A season of absurd theatre
By Okey Ndibe (E-mail: okeyndibe@gmail.com)
Tuesday, December 11, 2007
There’s often a surreal effect to reading Nigeria’s daily papers.
It’s as if one immersed oneself in a miasma of the strange, the outlandish
and the sheer incredible. As one who makes a point to read several Nigerian
dailies as well as websites each day, the experience can sometimes be overwhelming.
Of late, one has been steeped in a surfeit of absurd political theatre. Let’s
take a partial inventory.
First, there was Maurice Iwu, chairman of Nigeria’s electoral commission,
excelling at the game of turning incoherence and triteness into grand art. In
addition to his image as the worst electoral umpire in Nigeria’s history,
Iwu is now well positioned to cart away the prize for wild, fevered and (often)
foolish speculation.
This failed manager of elections appears to have mastered the art of making
hay out of perfumed cow dung. Where others, including beneficiaries of the polls
he misconducted, have soberly conceded that the April elections were a sham,
Iwu persists not only in defending the integrity of the elections, but also
in proclaiming their unparalleled success.
When he lets slip the sheerest concession to irregularities, it is always in
the service of training accusing fingers at malefactors other than himself.
If Iwu made any mistakes at all, the man has not—and from the look of
things will never—figure it out. Yet, here is a man who is ultimately
the face of the disastrous elections. Those inclined to generosity would say
Iwu bungled the elections out of incompetence. Still, many believe that his
ghastly performance was entirely a matter of volition. It doesn’t surprise
one that in certain quarters, the man has inspired the pejorative sobriquet
of wuruwuru.
A few days ago, Iwu went to town with his latest tedious contrivance. His newfangled
theory is to allege that certain political interests sought to sabotage the
last elections in order to provoke a coup d’etat. Iwu’s latest excursion
into myth-making happened at the 4th Conference of the Nigerian Guild of Editors
where the INEC chairman spoke on The Media, Electoral Reform and Electoral Management.
Iwu’s speech was a harvest of illogicalities. "The environment in
which the 2007 general elections were conducted," he said, "was not
the best any democratic election could have been conducted in." Veiled
in that assessment was the sordid role he and his commission played in creating
that inimical atmosphere. Through unabashed utterance and obliging action, he
left the impression that his fealty was not to Nigerians, but to then President
Olusegun Obasanjo and the ruling PDP.
He carried on a scurrilous shouting match with former Vice President Atiku Abubakar,
a man who had parted ways with Obasanjo and had been adopted as the presidential
candidate of the AC. When it was clear that the former president wanted Atiku’s
name erased from the roster of candidates, Iwu quickly obliged. He did so by
spiting the preponderance of legal opinion that his action would be hard to
sustain.
Iwu’s sanctimonious speech could not conceal its false air. He alleged
that in the run-up to the election, his commission "harped on the corrosive
influence of money in Nigeria’s politics and the willful abuse of power
and all rules by individuals elected to public offices." Then he added:
"Some of these individuals could easily buy off a state and its voters
if they found it necessary. Others had such heavy war chest that they could
afford to buy off every available civil society group, every willing media organ
and every consenting pressure group within sight."
The description above fit Mr. Nnamdi Emmanuel Uba, the ruling party’s
gubernatorial candidate for Anambra. Uba’s campaign reposed singular faith
in the power of money to buy civil society groups, the media, traditional rulers,
pressure groups and voters. Yet, the record shows that Iwu and INEC, far from
rebuking Mr. Uba, went out to bat for him. Iwu’s commission criminally
gutted the Anambra gubernatorial slate of formidable candidates, including incumbent
Governor Peter Obi and former Governor Chris Ngige, the better to enable Mr.
Uba to cruise to an unearned, wangled mandate. Six months later, the man who
cleared the path for a notorious campaign based solely on the purchasing power
of inexplicable wealth, wishes to hoodwink Nigerians with the fib that he bemoaned
the slush of cash in the elections.
As long as Iwu is left to parade platforms and dispense his sickening theorems
of what was a straightforward case of calculated abortion of Nigerians’
democratic aspirations, so long will he haunt us with his absurd mea culpas.
Iwu shared the absurd mantle with others. After months of underground existence,
former Governor Ayo Fayose of Ekiti State made a dramatic and carefully choreographed
return to his state capital. He breezed into town like a hero, accompanied by
a retinue of vehicles, heralded by drummers and hired praise-singers. This man,
a fugitive from the law who once boasted that God had promised him that he would
never be removed from office, came back as ebullient as ever. He mounted the
hood of a vehicle and addressed a swooning throng of "supporters."
Like Diepreye Alamieyeseigha before him, he issued himself a sparkling bill
of moral and political health. And in a touching gesture of generosity, he announced
that he had forgiven all who conspired to remove him from power. He didn’t
say whether God, with whom he apparently enjoys direct dial privileges, has
also forgiven the mortals who, in ousting him, had placed themselves at war
with divine will.
There was more absurdity. Clement Chinwoke Mbadinuju, a former governor of Anambra,
was heard griping about receiving a dose of his own bitter pill. As governor,
Mbadinuju adopted the mantra that "It shall be well with Anambra State."
Yet, his policies cut the people to the quick. He made a habit of not paying
civil servants and teachers their due salaries. When they complained of hunger,
the governor read them a few biblical passages and sent them home. When unimpressed
teachers revolted and went on strike, the governor affected nonchalance. He
continued to gorge at public expense while pupils lost one academic year to
the teachers’ strike. On one occasion, a delegation of pensioners went
to see the man to plead for payment of their entitlements, meager by most measures.
Mbadinuju dressed them down with a few choice derisions, and then sent them
away.
As it happens, Mbadinuju is not good at living large without his pension. The
man has lost his composure since his state government put him on notice not
to expect his own pension cheques anytime soon. Talk about poetic justice! The
former governor, whose failure to pay months of salaries and many more months
of pensions, sent many to their premature deaths, has been heard crying that
Governor Obi is persecuting him because, unlike the incumbent governor, he is
not a Catholic!
And there’s more absurdity. In the dubious name of rule of law, Umar Yar’Adua’s
government pursues its ill-disguised campaign to protect former Governor James
Ibori from the wrath of British law over money laundering charges. Michael Aondoakaa,
Yar’Adua’s attorney general, has proposed the strange doctrine that
Nigeria’s international image would be tainted should Ibori be put on
trial in England. Aondoakaa has never, to my knowledge, complained that his
nation’s image is smeared when top government officials export public
funds abroad to finance their vanity and obsessions. But the learned attorney
general pronounces anathema on the British for seeking to put a former Nigerian
governor in the dock!
One wonders if, in the spirit of his jealousness about Nigeria’s image,
Aondoakaa would now intervene in every court in the world where a Nigerian is
being prosecuted? Why not go ahead and develop a firm policy that no foreign
court on the globe may ever try a Nigerian on any charge?
Meanwhile, Ibori’s cousin and successor, Emmanuel Uduaghan—a doctor
to boot—is also making his nepotistic efforts to spirit the ex-governor
from the hands of English justice. Uduaghan has seen fit to argue that permitting
the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission to snoop into Ibori’s management
(or, more aptly, mismanagement) of Delta State funds would amount to handing
prized state secrets to adversarial foreign interests. The EFCC, Uduaghan suggests,
is fully in the service of foreign powers. Of course, when Ibori allegedly siphoned
state funds to Europe and North America, he was serving the established local
interests of all Delta indigenes.
What’s the final absurdity of the week? My vote goes to Umar Yar’Adua,
who has a standing pledge to finally right the nation’s power outage problems.
Last week, Yar’Adua’s spokesman blamed a faceless cabal for the
intractability of the country’s power woes.
Those naïve enough to expect an end any time soon to the perennial crisis
of inadequate power supply ought to take notice. From experience, whenever a
Nigerian government fingers a cabal as the source of a problem, it’s a
sure signal that there’s no solution in sight.