Again, Yar’Adua’s opportunity
By Okey Ndibe (E-mail: okeyndibe@gmail.com)
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Last week, when the Supreme Court ruled that Celestine Omehia must vacate the
office of Governor of Rivers State and that Rotimi Amaechi ought to be sworn
in, Umar Yar’Adua immediately ordered the judgment’s effectuation.
For many watchers of Yar’Adua, the alacrity of his pronouncement must
have burnished his reputation as a man who, in spirit and substance, is markedly
different from former President Olusegun Obasanjo.
One has argued before that Yar’Adua’s stock seems to appreciate
at those moments when he defines himself as not Obasanjo. Many Nigerians believe
that were Obasanjo still in office and faced with the Supreme Court order, the
odds are he would have started to quibble, parse and second-guess the justices.
At any rate, he would not have moved expeditiously to implement the verdict.
Despite Yar’Adua’s different posture—perhaps even because
of it—it is important to urge that he find the courage to repudiate his
"presidential" mantle. He’s spent five months in illegitimate,
un-mandated office and it’s time he considered renouncing the charade.
In the last two weeks, the nation’s intrepid judiciary has overturned
two gubernatorial elections as well as several legislative seats. Each judicial
torpedo has met with wide celebration, for Nigerians still smart from the (s)electoral
impunity of April.
Maurice Iwu continues to quack that his electoral commission did a sound, creditable
job. He persists in the delusion that the blame for whatever went wrong belongs
to every other party but the electoral umpire. Iwu has carpeted international
and domestic monitors. He’s indicted politicians and political parties
for not playing by the rules. He’s accused foreign observers like the
European Union and Human Rights Watch of seeking to undermine Nigeria. Everybody
who’s expressed dissatisfaction with Iwu’s carefully programmed
failure of an election has been pronounced a sinner, but Iwu has held himself
blameless. In his conceit, he’s become a tragic figure. History’s
judgment on him is bound to be even harsher as the record of his perfidy, and
its cold calculation and design, becomes clearer. The man is fated to enter
the nation’s democratic discourse as a tattered emblem.
Many see it as a mark of Yar’Adua’s residual moral sense that he’s
acknowledged the presence of irregularities in the process that produced his
"presidency." But such acknowledgments don’t go far enough.
What happened in April was not a credible exercise marred by isolated irregularities.
It was a fundamentally defective electoral exercise, an orchestrated mockery
of democracy. A nation with profound promise but cursed with a leader who despises
his people and loathes himself was given a bitter diet of electoral fraud. Obasanjo
made no secret of his designs: The elections were, he said, a "do-or-die"
affair.
With an obliging Iwu as accomplice, Nigerians got worse: A "do-and-die."
They did rig the elections at all levels, and their hired thugs and uniformed
enablers wasted several hundred Nigerian lives. These casualties, as a recent
report by Human Rights Watch noted, were a natural consequence of a planned
assault on the national will. A desperate outgoing president and his cohorts
of riggers and power-snatchers set out to intimidate, maim and maul a people
into submission.
For all his vaunted goodness, Yar’Adua is a beneficiary of this egregious
assault. The path to his office is littered with the corpses of Nigerians. Whether
he approved or not, lives were needlessly cut short, innocent blood spilt, to
pave his way to Aso Rock.
Yar’Adua would do well to extricate himself from this morally repugnant
dilemma. The answer is to announce soon that he can no longer sustain a lie,
that he has no stomach for keeping up the pretence that Nigerians gave him a
mandate to govern.
Mine is, I admit, a quirky prescription in a political arena where moral considerations
are openly disdained. Even so, Nigeria, as Chinua Achebe told me more than twenty
years ago, remains a nation waiting to be founded. Yar’Adua has a rare
historic opportunity to step into the office of one of the nation’s founders.
It’s not an easy call. Power is seductive, and for all his illegitimacy,
Yar’Adua already basks in the grandeur of power. Many fortunes and misfortunes
depend on his word. He is, illegitimate mandate and all, capable of doing many
good deeds. But the best of all his possible good deeds is, one suggests, to
save his nation from the evil that was foisted upon it in April.
Look at what the treachery of April has wrought in Nigeria. Nigerians are now
in the sad position of envying Sierra Leone, a nation that recently rose from
the ashes of two decades of war to conduct credible elections. Yes, Sierra Leoneans
can now boast of something that Nigerians can only dream of: Free and fair elections.
Of course Ghanaians did it several years ago. Botswana, one of the most stable
countries in Africa, has long taken credible elections for granted.
Why not Nigeria? It is up to Yar’Adua, if he can think and see beyond
his present illusions, to do something at once simple and radical. He should
announce today that he finds it incongruous to preside over the affairs of a
people who did not choose him. It is an act that demands courage and imagination.
He needs moral courage and political as well as ethical imagination.
Anybody who has closely watched Yar’Adua’s statecraft would have
glimpsed the debilitating effects of being cast in an illegitimate role. He
has oscillated between a few moments of promise and a sustained state of doldrums.
He has not been able to strike a coherent, convincing note in the crusade against
corruption. Like his predecessor, he still cuddles many of the nation’s
most corrupt elements. As Nigeria convulsed over Speaker Patricia Etteh’s
financial recklessness, Yar’Adua’s voice was (conveniently) choked.
With Obasanjo, the benefactor who bequeathed power to him, chafing at calls
to have the Speaker rusticated, Yar’Adua has taken to an inelegant—but
telling—silence. His ministerial appointments revealed a fundamental fealty
to Obasanjo’s legacy. His ambassadorial nominees seem a who’s who
of those who championed Obasanjo’s disastrous third-term gambit.
It may well be that a Yar’Adua Presidency with incontestable mandate might
still have acted in so rudderless a fashion. In which case Nigerians would be
satisfied that they had made a terrible choice, and must live with it for four
years. But many who know the man insist on his innate integrity, his independent-mindedness
and steely core. Those qualities, alas, have yet to be brought to bear on his
statecraft. That failure, juxtaposed against the man’s ostensible credits,
inspires the ongoing suspicion that this comatose "Presidency" is
a product of a scripted plan by those out to denude the nation of its promise.
Yar’Adua should imagine the amazing personal benefits of abdicating illegitimate
power. First, he would spare himself the pain of having the courts expose the
farce of his "election." Secondly, his stock would appreciate exponentially
in the estimation of fellow Nigerians as well as others around the world. He
would become, quite simply, Nigeria’s—and perhaps Africa’s—central
metaphor for political probity, personal integrity and moral courage. He would
transport himself, through that single act, to the front ranks of candidates
for honor and accolades recognizing outstanding courage.
Then he ought to consider the profounder benefits to his nation. He would have
seized Nigeria from the tiny cabal that has raped and exploited her, and given
it back to the citizenry who wish to nurture it back to vibrancy and hope. His
example would serve as an incomparable bequest to the younger generation of
Nigerians who have been ill-served by the cynicism and opportunism of the older
generations.
He would represent a beacon of hope and an icon of ethical illumination for
younger Nigerians. These younger ones have imbibed, or are in danger of imbibing,
the toxic creed that the end justifies the means.
Whenever one thinks of Nigeria’s cast of inept leaders, one also thinks
of the example of Mwalimu Julius Nyerere, the late Tanzanian leader. Nigerian
leaders, from Babangida through Abacha to Obasanjo, retired to lives of unconscionable
splendor and privilege. Ensconced in storied mansions, they shut themselves
off from the people they allegedly "served." Nyerere, on the other
hand, retired to a small, unfenced house in his village. Fellow villagers visited
him freely to make small talk and draw from the wisdom of an unassuming leader.
When Nyerere died, Tanzanians mourned him in a deep way. By contrast, Abacha’s
death elicited a paroxysm of celebration on the streets of Nigeria. Tanzanians
have enshrined Nyerere in their hearts and memory, remembering him as a true
father of their nation. Last week, Obasanjo (who styled himself father of modern
Nigeria) was spirited off a major hotel in Abuja when a group of elite Nigerians
threatened to beat him up. Yar’Adua has a choice: Be like Abacha and Obasanjo,
or aspire to Nyerere’s stature.