July 4, 2012 by Sabella Abidde
In early January 2010, I attempted to craft a
profile of Dr. Goodluck Jonathan in an essay entitled Goodluck Jonathan:
The Emerging Profile. I did so because many Nigerians had wondered what
type of a man he was, and what type of a President he was going to be.
Yes, he had been a deputy governor and, later, the governor of Bayelsa
State from where he was handpicked to be Umaru Yar’Adua’s running mate
under the Peoples Democratic Party platform. Still, he was, for the most
part, an unknown political commodity. Even after he became the
Vice-President, many still wondered who he was.
Unlike his predecessors, Jonathan’s anonymity level
was very high — so high that even within his state, not much was known
about him. Speculations and perception were one thing; but reality was
another. In reality, who was Jonathan? That was the main question. After
the untimely death of Yar’Adua (and it became apparent that Jonathan
would become the next President), the race to get a deeper and wider
knowledge and understanding of the man intensified. The generalised
question was whether a man of such mien and disposition had what it took
to govern and move the country to the Promised Land. I believed he
could.
Yes, I believed he could. And it was during this
period that several personalities came to mind, including Harry S.
Truman and Gen. Yakubu Gowon. President Truman, as I told my readers
then was “the unseen, the voiceless and lowly-regarded vice-president
under the highly-regarded Franklin Delano Roosevelt.” However, after the
death of Roosevelt, and upon becoming the substantive President,
“Truman became his own man — steering the ship of state like an old
hand, defying pessimistic expectations” and going on to become a major
player in domestic and global politics. He is today considered a
statesman.
And then there was Gowon. Though a soldier, he was,
in reality a young chap who was still trying to navigate life’s raging
seas. He was a man still trying to find himself. Yet, he was man enough
and strong enough to carry the weight of a nation at war. You see,
“unlike some of his contemporaries, he was not a braggart, a brute, or
bloodguilt. He spoke and acted like a gentleman. In another time or
place, he would have been a monk or a priest ensconced in a
monastery…Say what you may about his three failings, no other President
or Head of State has been half as good.”
With these and other personalities in mind, I thought
Jonathan had a very good chance of pulling it off. I saw a Truman and a
Gowon in him. Really, I did. At the very least, I thought he was going
to be better than Olusegun Obasanjo; and certainly better than Ibrahim
Babangida, Sani Abacha, and Shehu Shagari. But alas, I was wrong. Dead
wrong! What we have, and what we have seen is a man who is very
uncomfortable with his shoes and his many hats. What we have is a
President that is not loved, not feared, and definitely not respected by
the masses; or by anyone who is of any significance at home or perhaps
abroad. It was not this way in the beginning. It was not!
For instance, when Jonathan was the Acting President,
he visited the United States for the 2010 Nuclear Security Summit.
Diasporan Nigerians fell in love with him. What’s more, the global
community went gaga and agog over his disposition,
anticipated-presidency and possibilities. From China to Australia, and
from South Africa to Brazil and all spots in between – there was
collective happiness and excitement. Jonathan became the man of the
hour. Altogether, it seems like a new dawn for Nigeria. A new beginning.
In Goodluck Jonathan: The Domestic and Global
Implications of His US Visit, I summarised his visit this way: “Not
quite a Mandela, an Obama, or a Dalai Lama, still; they watched and
wondered. It’s been a while since the world wondered about an African
head of government. And especially in Washington DC, he became the talk
of the town: the doyen of such power houses such as the Council on
Foreign Relations, the Corporate Council for Africa, and the World Bank.
Anybody who was anybody in and around the DC area wanted to meet with
him or hear him speak.” It was surreal and electrifying all at once.
In concluding that essay, I cautioned that “…there
must be some great accomplishments on his part to continue in the good
grace of the people. At this point in time, Nigerians do not expect the
world of him. They just want him to be better than himself, to be better
than the ordinary, and to be better than mediocre. That’s all.” Sadly
and annoyingly, this President has disappointed everybody! As the Acting
President, he took some bold and courageous steps. In that short
period, he acted boldly, walked boldly and spoke boldly. His totality
pointed to a man of courage who was on a great mission. I never doubted
that he would change the face, the spirit and the ambience of the
nation.
Sadly and embarrassingly, since becoming the
President, everything — everything he has done or not done — reeks of
doubt, second-guessing, controversy, mediocrity, and self-immolating
tendencies. For instance, the economy is in a shambles with unemployment
in the high thirties. Politically, our public institutions are getting
weaker and weaker every passing week. Socially, corruption and corrupt
practices have attained new heights and no one seems afraid of judicial
penalties and punishments. At the local, state and federal levels,
Nigerians seem to have given up on good governance.
And while it is true that this President did not
cause many of the problems we now face, they have worsened under his
watch. And because he seems highly tolerant of ethical, political,
social and economic deficits and violations, the country is falling
apart; and its institutions decaying. The general perception of the
President is of a man incapable of little things. If he is incapable of
the little things, then, the big and great accomplishments become a
fantasy. With the passing of every week, this President diminishes his
person and his Presidency. Can he turn things around?
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