Crawling and Wobbling - Dr. Hakeem Baba Ahmed
“Do not swim in shallow waters if you do not want your back to show.” Malawian Proverb.
The meticulously-planned 50th Independence Anniversary of our nation
was blasted into infamy two years by criminal elements who wanted to
make a statement to the effect that they have a large chunk of our
political space. Since then, our independence anniversaries, events
which had been marked by two generations of Nigerians with deserved pomp
and pride, have been hushed affairs. Leaders who used to inspect school
children parades with military fanfare now release statements and
retreat further behind barricaded official residences. Now the loudest
sounds we hear are those of citizens who choose to blast their
grievances, or criminals after millions in banks, or of security agents
who run after them. A nation which started its journey on a confident
trot is now crawling and wobbling. It is uncertain how long it can stay
on all fours; and it is even more doubtful if our leadership has the
capacity to prevent it from collapsing on its belly.
A few years
ago, comments which suggest a perilous future for Nigeria would have
been roundly condemned as doomsday prophesy. Even when the foundations
of our nation began to be exposed to massive assault by corruption and
impunity, Nigerians thought we could still turn our nation around. When
our political system began to resemble everything else but a democratic
system, with massively-rigged elections, non-accountable leadership and
power produced by a combination of cynical manipulation of our
structural weaknesses, violence and corruption, those who thought they
could tell when a nation was sick enough to set alarm bells going began
to warn of dangerous slides.
A few years on, we have a nation
floundering under an ineffective and isolated leadership. Elder
statesmen who mouth tired clichés such as the certainty of the survival
of our nation; the indivisibility of our union; the irreversible unity
of our people and iron-clad confidence that our security forces will
defeat a determined insurgency and endemic crimes spreading themselves
around our daily lives in every part of the country, now look pitiable
in the eyes of most Nigerians.
During this independence anniversary,
the President and other leaders will reaffirm their faith in the
indivisibility, survival and greatness of our nation. They will assure
citizens that all our problems will soon be things of the past. They
will ask all citizens to remain steadfast in their support for them, to
raise their levels of patriotism and commitment to the nation, and to
re-dedicate themselves to rediscovering the ideals of our founding
fathers who fought so hard to wrest our freedom from imperialism.
This year too, Nigerians are likely to ignore these empty and
meaningless messages, because they will not assure or inspire anyone to
do what they have not done. They will not give citizens confidence that
our lives will be safer or more secure in the next few months, or this
time next year. They will not console citizens who worry that politics
is pushing the nation very close to the abyss. They will not assure our
young people that they can live in a united, prosperous and secure
nation. They will not assuage the worry that large-scale corruption has
eaten too deeply into our politics and the management of our economy;
and therefore the entire edifice of the Nigerian state is precariously
balanced. It will take only a push which will certainly come from the
massive resources that will be mobilized and deployed towards the
dangerous jockeying for the life and soul of the nation in the 2015
election to tip our nation into an irretrievable slide. The same leaders
who say we are safe, are fighting over resource mobilization and
distribution; over which region, not voters or parties, will produce the
next President; and over the nature of our federal system. All these
quarrels are putting our fragile unity at great risk. Some Nigerian
women may celebrate the independence anniversary of their country caged
like animals or criminals in Saudi Arabia because they are citizens of a
nation which is weak or indifferent to the welfare of its citizens.
Many citizens are taking up arms against their nation. Others see little
difference between its survival and collapse. Poverty and helplessness
are redefining the Nigerian political map.
If a look back at the
record of the Jonathan administration since the last independence is a
depressing exercise, a look towards the next independence will alarm
even the most level-headed. The maneuvers towards the 2015 elections are
well and truly visible. It will require the most monumental sacrifice
for President Jonathan (and the people who benefit most from his
presidency) not to run for the office again in 2015. Events unfolding
will not wait for him to make up his mind beyond 2013. If he could
renounce personal ambition and the pressures of those who milk his
government, he could concentrate on damage limitation around key issues
such as insecurity and corruption. He could run his term until 2015 and
attempt a relatively free and fair election, and then allow history to
judge him for doing what his predecessors failed to do. But this is
highly unlikely. His people will tell him that the second term is the
only guarantee that he can complete all he has started; correct mistakes
made, and then acquire enough influence and resources to live in
relative peace in Nigeria. They will say he represents a people and a
region which must have two terms, and only their enemies wish they will
not. They will tell him to ignore criticisms of weakness and
incompetence because it comes from people who are used to ruling, and
who cannot wait to reclaim power.
So he is likely to throw his hat
more openly into the ring. It will join those being thrown in by General
Muhammadu Buhari, Atiku Abubakar and about five or six Governors. There
are yet others who are keeping low, but all of them are likely to
reinforce the existing liabilities of the nation; rather than give it a
new lease of life.
President Jonathan laments that he is unfairly
criticized by the Nigerian media. He could try to improve the
performance of his administration, and attempt to break new grounds to
reduce the hostility of the media. He could also lower the fences around
him
self, and let in some of that fresh air he promised Nigerians
in 2011. He is not in touch with the feelings and pains of most
Nigerians because apparently those around him tell him he is doing very
well, and all critics are his enemies. If President Jonathan does not
get a firm grip on the Boko Haram insurgency, and if he does not address
very low levels of competence and capacity in his administration, and
if he does not facilitate a reduction of the dangerous gaps which are
evident in political groups and regions, and if he does not deal with
corruption more decisively, our nation will be a lot worse than it is by
this time next year. Since no patriotic or sensible Nigerian would wish
this, here is to wishing President Jonathan a stronger will to do those
things he swore to do as President.
Via Nasir El-Rufai
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