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9th NASS; Sinators, horribles and an old peoples’ home! 2 - Ik Muo, PhD
9th NASS;
Sinators, horribles and an old peoples’
home! 2
Ik
Muo, PhD, FCIB. Department of Business Administration, OOU, Ago-Iwoye
Last week, we
discussed how senator Abboh announced
his arrival as the youngest member of the house of sin( Sinate) by assaulting
a pregnant woman, one of those Nigerians for whom he is supposed to be
making laws and conducting oversight functions . The Red Chamber as a group has
also committed the ‘sin’ of turning the serious business of lawmaking into one
huge joke. They created the local and global record of approving the whole
ministerial nominees submitted by the
President (23 of them without any questions,) including the one who unabashedly
declared that he had a right to decide when and when not, to obey court orders. A member who had a corruption case dangling around his
neck was made a ranking member of the
committee on EFCC, just like those with electoral cases were in the past asked
to oversea INEC! That was why Senator
Abaribe referred to the exercise as an endorsement hearing, rather than a
confirmation hearing!
The senate has also be
transformed from a retirement home for former governors and party leaders to an
old peoples home( OPH) of sorts. Analogue oldies, who were in charge while I
was shouting Ali-Must Go at UI in more than 30 years ago are now our lawmakers.
What do old people do? They dream ( acts 2.17; Joel,3:1)and how do they dream?
They sleep! Young ones also dream but when they dream, they wake up and
pursue the dreams and that is why it is a vision. The oldies dream and dream
on. You want me to name names? Just go to the net and search for sleeping
Sinators! Some have been in Government for the past 40 years and having been
retired and tired, they sought accommodation in the senate, the only OPH funded
directly from the Federal purse! And this is because of the caliber of the old
people there.
Our people say that when the she-goat is chewing cod, the kids watch and
learn. While those in the house of sin are retired, tired and old, and thus
respond to natural imperatives by
sleeping, the young ones in the green chambers are younger, more agile, full of
energy and are still seeing visions. Therefore, they have to find ways of using
these youthful attributes and thus they transform themselves to horrible boxers
and wrestlers. In the senate, the president listened to the voice of the
opposition party ( did you say parties…?) while constituting its leadership
team. In the green chamber, the Speaker spoke
only to his own interest and
decided to appoint minority officers for the minority party. The ‘winners’ are Mr Elumelu (Minority Leader) Toby Okechukwu
(Deputy Minority Leader) Gideon Gwani (Minority Whip) and Adesegun Adekoya
(Deputy Minority Whip). This is against the nominees of the PDP for these
posts(Kingsley Chinda , minority leaders; Chukwuka Onyema, Deputy Minority
Leader, Yakubu Barde ,Minority Whip and Muraina Ajibola, Deputy Minority Whip). I must admit that I don’t know how this is usually done either
constitutionally or politically.
Members of the opposition party took exception to that. It is a normal political and social tendency for people to take
offence whenever they feel cheated. However, the members reacted in a way that
is far from honourable.
They engaged in first class
pugilism and free-style wrestling in which there was neither a referee nor a
linesman and everything was thrown into the ring! It was a horrible scene acted
by horrible members! My heart beat
widely when I heard the name, Chinda, as I immediately remembered the River State House of Assembly crises of
about 6 years ago. But I don’t think it
is the same Chinda and I cant confirm whether both of them are related.
However, if I were in that house, I would have been VERY cautious when that
name cropped up. If you want to know why, go and review what happened in Port
Harcourt during that wild-wild
legislative era, when 5 became the majority against 26 and there were up to
three maces in ‘attendance’. The Rivers State scenario of old is also repeating
itself at Edo and Bauchi states where the simple grammatical mathematics of minority and
majority has become difficult to interpret. On Bauchi, two Speakers emerged
while in Edo, only 9 out of 24 were inaugurated and shared all the offices
among themselves. Honourable indeed!
Other Matters:
Checkpoints, security and the ease of travelling
The gods
are angry, a sacrifice MUST be performed and the white chalk is needed! This is what a policemen, detailed to provide
security along the Benin Bypass told me thrice, on Thursday,8/8/19. The man was a Yoruba man, who spoke a good
dose of Igbo Language, which he claimed
to have learnt while serving in Lagos. However, let me begin the story from the
beginning. I had to go home for a thousand and one engagements, the key one
being the Igbo-Ukwu 2019 Ili-ji ( new
yam) festival. On my entourage were my beloved, the Acting President of
Igbo-Ukwu Development Union, and a driver I had hired to drive me down for that
day( You see, the son of man is going down gradually and that was why the man
who drove effortlessly from Enugu to Jos, to Gombe, to Maiduguri Kano, Kaduna Abuja and back to Enugu) is now
finding it difficult to drive from Lagos to the east). We had left Lagos around
5.30am and our EAT( Estimated Arrival Time), barring any traffic gridlock, was
circa,12noon. However, the Nigerian Policemen were on duty! Between Ijebuode
and Benin, we encountered more than 50 police roadblocks. At a stage, it was so bad that you while being harassed at RoadBlock-x, you
would notice RoadBlock-y, about 500m away.
And
each contingent would search the booth
of the car, check your particulars, ask for your tinted permit and all that.
The consequence was that despite the free flow of traffic, we got home around
3pm! And the extra 3 hours delay was due to the activities of the policemen who
were searching for herdsmen in the boot of our car. And one of them was the man
who demanded for white chalk with which to make sacrifices to the gods of
Benin! Is that how the catch the herdsmen who emerge from the bush, strike and
disappear? Do the herdsmen wear red
caps, drive along the express way and particularly on Sagamu-Benin
Expressway? How do stationery police
teams, whom everybody knows where they are stationed, provide security? Why do
policemen allow easy passage to unregistered who pay 200 per checkpoint but ask those whose cars are
duly registered for documents I have not
heard about since I started driving 36 years ago? And which one is better: the policemen who
stop, search and ask asinine
questions or soldiers who just block the road with
logs of wood and watch as you people struggle over the consequential artificial traffic? And back to my police friend, who made him a priest of Bini Kingdom and why
must he be the priest to demand for white
chalk( nzu) for the sacrifice...along the expressway? . We have been measuring
ease of doing business. It is time we start measuring ease of travelling
because ease of travelling is also related to ease of doing business!
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