Prof. Wole Soyinka.
By Wole Soyinka
I am notoriously no
fan of Olusegun Obasanjo, General, twice former president and co-architect with
other past leaders of the crumbling edifice that is still generously called
Nigeria. I have no reasons to change my stance on his record.
Nonetheless, I embrace the responsibility of calling
attention to any accurate reading of this nation from whatever source, as a
contraption teetering on the very edge of total collapse. We are close to
extinction as a viable comity of peoples, supposedly bound together under an
equitable set of protocols of co-habitation, capable of producing its own means
of existence, and devoid of a culture of sectarian privilege and will to
dominate.
On Africa Day, May 2019, organised by the Union Bank
of Africa, I similarly seized an opening to direct the attention of this
government to warnings by the Otta farmer over the self-destruct turn that the
nation had taken, urged the wisdom of heeding the message, even while remaining
chary of the messenger. That advice appears to have fallen on deaf ears. In
place of reasoned response and openness to some serious dialogue, what this
nation has been obliged to endure has been insolent distractions from garrulous
and coarsened functionaries, apologists and sectarian opportunists.
The nation is divided as never before, and this
ripping division has taken place under the policies and conduct of none other
than President Buhari – does that claim belong in the realms of speculation?
Does anyone deny that it was this president who went
to sleep while communities were consistently ravaged by cattle marauders, were
raped and displaced in their thousands and turned into beggars all over the
landscape?
Was it a different president who, on being finally
persuaded to visit a scene of carnage, had nothing more authoritative to offer
than to advice the traumatised victims to learn to live peacefully with their
violators?
And what happened to the Police Chief who had defied
orders from his Commander-in-Chief to relocate fully to the trouble spot – he
came, saw, and bolted, leaving the ‘natives’ to their own devices. Any
disciplinary action taken against ‘countryman’?
Was it a spokesman
for some ghost president who chortled in those early, yet controllable stages
of now systematised mayhem, gleefully dismissed the mass burial of victims in
Benue State as a “staged show” for international entertainment? Did the other
half of the presidential megaphone system not follow up – or was it, precede? –
with the wisdom that they, the brutalized citizenry, should learn to bow under
the yoke and negotiate, since “only the living” can enjoy the dividends of
legal rights?
To reel off any achievements of a government –
genuine or fantasised, trivial or monumental – is thus to dodge the issue, to
ignore the real core concerns. No government, however inept, fails to record
some form of achievement – this was why it were elected, and it takes real
genius to succeed in spending four years actually doing nothing. What it fails
to do, or what it does wrongly, deceitfully or prejudicially is what concerns
the citizenry.
Across this nation, there is profound distrust,
indeed abandonment of hope in this government as one that is genuinely
committed to the survival of the nation as one, or indeed understands the
minimal requirements for positioning it as a modern, functional space of
productive occupancy.
Donald Trump is not without a governance pass mark
here or there – indeed, he has been touted for the Nobel Peace prize in some
quarters, backed, predictably, by the quota Nigerian columnist – yet who
dares deny, outside Republican diehard circles – that the great United States
of American is brutally divided, and is even unraveling under the
Trumpian phenomenon!
Back to our own yaws however: Are pensioners still
considered human, deserving the rewards of labour without further labour?
Many collapse from that extended labour of recovering routine entitlements.
Even routine access to that basic human requirement – food – is now under
question, as farmers are chased off their farms in large numbers. Instead of
timely action – urged stridently by beleaguered governors and of course by
‘professional agitators’ — appeasement of the violent food saboteurs was the
preferred route to food security – operating under fancy names like RUGA.
So how do you persuade graduates and young school
leavers to try their hands at farming instead of flooding urban centres looking
for non-existent white-collar positions? To get killed and dismembered?
And what is the score within those much-coveted
urban precincts? Lop-sided appointments to crucial positions in Civil Service
and parastatals! Consider the prime economic cash cow – petroleum –
exposed a few months ago as a reeking cesspit of nepotism. Who is the Minister
of Petroleum under whose watch such an unprecedented contempt for geographical
parity – uncontroverted till today — became entrenched? That happens to
be none other than the nation’s president – and he did make a show of
astonishment at the gross disparities, promised to subject the anomaly to
immediate enquiry.
May one ask what action has been taken to rectify
that presumably “nation-unifying” compilation? It all casts a long,
unedifying shadow backwards to those days of agitation by Tai Solarin and the
mercuric engineer, Awojobi when the same Buhari took forceful charge of that
ministry, promised to get to the root of the flying charges – anyone
still recall the saga of the missing millions?
He made a beeline for the home of a prominent
political leader and carted away loads of files in his illegal possession. In
vain the nation awaited enlightenment – Nothing!
National
divisiveness? Just where does culpability lie? Does centralist usurpation
divide or bind?
The answer is obvious in daily effects. We have even
heard the charge laid at the feet of governors. When the constitutive units of
this nation take steps to rescue themselves into the ‘unifying’ quagmire into
which they have been plunged by a creaking, clearly unworkable centralised
system, guess who squawk, gnash their teeth and threaten to call down thunder
even where such remedies are backed by constitutional provisions! Alas, the
dare of ignorance! And after being confronted by the legitimate right of
states to at least salvage their existence and protect their citizens, guess
who trundles out constrictive parameters, and attempts to dictate to governors
how such state prerogatives should be exercised! Come under the umbrella of a
failed Inspectorate Usurper – ordered the Garbled megaphone. Just on whose
authority?
We do know – let this be stated for the umpteenth
time! – that the rains did not just begin to beat us yesterday in this nation.
We know when the clouds began to gather, where the deluge began and turned to
severe pounding. We can pinpoint the first trickle of the torrent of
appeasement, of illegal extortions and concessions.
Past leaders will not be permitted to forget or
gloss over own self-centred interests and nation corrosive lapses that brought
us to this parlous present.
But we do endure in this here and now, in the
immediacy of current governance, so let no uppity flunkey attempt to divert
attention from current realities, realities that now clearly pronounce this
nation of once promising prospects a basket case of abject penury and
insecurity, where hordes of trained minds and sturdy limbs roam the streets as
beggars, as haphazard vendors of the products of other peoples, other lands!
Inequity reigns, and solutions are trivialised.
Again and again voices are raised to urge the dismantling of a crude, militarised
centralist contraption – repeatedly exposed in illegalities — and
substitute a more efficient governance system, decentralised, providing
broader access to opportunities.
All such efforts are turned into opportunities for
legislative junketing and budget padding. Legislators watch with indifference
in this day of human advance, as individuals are sentenced to hang for
expressing their views on the relative apprehension of religious avatars, not a
squeak emerge from such lawgivers. Pedophiles and cross-border sex traffickers
are honoured in the act, granted immunity on cooked-up alibis of religion. Is
this nation a theocracy?
Nigeria is a suppurating slaughter slab, and it
boggles the mind that supposedly wise and lettered men, sheltering under any
religious mandate, would go into a solemn huddle to ‘legitimately’ augment the
toll of mindless killings that now plague the land.
Presumably, the ongoing ‘national security’
persecution of Obadiah Mailafia is a sign of national unity? I invite our
marionettes to read deeply into history. Oh, excuse me, history has been
banned from learning structures, so look not for history books! However,
straightforward, first-hand testimonies abound, exposing structural flaws,
deceits and conspiracies against this presumptive national edifice.
They are perpetrated by highly placed servants of
the state, some of whom have since risen to even higher national positions. I
draw attention, for instance, to detailed revelations of plots against the
nation, plots that resonate in the present. Such is the two-year old interview
of a former ambassador to the Sudan, Bola Dada – The Punch
Newspapers. Archives remain ever obliging. They avail us vivid
material to decide whether or not a sinister script is being acted out today
with copious libations from Nigerian blood.
I think, in public interest, The Punch should re-run
that interview, most especially in view of recent claims by a columnist in The
Nation – Femi Abbas Sept. 4 — regarding how and by whom Nigeria was
corralled into the OIC. When you abolish History in institutions, you open the
gates wide for rampaging revisionism while the same gates are shut
against a grasp, however tenuous, of why, for instance, a Mailafia becomes a
target of serial interrogations and harassment, rather than those boldly
named in his revelations. Is it he who constitutes a danger to the nation, or
the indicted fanatics of unlimited impunity and callous disregard for humanity?
Why the ostentatious pretence of investigative zeal? The man has told you where
to look. Well, look in that direction and report back to us! In the meantime
however, ensure that he meets with no accident!
Still on security: any tear that is shed for the
arch-bandit and multiple murderer Akwaza, known as Gana, is an obscenity.
However, tears of trepidation are falling fast and furious over the conduct of
an army that eliminates a captive in cold blood, side-tracking the rationality
of professional investigations and legitimate pursuit of felons and other
enemies of society. The issue here is not one of the appropriateness of a
policy of Amnesty – that constitutes a larger debate in its place. The issue
here – and a critical one — is that a Wanted Man, on his way to
surrender, has been killed in cold blood. I read yesterday that the Army has
followed this up with a demand for the bounty earlier placed by the Benue State
governor on the head of the WANTED man. However, all reports so far indicate
that he was on his way to surrender? And so, is this bounty demand a joke? An
end then to such gallows humour! And certainly not now, not while the nation is
freshly reeling from the latest horror of the targeting of unarmed Road
Safety officials, gunned down in cold blood in their commuter bus, and the mass
kidnapping of survivors.
Shall we presume that the surviving casualties of
routine duty rosters are also nation-dividers if they scream out for protection
and deplore a breakdown in the entire security architecture of the nation?
We must however concede one remedial initiative to this
government. Perhaps it was a belated awareness that the roof of the national
edifice was on fire that instigated the effort to appropriate all available
water resources in the nation — a desperate move to put out the flames with one
hefty splash!
Presumably, even the rains that fall on earth will
belong to the Exclusive List? We shall have to learn to gather such rain
before it strikes the earth, or else queue for a licence to tap it later for
domestic use. Get ready to pay stiff fines when we get rain soaked for lack of
public transportation. Distractions upon distractions, but dangerous
distractions! Provocative moves that deeply erode any lingering faith in the
even-handed claims of governance, of respect for the rights of independent
peoples that were brought together to form a nation, and the justice of
equality of access to the land’s resources.
But the fault is not one-sided. Let governors also
wake up to their constitutional rights and duties. There are vast areas of
those rights that have been trampled upon, usurped for far too long.
Forget legislative jamborees of constitution reviews
– we have had our fill of them – all the files are gathering dust. It is time
for Reparations! Dust up those files and head for the courts. Prepare for
name-calling, just as long as such names embody – Dividers-in-law!
Only then shall we uncover who are the real
Dividers-in-Chief? If individual voices rankle, then perhaps it is time to
convoke a Nation Survival Conference. Let all sections and group interests
place their cards on the table and starkly articulate what we all know and
endure on a daily basis, and proffer solutions, debate moves towards a
collective – rational and sincere — undertaking of nation formation.
The ongoing governance posture of aggressive evasion
spells only one end: collective suicide.
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