A motion against moving forward
By Okey Ndibe (E-mail:
okeyndibe@gmail.com)
Nigerian politicians are so enamoured of the phrase “to move the nation
(or state, or local government area) forward” that it is about time somebody
proposed a counter motion. Ask any politician why he or she is seeking a particular
elective or appointive office and the odds are you’d get this pat response:
“I want to move the nation forward.”
This rhetoric has become as pervasive as it is trite. In spite of it—perhaps,
even, because of it—Nigeria is stuck in the doldrums. If the country’s
spiritual, political and infrastructural state is anything to go by, then it’s
clear that the nation is far from moving forward. Or, if it’s moving at
all, it’s decidedly in the wrong direction.
The trouble is that the politicians’ silly rhetoric is not in sync with
the reality of experience. As a friend once quipped to me, Nigeria is akin to
a car in reverse gear that is then said to be on forward thrust. Some superstitious
Nigerians repose great faith in fantasies even to the point of idolatry. Still,
a car in reverse isn’t going to move forward anytime soon.
Here’s a more troubling prospect: That Nigerian politicians are so warped
of mind as to think that all it takes to move a nation forward is just to speak
the words. Ask them what it takes to move the nation forward and they respond
with some ill-digested expression: “God is in control.” Or, “We
have to carry all stakeholders along.”
The first statement implies that God is Nigeria’s standby factotum, meekly
planted in some corner to await our marching orders. Need Nigerian streets cleaned?
Call God to do it. There are too many accidents and fatalities on our gutted
roads? Dial God. How about creating jobs? It’s God’s job. We can’t
conduct credible elections? No problem, God is on the side of the biggest riggers—since
only God gives power.
The statement about carrying along all stakeholders is just as hollow and dangerous.
It implies that Nigeria does not belong to all its citizens, but to a small
clique of alleged stakeholders. Pry further and it becomes clear that the so-called
stakeholders are men and women who have privatized the nation’s treasury.
They are, in other words, men and women whose stake—if Nigeria were a
polity founded on observance of the law—should be in jails.
Nigerians appear in danger of being sold another toxic deal in the alleged name
of moving the nation forward. Over the last three weeks, I’ve been told
by several sources that a quiet discussion was going on among “stakeholders”
to solidify a consensus on Nigeria’s contentious 2007 presidential election.
And, according to these sources, the emerging consensus is for the presidential
electoral tribunal to affirm the legitimacy of Umar Yar’Adua’s “election”
as president.
What’s dismaying is these sources’ admission is that, on the face
of evidence so far presented before the tribunal, Yar’Adua holds a questionable
mandate—at best. The elections, they conceded, was indeed a sham. Even
so, they suggested that a few shadowy stakeholders in politics as well as within
the hallowed walls of the judiciary, had decided that harm would be done to
Nigeria’s corporate interests should the election be invalidated. In lieu
of invalidation, said one source, stakeholders were negotiating a deal that
would accommodate everybody’s interests and move the nation forward.
One hopes this is some form of jiggery pokery. The Nigerian judiciary’s
image has been battered for a long time, and it’s only in recent times
that a few principled judges and their smattering of courageous judgments have
begun to offer beacons of hope. Judges who do the right thing—by fearlessly
upholding the law—help to strengthen Nigerians’ faith in the promise
of their polity. Judges owe a duty, to themselves, to Nigerians as well as to
the Constitution, to be assiduous interpreters of the law. They must resist
the temptation to dabble in wooly political calculations. They ought not to
permit themselves to play the odious game that masks its perniciousness under
the deceptive and ostensible rhetoric of “moving the nation forward.”
If there are no legal grounds to sustain Yar’Adua’s “election,”
the presidential electoral tribunal should not go scavenging for a so-called
political solution. To do so would amount to judicial complicity in the enthronement
of anarchy. Maurice Iwu’s electoral commission lent itself to forces bent
on raping Nigerians’ sovereign will. A rigged election is a crime of the
highest order and what we witnessed over two weekends last April was crime compounded
by impunity. It was a traumatic experience par excellence.
The judiciary should not be beguiled by the false proposition that the way to
move a nation forward is to adopt, legitimize or obfuscate an illegality. Even
if some “stakeholders” and pundits have discerned Yar’Adua
as the President Nigeria needs, the judiciary should insist that the matter
be properly, and transparently, decided by Nigerians—in an election that
is capable of making us proud. Anything short of this standard would leave the
impression that Nigerians are wedded to mediocrity and empower the notion that
right is conferred by might.
The false creed of moving the nation forward has had its woeful run, and deserves
rejection by astute citizens. After each rigged election, the beneficiaries
of electoral robbery are wont to entreat those whose mandates they stole not
to complain too much. These reapers of stolen votes are quick to lecture their
victims to accept the falsified results as “God’s verdict.”
It is only in Nigeria that daylight robbers claim that God is firmly in their
corner. Unable to pretend that they won a majority of the votes cast by mere
mortals, they hasten to ascribe their purloined mandate to “God’s
doing.” They also implore those they cheated not to “overheat the
polity.” It’s a peculiar doctrine beloved of thieves. Their brazen
theft of votes can’t overheat a mere kitchen. But when the robbed raise
their voices in protest, why, the polity is instantly in danger of overheating!
Making peace with rigged elections in the past has brought Nigerians nothing
but more political grief. In 2003, former president Olusegun Obasanjo and his
party masterminded grave rigging of the presidential election. The electoral
tribunal elected—no doubt in the name of what was perceived as consistent
with “moving the nation forward”—to bestow legitimacy on that
purloined presidential mandate. Using tortuous, sometimes plainly incoherent
logic, the Supreme Court also ratified the lower court’s ruling.
As Nigerians were forced to swallow the bitter pill of that bizarre ratification,
many hoped (even fervently) that the nation would never be treated to such malignant
disregard for the basic tenets of elections. We prayed that some measure of
probity and credibility would attend the 2007 elections. Alas, it was, from
the outset, an untenable hope. You don’t deter future bad behaviour by
giving a pass to a current deplorable act.
A bad signal had been telegraphed to the ruling (more appropriately misruling)
party. Buoyed by the knowledge that the odds are frequently in favour of the
man quickest to grab—that is, steal—the electoral prize, the PDP—ably
mobilized by Obasanjo’s rallying cry of “do-or-die”—delivered
a rigging performance in 2007 that left Nigerian and foreign electoral monitors
shocked and awed. More than three hundred Nigerians lost their lives in that
carefully orchestrated scam that was misbaptized as an election. These casualties,
properly speaking, were also legitimate stakeholders in the fortunes of Nigeria.
Their memories must be honoured—can only be honoured—by repudiating
the electoral bastardry of April 2007.
If Nigerian judges are in doubt about the fertilizing effect of rubberstamping
electoral illegality, they should read up on the moral blight exposed by the
recent round of local government “elections.” In each state, the
ruling party won a perfect 100% of the contested seats. Without a principled
and alert judiciary to rein in their malpractices, it is clear that Nigerian
politicians abhor any form of self-restraint.
Yar’Adua is the primary product of that democracy-deadening heist of 2007.
As a custodian of illegitimate power, he has been held captive by all manner
of shady interests and shadowy forces. The effect of the diseased process that
brought him into power can be seen in the predictable air of confusion around
his regime. He comes across as confounded, a man incapable of discerning his
own mind, much less acting in a decisive fashion.
A notorious example of Yar’Adua’s befuddlement was his government’s
sloppy handling of the removal of Nuhu Ribadu from the control room of the Economic
and Financial Crimes Commission. Two weeks into it, Yar’Adua’s handlers
were still bereft of a coherent narrative. They sent confusing signals and sounded
discordant notes. With its public relations image in tatters, the government
couldn’t manage a straightforward story of why Ribadu was removed. Worse,
the government’s ineptitude meant that it rusticated Ribadu without deciding
the simple question of who was going to run the anti-corruption agency in his
stead. That’s a profound pity.
One must conjecture that something more serious than sheer incompetence is at
play here. It is my speculation that the government is deeply haunted by its
illegitimacy. Nigerians should insist, starting now—not in 2011—that
this imposition is unacceptable. They ought to reject any creed of forward movement
that depends on conferring an imprimatur on the product of dud polls. Let’s
have the courage to say: Stop this disastrous movement towards the precipice.
If moving forward means reconciling with our collective disenfranchisement,
let’s empower ourselves by exclaiming: “Stand still for a moment.
Let’s vote on it—and let our votes count!”