President Yar’Adua’s Kairos Moment? Print E-mail
Written by Olu Ojedokun, Ph.D   
Friday, 12 September 2008

A few years ago at the National Conference of the Overseas Fellowship of Nigerian Christians in the United Kingdom, a charismatic speaker called, Bro Gideon Para-Mallam urged the gathering to grasp their Kairos moment. In this urgings he attempted to envision and motivate the gathering to visualise its own unique moment in time which comes once in a generation for any movement. 

In my own limited understanding I concluded that what he wanted them to realise was that such Kairos moment only emerges when faced with circumstances which brings together the intersection of mangled plans and spiritual openness. And of course the emphasis was on deploying this as Jesus did, demonstrating that through a creative response to an otherwise disconcerting surprise, situations could be reversed and turned around for good.  The essence of his message I think was to highlight that this singular grasping of the moment could launch the gathering towards its goals but also embody its goals. Since then the urgings to master the times, discover my own Kairos moment and strike accordingly has remained in my subconscious. Therefore it will inform my next attempt as operating as a constructive critic to power within the Nigerian context.

The recent times in Nigeria, in terms of its governance resembles a drama containing scene after scene with no discernable plot or any conclusion in sight. The Nigerian audience is served and presented with one period of lethargy after another.  It also bears close similarity to a restaurant menu, where silences and complexities are the main courses and doldrums and policy summersaults are for the after courses or desserts. In the meantime the international audience is treated to a cancelation of a ‘state’ visit and some period of intense speculation about the health of Mr President in a far away land.

Then the President re-emerges into the country under the cover of darkness, like a thief in the night. With his re-emergence we now have what some commentators are alluding to be a sort of Kairos moment. For it appears that with the sackings of Babagana Kingibe, ‘decoration of military chiefs’, the creation of a ministry of Niger Delta, restructuring of ministries and do not forget the holding of an ‘8 hour’ Federal Executive Council meeting, the President has found his Kairos moment!  And now all is forgiven in so far as his unexplained absences rejuvenate the Nigerian state and some movement forward is discerned.

I quote from a respected journalist, Dr Reuben Abati who in his article, The new Niger Delta Ministry’ published in Nigerian Guardian of 12th September 2008:

 “The timing of President Yar'Adua's current moves would seem to be related to affirmations, speculations and arguments in the past three weeks that he is an ailing President, in urgent need of a kidney transplant. He was even declared dead, and then resurrected. He finally returned to the country during the weekend.  Since then, the President has been acting with such great bursts of energy and uncommon dynamism. He decorated the military service chiefs; he set up the Niger Delta committee, he has restructured the Federal Ministries. On Wednesday, he chaired a Federal Executive Council meeting which lasted for eight hours (!), he has also been receiving a steady stream of visitors from the states, Cameroun and elsewhere. This President has never been this busy publicly within the space of one week. It is a new-found dynamism that Nigerians would like to see sustained.”

My own take is some what similar for it appears that after varying levels of fun and games at governance and the shenanigans of many varieties that Mr President maybe seizing the moment and grasping it with his hands his legs, his feet and his entire frame.  However, on the face of the evidence of this government’s antecedents I am very sceptical. It may be suggested that such sceptism is unwarranted and unjustified. I will seek however, to plead my case in the next few paragraphs. It is simply this:

The President was away for longer than specified either for religious reasons or ill health basis, he missed a state visit, postponed his return on at least two occasions. Yet even after some days have passed the Nigerian bystanders or audience are not worthy or do not deserve an explanation from its servant leader? Naively I ask why would a government feel more at home in the land of silence that breeds conspiracies, shenanigans and deceit? I query, is the audience constitutionally entitled to be informed about the state of the President’s health? In other words is the President accountable in any shape or form to the Nigerian audience? It may well be this is a private matter and no business of the audience. You may arrive at the conclusion that so far the drama presented lives up to its billing, the behind the scenes’ rehearsals are no business of the curious onlookers.

For those who hold up hopes that the sacking of Babagana Kingibe holds up hopes of a Kairos moment for this government I would suggest there is little basis for optimism. For a Kairos moment to be genuine it must be built on a foundation of truth.  Seizing the moment in the Kairos fashion I dare suggest cannot be based on selective amnesia and silences, which may be comforting, but in the end it will prevent real progress. 

I am very concerned that the President and his handlers continue their failings in their duty to speak truth, and are hiding their knowledge in obscurely erudite terminology, losing themselves in word games and speaking the truth in secret only to his cronies and retainers. Then again who am I to push this any further since it seems the teeming intelligentsia has more priorities on their mind? Some may even ask what has truth got to do with putting bread and akara on the table.  

In conclusion I remind Mr President that it is his duty to learn and realise that history teaches us that leaders must not only be tough enough to sack errant aides but tender enough to cry, human enough to make mistakes, humble enough to admit them, strong enough to absorb the pain, and resilient enough to bounce back and keep on moving.  Normally I should now be resting my case, having deployed the substance of my arguments.  However, I am simply unable to rest my case, for it is not my case alone, and the rest comes only when I am able to speak truth to power and power is transformed for our good.

 

The writer is a Barrister and Solicitor of the Supreme Court of Nigeria





RobotRobot is offline 
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 # 1

A few years ago at the National Conference of the Overseas Fellowship of Nigerian Christians in t...Read the full article.

Posted by Robot| 12.09.2008 22:18

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AgidimolajaAgidimolaja is offline 
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 # 2

Your Lordship Sir,

You can see it with your own eyes that this selected President is something else.
Are you not convinced enough Sir,that this is not the type of President that this dilapidating country is in need of at such critical time like this?
Are you aware Sir,of any civilized President that shall disappear from his duty post and stayed away for such a long period of time, yet owe his subjects no explanation for his AWOL? Only in Nigeria can such happened.
Over 140 million Nigerians are still eagerly waiting for the President to tell them the truth about his condition of health.
The fact that he sneaked back into the country under the cover of night and descended immediately upon his offending Secretary and also conducting some national business in such a mad haste have not changed peoples' mind that he is a sick President who is struck by a life threatening ailment.
The entire excersise is a cheap cover up of the truth that the nation needed to know.
Nobody wished that Yar'Adua should die.But if he died,I will not lose sleep neither will I mourn for him.
Are several Nigerians not dying when they are not suppose to have died?They died in ghastly motor accidents on the roads that our evil Federal/State Governments refused deliberately to fix.They died because out Federal Government cannot guarrantee their safety from menancing armed robbers.They died because there are no hospitals with drugs and equipments for them to attend where their various ailments may be attended to.They died because the government starved them unto death because they are unemployed and so have no bread and water to sustain their lives. Did the government care about these hapless Nigerians? The answer is NO!
Therefore who cares when a President or corrupt political leaders died?To hell with all of them!

Posted by Agidimolaja| 13.09.2008 00:39

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employlawoneemploylawone is offline 
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 # 3

Very powerful response, thank you.

Posted by employlawone| 13.09.2008 04:20

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allaccessallaccess is offline 
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 # 4

For me, the only solution I see is for all nigerians to emmigrate and leave the leaders alone to occupy the place, or they should fight the leaders and reclaim their country back before it is mortgaged without their knowledge.

Posted by allaccess| 13.09.2008 12:00

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