01

Feb

2009

Beyond Yar’Adua PDF Print E-mail
By Sonala Olumhense

Beyond Yar’Adua 

Last week, Yobe State Governor, Mr. Mamman Bello Ali, died, abroad. In the United States. 

Mr. Ali’s passage is bound to turn the quiet concern of every Nigerian to our perennially-sick “leader,” Mr. Umaru Yar’Adua. Mr. Ali died one day after Yar’Adua was to have left for treatment abroad. 

Instead, he began an impromptu two-week “vacation” that his spokesman said he would spend within Nigeria’s borders. I commend Yar’Adua for this decision. Hopefully, ordinary Nigerians will run into him at the Obudu Cattle Ranch in Cross River, which will do wonders for tourism in the country, but I doubt that. 

Yar’Adua’s “vacation” has not gone without controversy. Yar’Adua did not inform the Senate he wanted to go on vacation. Perhaps he did not know; he would not be our first leader to read only the sections of our constitution that grant him authority. In any case, with one part of the government claiming he had handed over to the Vice-President, another said he did not hand-over “per se,” whatever that means. 

It would seem that this development is not entirely reassuring to the half of the government that sees the presidency as personal to Yar’Adua. Spokesman Adeniyi seemed to have been bristling with considerable discomfort last week when he addressed the press, bouncing off questions with other questions with the dexterity of the Flying Eagles goalkeeper Dele Ajiboye deflecting shots away from the goal line. 

Reporter: Is the president uncomfortable with the Obasanjo/Atiku reconciliation? 

Spokesman: Why should the president be uncomfortable with the former president and former vice president?

Reporter: [On the President’s vacation]: Why now, does it have anything to do with his health? 

Spokesman: Why not now?

Reporter: There are speculations that some doctors will be flown in from Germany? 

Spokesman: From where? 

Reporter: From Germany. 

Spokesman: To where? 

Reporter: To Nigeria. 

Spokesman: Okay go and wait for them at the airport. 

It is strange that a man as sick as Yar’Adua is would suddenly convert his treatment plans into vacation plans, and expect to be fit to swat his own mosquitoes in two weeks. But I agree with the spokesman that like everyone else, the President is entitled to rest. What is questionable is that the so-called vacation was so sudden. It is also being oversold: Mr. Adeniyi said the President would “relax, refresh and reflect on governance, but also engage in intellectual exercise.” 

That does not make sense. Ill-health is no opportunity or signal to begin R &R, let alone intellectual rigour. Even if Yar’Adua originally meant well, it is now clear that he is incapable of the demands of his high office. Is there any Nigerian who truly believes that the man is capable of a full week’s work? 

I do not, and we deceive ourselves if we say a nation of our size and complexity can be led by a man who is operating at less than double capacity. Our country is demanding of a vigorous 24-hour man; it is the worst form of conceit to suggest we can thrive under the watch of one who is merely clinging to power. 

If Yar’Adua is so sick they are having to doctor his pictures and videos—instead of doctoring the patient—is that really wise? He was a person before he became President; shouldn’t that person, in poor health, be seeking the best medical care without having to worry about family or nation? How low and selfish can we go if a man chooses to put his nation on hold while he struggles to survive? 

This reflects extremely poor judgment reveals our President as a selfish and power-hungry Nigerian. In his mind, his interests are superior to that of his nation, which explains why he is working at preserving his presidency, not what would elevate her. Regrettably, we now have a patter where, when a Nigerian leader travels—or falls sick, or is drunk, or visits his concubine—the nation must wait. In Yar’Adua’s case, we are on that sick bed with him, and he knows it. 

Away from that bed, only a fool would argue that a leader who mistakes spending billions of Naira on electricity generators for an energy policy would remember him. Only a fool battling HIV would believe that Yar’Adua, on his sickbed in the best private hospital settings money can buy, would remember him. 

Only a fool would think that on that hospital bed, Yar’Adua is actually concerned about the millions of Nigerians who lack drinking water or jobs or safe highways. Only a fool would think that Yar’Adua, on that bed, is concerned about his seven-point plan, or the United Nations Millennium Development Goals, or the so-called Vision 2020. 

Only a fool would think that Yar’Adua—a man who is keeping Maurice Iwu in INEC while he proclaims interest in honest elections; a man who is maintaining some of our most indolent and corrupt former state officials as advisers; a man who, having surveyed our 140 million population, picked Tony Anenih as the one most capable of the chairmanship of the Nigerian Ports Authority—is concerned with the values of decency, morality, rule of law, justice or development. 

Yet, in the midst of all this, President Yar’Adua thinks he needs a vacation. What is the vacation from? If it is merely to fulfill the principle of rest, it would be difficult to quarrel with it. But if it is rest from his labours, what labours? Much of Yar’Adua’s tenure has been a waiting game: about his health, his cabinet or his budget. I do not know exactly what toil he has undertaken, or what game of tennis or squash he wants to recover from. Has he conducted an election that was unannounced, resolved the Niger Delta situation, or fixed our unemployment? 

Has any item on his agenda been completed? How many Nigerians has he saved from dying on our roads?  While he hobnobs with crooks and appoints to office their cronies and servants, how many children has he inspired to serve our country with every drop of their blood? 

In Yar’Adua’s hands, the past is the present. That past was a crisis of governance. In Yar’Adua’s hands, and in the context of his paranoia, poor health and absence of focus, uncertainty and chaos are taking over. Yar’Adua is not thinking of what would move Nigeria forward, most quickly, for most people. 

But chaos may be just what we need. Except that chaos does not usually benefit those who created it. 

But we cannot wait. We must neither be forced to wait, not become the victim of the greed and selfishness of a man who did not win an election in the first place. We must refuse to be the victim of a leadership that remembers us only in the period between medication and bed. 

Still, there are people who have Yar’Adua’s ear. They may want to reassure him that leadership is not always the power you control. Leadership is more eloquent and robust when it admits of a reality that is bigger and bolder than those who wield it. Leadership is not Yar’Adua, and beyond him we must now critically look. 



Your Comments

Please make The Square an enjoyable experience for everyone by refraining from gratuitous ad-hominem contributions, defamatory comments and off-topic posting. Such posts will be removed.

User Avatar
RobotRobot is offline

 # 1 | 01.02.2009 00:21

Beyond Yar’Adua Last week, Yobe State Governor, Mr. Mamman Bello Ali, died, abroad.In the United States. Mr. Ali’s passage is bound to turn the quiet concern of every Nigerian to our perennially-sick “leader,” Mr. Umaru Yar’Adua.Mr. Ali died one day after Yar’Adua was to have left for treatment abroad. Instead, he began an impromptu two-week “vacation” that his spokesman said he would spend within Nigeria’s borders.I commend Yar’Adua for this decision.Hopefully, ordinary Nigerians will run into him at the Obudu Cattle Ranch in Cross River, which will do wonders for tourism in the country, but I doubt that. Yar’Adua’s “vacation” has not gone without controversy.Yar’Adua did not inform the Senate he wanted to go on vacation.Perhaps he did not know; he would not be our first leader to read only the sections of ...Read the full article.

User Avatar
DapxinDapxin is offline

 # 2 | 01.02.2009 03:41

You 've got to commend SO - probably the boldest Op-ed - still gracing the pages of Nigeria's newspapers.

+

I agree with you; Mr. Yaradua's past. We should be focusing beyond him.

User Avatar
Osita MbaOsita Mba is offline

 # 3 | 01.02.2009 05:49

The National Assembly should, for once, do their duty and impeach the man.

User Avatar
ozoodooozoodoo is offline

 # 4 | 01.02.2009 06:09

Who is spreading all these rumours about Governor Ali? The "big man" is not dead. Afterall he has several big big mansions in Abuja. He also own several landed properties in Lagos, Yobe, Sokoto, Kano, United Kingdom, USA, and wherever. The rumours are designed to discourage the other Big Men from continuing with their lootocratic ways. So many of our countrymen suffer from Bad belle syndrome. Come on. I appeal to our Big Men, respected worldwide, to please keep the flag of lootocracy flying. Be rest assured, Big Man, that whenever you kaput you are able to carry some millions of those dollars along with you to hell.

User Avatar
nijalawnijalaw is offline

 # 5 | 01.02.2009 06:52


No, Don’t Share Excess Crude Savings!
Simon Kolawole Live!, Email: simonkolawole@thisdayonline.com, 02.01.2009

Welcome to Davos, Switzerland. This is where the global political and economic elite meet every year to brainstorm on the latest developments on virtually any topic – from business and economy to malaria and music – and peep into the future. The Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum (WEF) attracts the heavyweights from all over – presidents and heads of states, ministers, chief executives and chairmen of the world’s biggest companies and corporations, and academics. Several African presidents and prime ministers are here – from Rwanda, Senegal, South Africa, Mozambique, Kenya, name them.
Sorry, Nigeria is NOT here. President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua is on holiday, I understand.
The Minister of Finance, Mansur Muthar, is also absent, although he was supposed to be part of a discussion on “Rising Population: Overload or Opportunity?” last Thursday. He was replaced with Dr. Shamsuddeen Usman, Minister, National Planning Commission, who, again, was also absent. I suspect that at these critical times, Nigeria is beginning to disappear from the international scene, even though the rest of the world seems to be very eager to feel us and touch us.
Davos offers a lot of opportunities for countries that are serious about moving forward. This year’s event is all the more important because of the global economic crisis. How are big and small countries coping? What plans are they putting in place to minimise the impact of the crisis and revive their economies? What are the results of the latest research studies on the crisis? What are governments and private sector players expected to do? This was a perfect opportunity to learn from the rest of the world. This was a perfect opportunity to get first-hand data and vital information for the purpose of planning our own response to the emerging trends in global economy.


The above are just excerpts from Simon Kolawole's column.

Clearly Yaradua is taking this country no where. When the worlds top economies are in trouble & the effect is slowly creeping into our nation, the president decides to take a vacation. This man is inept & does not have the intellectual nor physical capacity to lead this nation. I am just frustrated with the current situation of governance & scared what this spineless, vision less & corrupt government will lead us into.

User Avatar
PAPIGPAPIG is offline

 # 6 | 01.02.2009 08:22

YAR'ADUA IS WORSE THAN SHEHU SHAGARI

We the people agree on one thing. We did not elect UMYA and the PDP to the presidency of Nigeria inspite of our Supreme Court. Since ascending to power by the grace of an incorrigible thief known as Olusegun Obasanjo, he has spent his time surrounding himself with convicted thieves like Onanafe Ibori and rewarding chalattans like Tony Annenih to lucrative directorship of our commonwealth. Providing WATER, ELECTRICITY and HOUSES for his people is NOT A PRIORITY neither is HUMAN RIGHT. He perversely and persistently rants about the RULE OF LAW.

I sympathise with him on his perennial poor health. But a more honourable man would place his country first and do the right thing - RESIGN ON HEALTH GROUNDS. Mark you, i did not say on the grounds of SHEER INCOMPETENCE. I would not be exaggerating to say that even Shehu Shagari made real attempts to be at his desk when it counted and he Shagari was not only frail but also less educated.

It is obvious UMYA would not give up power voluntarily and neither would ALL THE THIEVES IN THE PDP. The legislature is within the pocket of the PDP as is the NIGERIAN POLICE. I can never trust the NIGERIAN MILITARY even if they are led by JERRY RAWLINS. The Military is worse than NPN and PDP put together. You only have to look at IBB and ABACHA lootocracy to appreciate the depravity of our military class.

So, how can we ensure that UMYA and the PDP relocates permanently to GERMANY before the next election? This is where i must confess my own disappointment at myself. I am totally bereft of ideas of how to get rid of this rubbish called the PDP. Can a MASS ACTION work in NIGERIA? Even if it does, where is the alternative political movement to drive us forward? Can we the people be trusted to rally round a poor political party like the PRP led by dedicated leaders like Balarabe Musa? Can you see why i am disappointed in myself? Over to other Nigerians but what is certain is UMYA and the PDP MUST GO before the next election. Shehu Shagari must be smiling.

User Avatar
EbeEbe is offline

 # 7 | 01.02.2009 16:21


You 've got to commend SO - probably the boldest Op-ed - still gracing the pages of Nigeria's newspapers.




I couldn't agree more with this. Olumhense and Okey Ndibe are the two most hard hitting and uncompromising pundits penning columns for Nigerian papers today.

Incidently--or is it?--both of them live in and write from the Diaspora. This validates my pet theory that the Nigerian Diaspora incubates the boldest voices of moral clarity in the Nigerian commentariat and that if there's going to be a radical change from the present rot, these voices will be critical in inspiring it.

It seems to me that, with a few exceptions, the bigger the physical and mental distance from the decay and the more independent and removed pundits are from the rot, the more radical and refreshingly angry their commentary tends to be.

Instead of celebrating this heartening phenomenon, some home-based intellectuals are busy accusing us of excessive anger and lack of pragmatism.

User Avatar
iamgodiamgod is offline

 # 8 | 02.02.2009 05:39


=Ebe;320409>I couldn't agree more with this. Olumhense and Okey Ndibe are the two most hard hitting and uncompromising pundits penning columns for Nigerian papers today.

Incidently--or is it?--both of them live in and write from the Diaspora. This validates my pet theory that the Nigerian Diaspora incubates the boldest voices of moral clarity in the Nigerian commentariat and that if there's going to be a radical change from the present rot, these voices will be critical in inspiring it.

It seems to me that, with a few exceptions, the bigger the physical and mental distance from the decay and the more independent and removed pundits are from the rot, the more radical and refreshingly angry their commentary tends to be.

Instead of celebrating this heartening phenomenon, some home-based intellectuals are busy accusing us of excessive anger and lack of pragmatism.



You forgot 'Area Fada', Dele Shobowale of Vanguard Newspapers. He is extremely hard hitting too and he lives in Naija.

User Avatar
DapxinDapxin is offline

 # 9 | 02.02.2009 05:49


=iamgod;320577>You forgot 'Area Fada', Dele Shobowale of Vanguard Newspapers. He is extremely hard hitting too and he lives in Naija.



Yeah, quite right. Its been long I read him, would it not be nice to have him syndicated here too ?

I thought he quit actually...I like the way he goes about quoting "area boys" gist....:)

User Avatar
Kay Soyemi (Esq.)Kay Soyemi (Esq.) is offline

 # 10 | 02.02.2009 06:49

SO, hats off to you for this excellent piece.:hug:

A short prayer: may you never be cursed or touched by the scourge of Abujaland!

Amen
 

Services : E-mail news | RSS Feeds | Podcasts
Links:   About the NVS | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Privacy & Cookies | Advertise With Us
All Rights Reserved. NigeriaVillageSquare.com