online

 # 3 | 14.04.2006 07:12


=DoubleWahala>This is a beautiful article (as usual) by Abati. However, the main thrust of his arguement was somewhat marred by his decision, towards the end of the article, to adopt a quotation from the great Awo, regarding leadership skills.
This is because he had earlier shown that the same Awo he later quoted from was also suceptible to personality clashes.



Double Wahala i grab your point(Abati sort of contradicted himself in the article) maybe abati for don quote hitler :) lol or perhaps Abraham-lincoln :(
On a more serious note though i feel that all humans are susceptible to personality clashes, so Abati really had no escape, the guy had no option.

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AbraxasAbraxas is offline

 # 4 | 14.04.2006 08:02

Hi, folks!

Ab initio, Nigerian political behaviour was inadvertently anchored on the ego battles of rather myopic practicing indigenous politicians, with the full knowledge, and tactic nudging of the then British colonial administration.

With the benefit of hindsight, Nigeria’s so-called founding fathers (i.e. Engineer Herbert Macaulay, Owelle (Dr.) Sir Nnamdi Benjamin Azikiwe (GCBE; GCFR), Sardauna (Alhaji) Sir Ahmadu Bello (KBE), and Chief (Barrister) Obafemi Jeremiah Awolowo (SAN; GCFR)) were only simply indulging themselves in ego games, which have, over the decades, become the template on which political behaviour seems to have been standardised for subsequent generations of an unsuspecting, naïve, and politically underdeveloped Nigerian citizenry.

Thanks to the nuisance value of some 30 years of military-induced arrested development, and truncated political evolution of which, General (Dr.) Yakubu Gowon (GCFR), General (Chief) Olusegun (Baba 3rd Term) Okikiolakan Obasanjo (GCFR), Major General (Alhaji) Mohammadu (WAI) Buhari (GCFR), General (Mallam) Ibrahim (Maradona) Badamasi Babangida (GCFR), and General (Mallam) Abdulsalami Alhaji Abubakar (GCFR) are all LIVING key culprits.

In order to counter the impact of over half a century of very dangerous and simply bad political precedence, it may be unavoidable to look for Nigeria’s sustainable and radical departure from the stifling effects of yesteryears, by looking for a brand new breed of change agents from a COMPLETELY DIFFERENT GENERATION OF NIGERIANS: The Under-50s!

That is the only meaningful and workable solution to the disaster of political ego tripping that is hurting Nigeria, and killing, by incremental instalment, the enthusiasm of Nigerians for their motherland, Nigeria.

Muchas gracias.

Don Juan Carlos ABRAXAS (III)

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bambobambo is offline

 # 5 | 14.04.2006 08:46

Abraxas talks about the under 50s, but correct me if, I'm wrong u seem to be affected by the ego tripping attitude judging from all ur postings on the NVS and u're under 50. Also judging by the " do u know who I am " attitude common in Nigeria irrespective of the age group, I think it is a general problem.

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NosaNosa is online

 # 6 | 14.04.2006 12:19

Here we go again.....

Dr. Abati has written a very wonderful article here....something that should stand the test of time as a great food for thought.....something we should all meditate over. But what do we make of some of the responses so far.....

The thrust of Abati's article is that great leaders have their personality issues....what he probably forgot to state was that, this is not strictly a Nigerian problem because it's all over the global community. In fact, at one time in the history of America, a whole American president could no longer hide the personality problem between him and his VP. He made a public declaration that a Vice President was just what his title meant....a vice!

So, the problem of personality ego is common with human nature but when it comes to the Nigerian setting, as Abati tried to put across, the greater problem lies with the followership. While the quarrel between two "big" men is often limited to a quiet malice, the "little" guys that support them will start to kill each other. And even when the "big" men die and their respective families go on with their lives.....the many "little" people who are their supporters will continue to sustain the mutual animosity, hatred and killing.

These are amply represented by the current situations in our nation: Part I : Zik (Igbo) versus Awo (Yoruba); Part II: Gowon (Hausa/Fulani/Middle Belt) versus Ojukwu (Igbo); Part III: Bello/Gowon/Shagari/IBB (North) versus Zik/Awo (South).

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busangabusanga is offline

 # 7 | 14.04.2006 13:13


=Abraxas>Hi, folks!

Ab initio, Nigerian political behaviour was inadvertently anchored on the ego battles of rather myopic practicing indigenous politicians, with the full knowledge, and tactic nudging of the then British colonial administration.

With the benefit of hindsight, Nigeria’s so-called founding fathers (i.e. Engineer Herbert Macaulay, Owelle (Dr.) Sir Nnamdi Benjamin Azikiwe (GCBE; GCFR), Sardauna (Alhaji) Sir Ahmadu Bello (KBE), and Chief (Barrister) Obafemi Jeremiah Awolowo (SAN; GCFR)) were only simply indulging themselves in ego games, which have, over the decades, become the template on which political behaviour seems to have been standardised for subsequent generations of an unsuspecting, naïve, and politically underdeveloped Nigerian citizenry.

Thanks to the nuisance value of some 30 years of military-induced arrested development, and truncated political evolution of which, General (Dr.) Yakubu Gowon (GCFR), General (Chief) Olusegun (Baba 3rd Term) Okikiolakan Obasanjo (GCFR), Major General (Alhaji) Mohammadu (WAI) Buhari (GCFR), General (Mallam) Ibrahim (Maradona) Badamasi Babangida (GCFR), and General (Mallam) Abdulsalami Alhaji Abubakar (GCFR) are all LIVING key culprits.

In order to counter the impact of over half a century of very dangerous and simply bad political precedence, it may be unavoidable to look for Nigeria’s sustainable and radical departure from the stifling effects of yesteryears, by looking for a brand new breed of change agents from a COMPLETELY DIFFERENT GENERATION OF NIGERIANS: The Under-50s!
That is the only meaningful and workable solution to the disaster of political ego tripping that is hurting Nigeria, and killing, by incremental instalment, the enthusiasm of Nigerians for their motherland, Nigeria.

Muchas gracias.

Don Juan Carlos ABRAXAS (III)


A sure early sign of ego tripping..why do u need to look for "people"- why not look for "ideas" ? Abraxas!

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FemiFemi is offline

 # 8 | 14.04.2006 13:38

Hey Dr. Abati,

Thanks for this highly informative article. You hit the nail on the head. It's a food for thought....addressing the fundamental problems that made our nation what it is today....ethnic brouhaha, mutual hatred, kill me-I kill you mentality etc etc. And all these becuse of a fanatical followership?

Ethnic leaders and Public figures such as Awo, Zik, Bello, Tarka, Osadebey and several others have come and go. Their children and even grand-children have been adequately provided for in terms of money, properties and a life-long "connection". But the followers.....not the immediate privileged followers....but the unknown followers (like the unknown soldiers).....what have they got to write home about.....poverty, mayhem, uncertain future, untimely deaths and more hatred?

Femi.

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GoddyGoddy is offline

 # 9 | 14.04.2006 13:50

Femo, I'll join you in agreement with Abati on this one.....God knows I'm not one of his fans.....but once in a while like this, one can't help but to agree with him.

Ethnic leaders and Public figures such as Awo, Zik, Bello, Tarka, Osadebey and several others have come and go. Their children and even grand-children have been adequately provided for in terms of money, properties and a life-long "connection". But the followers.....not the immediate privileged followers....but the unknown followers (like the unknown soldiers).....what have they got to write home about.....poverty, mayhem, uncertain future, untimely deaths and more hatred?

The unknown soldiers even fare better in this context because they are only taking orders but what orders can the follow-follow people claim to be taking?

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gwobezentashigwobezentashi is offline

 # 10 | 14.04.2006 14:18

I am in agreement with Abraxas that what we have in Nigeria is a generational failure. Worse is that the bumbling and incompetent geriatrics are refusing to leave the stage believing that they can repair the damage except they are making it worse. They haven't learnt that when you reach the point of diminishing returns, you've got to stop digging.

I however disagree with his prognosis that the under 50s have the answer. This generation has already been corrupted by a culture of impunity and unaccountability. Look at some of the nonsense being paraded here as intelligent debate! Would you trust a country to some of the misfits straddling this board? Granted that there are some very intelligent and decent members of this group but a sifting exercise would be necessary and desirable.

If you go back a bit to the under 30s, you will find a cult ridden culture of thuggery and semi literacy due to the failure of the educational system and environmental moral bankruptcy. Again there are some excellent materials within this group who have lived on "Mars" all this while and are therefore untainted by the pervasive decadence but a major weeding exercise is necessary to sift the wheat from the abundant chaff.:wink:

In my estimation the under 10s have the best chance of salvaging our country and have my vote! :biggrin:

On a serious note, it is nigh impossible to seperate personality from the message. The messenger lends credibility to the message. He gives the message some "oompf" and character. He sets the agenda and connects with the aspirations of the people. Colourless people have a tendency to be drab and incontinent in presentation. They do not enthuse and there is little passion and vim about them. With the less physically appealing comes an inability to hold their audience's attention and only a few people have breached these conventions either through the sheer force of personality or the timing of their emergence. Having said that, the most well packaged and physically appealing messenger with a bum message will still fail to sparkle except it would probably take him longer to fail than an ugly duckling (with a bum message) who would probably never get the benefit of the doubt.

Abati rounds off his interesting article with a welcome appeal to today's feuding leaders except they are not listening as there are sufficient hangers on both sides to benefit from the rofo rofo ( I feel another song coming on ...igbangidi gban igbangidi gban....). With a $1m and land in Abuja bounty, who amongst them would agree for Baba to call a truce? There are also candidate VPs waiting in the wings to step up the greasy pole to self immolation that is the No 2 role in Obasanjo's presidency today. On the other side is the possibility of gains if their master prevails and gains higher office. Others whom are out of the picture have nothing to lose anyway. So the die is cast and the body bags are being prepared for the battle royale. Unfortunately in these matters, there is one guaranteed loser. The people's business.


Aluta!

Gwobezentashi
 

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