Today is October 1,
2020, 60 years after Nigeria became ‘independent’ and 60 years of being potentially
great. One should not be sulking on a day like this, when we should be
joyously counting our blessings one-by-one and seeing what God has done.
Surely, the good Lord was (and is) favourably disposed towards Nigeria as
evidenced in all that he did to and for Nigeria( large and diverse population, awesome natural
endowments, including large expanse of fertile land ). I am convinced that some countries are
accusing Him of barefaced partiality. Unfortunately, because of what we have
done and what we have failed to do, the blessings to count are few, and are
getting fewer by the day. We have
allowed ourselves to be burdened (did we actually?) with accidental leaders,
with each of them adopting the ‘Rehoboamic model’(1kings,12:1-15:
imposing more oppressive burdens than their predecessors) . Sadly, we the
people, have adopted and continue to adopt
a pusillanimous, docile, whatever
Oga does is right attitude. Thus, while the leaders have
done the wrong things with impunity, we the people have failed to
do the right things for ourselves and for the forthcoming generations.
Multiple choice
Questions (MCQs) appear easy, because at worst, the student would just choose
an option and if there were just 3 options, he has a .33 probability of being correct. It is
however difficult because at times all the options appear correct and differ
only in degrees of correctness. The above MCQ( the title) is the type in which all appear to be correct.
It was derived from the response by the
‘presidency’ to those who are warning that Nigeria is on the brink( it has been
there several times) and that this time, we may not be so lucky. Those who cried in the wilderness about the unflattering situation of Nigeria and the
to your tents oh Israel scenario include Bishop
Kukah, Archbishop Onayekan, Prof Soyinka and Chief Obasanjo. Soyinka and
Obasanjo, age-mates and brothers, are strange bedfellows who have probably only
agreed on two issues in recent years: in 2015 that Jonathan was the worst President ever and
that PMB was the Messiah for Nigeria( with OBJ publicly tearing his PDP card)
and now, 2020, that PMB is a failed Messiah,
and that the country should be saved from him. Obasanjo based his multidimensional warning
on insecurity and believed that restructuring is the panacea or else… In his
own words ‘Nigeria is fast drifting to a failed and
badly divided state; economically our country is becoming a basket case and
poverty capital of the world, and socially, we are firming up as an unwholesome
and insecure country.
Garba Shehu accused him of
descending ‘from the lofty heights of Commander-in-Chief, to the
lowly level of Divider-in-Chief’ . As a corollary to this,
Soyinka declared that ‘The nation is divided as never before
under President Buhari who went to sleep while communities were
consistently ravaged by cattle marauders, all over the landscape, who advised
the traumatised victims to learn to live peacefully with their violators.. and
whose spokesman gleefully dismissed the
mass burial of victims in Benue State as a “staged show” for international
entertainment and that “only the living” can enjoy the dividends of legal
rights”… adding that “We are close to extinction as a viable comity
of peoples’.
Bishop Kukah had in January 2020 described the government
as a Boko-Haram without bombs because it is using different method to
achieve the same goal of Islamic dominance; A statement the great
Lai described as unfortunate
divisive, incendiary and insensitive. Last weekend( 26/9/20) he
further declared that Nigerians are sadder and more frustrated than ever, accusing PMB of “greatest
degree of insensitivity in managing the country’s diversity” especially
as lopsided appointments are against the
spirit of a united Nigeria and that “We
have never had it this bad in our history where power is privatised and shared
based on religious and ethnic considerations.” He concluded that when
you recruit people based on religious and ethnic considerations, it diminishes
the system, create tension and make others feel like they don’t belong to the
system’ Earlier that week(
20/9/20), John Cardinal Onaiyekan, the
immediate past Catholic Archbishop of
Abuja gave his own brief punchy warning that Nigeria’ can break up even before 2023, if we continue to be
irresponsible and reckless.’ It was
around the same time that the Bishop of Anglican Communion, diocese
of Kaduna, Timothy Yahaya lamented that life in Nigeria has become nasty,
brutish and short, owing to increasing rate of insecurity across the
nation.
Rtd Lt Gen Akinrinade
recalled the ‘pervasive belief’ that PMB is an ethnic bigot, an
irredeemable religious fundamentalist, with open pro-fulanisation
agenda, who treats the Fulani armed
gangs ‘with deodorant’ and hoped he was aware of the cries for separation
across the land. He the argued that he has woefully failed in the war against
BH and failed to reflect ‘the heterogeneous composition of our country
when it comes to appointments to sensitive positions in his government’
As this is going on, MASSOB, the former leading Biafranist group declared that ‘Under President Muhammadu Buhari, the Nigeria state has
turned to a Fulani empire where every other major and minor ethnic
nationalities are not regarded. IPOB had already ordered for a sit-at-home in
‘Biafra-land’ on October 1.
Subsequently, Apapo Oodua Koya,
(AOKOYA), a coalition of several Itsekiri, Edo and Yoruba groups wrote a love
letter to the Sultan as the head of the 7m Fulani in Nigeria,
complaining and warning that ‘the Fulani are digging their hands down our
throats. They are entering our bedrooms and sleeping with our mothers and
wives. These actions are against humanity.. which have renewed the energy of
millions of people who want a country of
their own;.. and that Having Yoruba or Igbo Republics is imminent and inevitable. AOKOYA just
wanted ‘to live our lives, design our political and cultural architecture, live
and die on our own terms’ and promised to accommodate law abiding Fulani in
their republic. Around this same
time, Gen Buratai usurped Executive and Legislative powers, and threatened to
impose state of emergency in the South
East, if his men were attacked again. Ohanaeze wondered why he had not issued
such warnings in the North, which have
become theatres of war and where army posts and are attacked incessantly by
sundry Non State Actors who
overrun military bases, kill and maim our soldiers and who gave him the
powers to say so. This was happening as the contentious Water Resources Bill
surreptitiously re-surfaced at NSSS, where it is receiving urgent attention,
despite the strident protestation of Southern and North Central regions. I cannot remember when our October 1
discussions were inundated with such dreadful and doomful declarations. It is
also noteworthy that most of those warning PMB now( Soyinka, Obasanjo,
Akinrinade),were his cheer leaders in 2015.
However, the most worrisome on
this matter was the reaction of the government to the outpouring of frustration
by Nigerians. Femi
Adesina, ‘who has put fire on everything he ever wrote as a journalist’ since
becoming the SA talk-talk to PMB gave it back to all these people, and indeed
to all of us, that
"Nigeria had always been divided right from the inconvenient
amalgamation of 1914. …and there is no
time in the history of this country that the country was not divided. As at
2015 when President Buhari came, Nigeria was terribly divided; divided along
ethnic, religious and political lines; divided along language; divided
hopelessly and terribly. So, if they say Nigeria is divided today, it is
because Nigeria has always been divided. And all efforts to unite Nigeria and
Nigerians never worked’ . He did not contradict these positions; he did
not explain what the government has done to ameliorate the situation; he just
said, ‘it has always been so’. Saddening!
But these warnings about the future
of Nigeria did not start today. In 2013, Soyinka had warned that ’if we are to remain as a country,
we have to treat one another as equals; we have to accept the same set of
protocols. Nobody can say that these protocols do not apply to him/her; or that
he has immunity and can act with impunity to hurt the rest of the nation (Certain Mindsets must change for
Nigeria to stay united. Guardian, 1/6/13, p10-12). Emeka Anyaoku had
raised the alarm that Nigeria was more divided than before during his 85th
Birthday( Guardian, 18/1/18). He blamed it on a defective governance structure
that fostered the militancy and separatist tendencies across the country,
‘which promotes intense competition( religious and ethnic) for the control of
the center, which exacerbated the divisive factors in Nigeria’ He had
advised Nigeria to learn from Canada, India and Malaysia, which had experience
in such matters.
Surprisingly, another
warning about the possible breakup of Nigeria came from a strange quarter. Our
Vice President Professor, Barrister, Pastor Osinbajo has joined the fray by warning that Nigeria will soon break up if the various
cracks in the polity were not adequately treated. He was speaking at the 2020 Independence
interdenominational service. Not surprisingly, Ohaneze, Afenifere and PANDEF
hailed him, saying we should not live in denial, that government is not doing
enough to mend the cracks and that restructuring is it. Arewa Consultative
Forum on the other hand ‘warned’ the VP
for raising the tension in the polity, even though they agreed that there were
some cracks in the Nigerian wall. That is a sign of the division we are talking
about.The President of the Christian
Association of Nigeria, Dr Samson Ayokunle, had supported Osinbajo’s motion by saying that “For
us, all to be on the same page, have a sense of belonging and be happy, the
doctrine of equality, that is equal access to employment, governance and
education, must be available to all. The principle of inclusivity must be
adopted. Nobody or region must be excluded from the scheme of things in Nigeria. I am still awaiting the response of Garba Shehu or Femi
Adesina to the crack in the wall treatise.
Meanwhile, we started this writeup with a
three-option Multiple Choice Question. In response to the first option, I agree with Femi Adesina,
(for the first time) that Nigeria has always been divided. That was why some
people spoke of Araba; that was why some
people described ndi-Igbo as intruders; that was why some governors adopted Sharia law in a
secular state and that was why some people called Nigeria a mere geographical
expression while others described it as a mistake….. We shall still discuss the
other options in due course. Meanwhile, happy independence!
Having provided answers and being in agreement with the proponent of the first of the three-option Multiple Choice Questions about Nigeria's divisibility status especially at 60, I'm tempted to say the answers to the remaining two will also be positive; nevertheless, I patiently await further discussions on them. Happy Independence sir!
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful piece. Weldon.
ReplyDeleteSame to you sir 😀
ReplyDeleteWell written Dr. While I await for your opinion on the other MCQs ,I do also agree with Mr. Demi Adesina but the question is this , what have they done to ameliorate the situation. Truly with the lopsided appointment even till of late it shows the insensitivity of the Presidency to the plight of masses. Fueling the already tensed situation isn't the way to go.
ReplyDelete