A Tale Of Two
Choices
By
Simon Kolawole
culled from THISDAY, April 24, 2006
It was the best of times,
It was the worst of times;
It was the age of wisdom,
It was the age of foolishness;
It was the epoch of belief,
It was the epoch of incredulity;
It was the season of Light,
It was the season of Darkness;
It was the spring of hope, Tale Of Two Choices by Simon Kol
It was the winter of despair;
We had everything before us,
We had nothing before us…
—Charles Dickens, ‘A Tale of Two Cities’
As the nation finally moves
towards the formalisation of the life presidency project (alias third term),
perhaps it is good for us to pause and look once more at the scenarios
before the president. We have been praying and wishing that President
Olusegun Obasanjo would go home in grace and honour on May 29, 2007 after a
colourful and glorious ceremony at the Eagle Square, Abuja, in the presence
of world leaders and Atilogu dancers, to be shown live on AIT, NTA, CNN and
BBC. But he seems determined to overstay his welcome. He seems to have been
sufficiently deceived by the court jesters around him who keep telling him
that, indeed, he is the only human being who can embark on a reform
programme. Judging by the doggedness of this obsession with power, we can
only conclude that a dog that is bent on going astray will never listen to
the call of its owner. A player that is determined to get a red card will
never listen to the whistle of the referee.
The Yoruba say “the end ni opin sinima”. When you’re watching a movie at a
cinema and you see “The End” displayed on the screen, the time has come for
you to wear your shoes, dust your cap and go home gently, no matter how
“sweet” the movie is. It beats the imagination why an experienced and
intelligent person like President Obasanjo will choose to sit tight rather
than respect himself and bow out peacefully.
Here was somebody who was dying in Yola prisons. By divine favour, he not
only came out of prison alive, he was installed as president of Nigeria.
What else does Obasanjo want in his life? You would think that, ordinarily,
Obasanjo would be grateful to God for keeping him alive to rule Nigeria for
another eight years. But the lust for power—that terminal ailment ravaging
many African leaders—will not allow him to see reason. He would rather
listen to the self-serving sycophants that have formed a wall around him. As
the federal legislators scheme to change the constitution in Obasanjo’s
favour, we should nevertheless take solace in the fact that the best-laid
plans can go wrong.
All this propaganda about somebody succeeding Obasanjo and reversing the
reform programme is absolute trash. It will take a completely mad man to
withdraw GSM licences, reverse “debt relief”, “de-consolidate” the banks,
revert cassava policy, “de-privatise” public enterprises and so on and so
forth. Like I’ve said before, the entire reform programme is an IMF/World
Bank-inspired design. It is therefore very misleading and deceptive to tell
Nigerians that it is an Obasanjo programme and he is the only one who can
implement it. Any developing country that does not implement these reforms
will be crushed by the powers that be.
All over Africa, it is the same language of reform: privatisation,
liberalisation, arms-length government, retrenchment (“right-sizing”), cut
in social spending, removal of subsidies and the rest of them. There is
nothing original to Obasanjo in all that and these semi-literate sycophants
should stop insulting our intelligence with their ill logic. It’s a simple
thing: if you don’t embark on reforms, IMF/World Bank will suffocate you.
Even if Comrade Adams Oshiomhole were to become Nigeria’s president today,
he will have to toe the IMF/World Bank line. Obasanjo himself tried to
resist the IMF/World Bank between 1999 and 2003, but he eventually went back
to them and has now become their darling president. In fact, how many
African countries can survive without the support and endorsement of these
neo-colonial institutions?
Today, I will like to paint the two choices before the President Obasanjo
and ask why on earth he does not want to take the honourable path.
The best of times…
I believe Obasanjo has achieved a
lot, far more than we can appreciate now. I believe that many of his
achievements will not be appreciated until they begin to yield fruits in the
future, some in 10 years’ time. That is when we can look back and say this
was the man who laid the foundation for this and that. Of course, I also
believe he could have and should have achieved far more, given the human and
financial resources at his disposal—unprecedented since Lord Luggard glued
Nigeria together in 1914—but the fact remains that the man has re-designed
the economic landscape under the guidance and protection of the Bretton
Woods institutions, and he deserves the credit irrespective of any
misgivings and reservations.
Although politically, Obasanjo has been a disaster, using brute force and
naked power to pummel those who don’t agree with him to submission, he has
managed to create a good international image for himself and is perceived as
a statesman all over the world. It’s his luck, and we must congratulate him
for that.
In 1979, he left power on a high as the first African military dictator to
voluntarily relinquish power to civilians. He became an international
figure, much sought after to deliver lectures. He became a respected voice
on African politics and could call any African head of state or president to
order if things were going wrong.
On the local scene, his voice was often sought by the media, and he never
disappointed in delivering scathing criticisms of the actions and inactions
of the governments that succeeded his. His famous interview with TELL in
1993 is a landmark in the history of journalism in Nigeria. Photocopies of
the interview were being sold by vendors. I have never read an interview so
often quoted. It was full of venom and verbiage. He spoke at a time
Nigerians were tired of the IBB government. He spoke for everyone, in spite
his antecedents.
If Obasanjo leaves in 2007, what is the likely scenario? He will become a
bigger hero, in spite of his recent history. From his Ota farm, he will
become our mini-Mandela. He will become an authority on economic reforms and
political transition. He will be invited to deliver lectures all over the
world on how to reform the economy, groom successors and hand over power
peacefully. He will become a role model. He will have the moral right to
criticise sit-tight African leaders and refer to how he served his
constitutional terms without changing the constitution. He will be able to
take the Mugabes and Musevenis of Africa to the cleaners without mincing his
words. On the local scene, he will be like a guiding voice for the political
project. He will talk, intervene and counsel whenever anything is going
wrong in the land. I can imagine headlines like: “Obasanjo Cautions National
Assembly on Foreign Reserves”, “Obasanjo Mediates in Kogi/Edo Land Dispute”,
“Obasanjo Advocates Fiscal Prudence”, etc. I imagine that any president or
world figure that visits Nigeria must pay homage to Obasanjo at Ota before
departing. I imagine that Obasanjo will see him/her off to his balcony and
say one or two things to the media which will make the headlines the
following day. That is my wish, my prayer, my desire for Obasanjo.
The worst of times…
If Obasanjo stays beyond 2007, he
will automatically run into a moral morass. He will lose whatever
credibility and legacy he thinks he has built for himself in his 70 years on
earth. History does not favour those who sit tight—they become even more
desperate and more brutal as opposition explodes in their face. People
easily forget whatever these rulers have achieved while in office. The
memories that stick are the awful ones—the arrests and incarceration of
activists, break-up of rallies, clampdown on the press, police shooting
sprees, the climate of fear. That is all you remember about desperate
despots.
IBB can testify to this. For all his achievements in office, Nigerians
remember him mainly for his unending transition programme that climaxed, or
anti-climaxed, in the annulment of June 12 and the political crisis that
bedevilled the country for five years. How many Nigerians remember that it
was IBB who started economic reforms? He started privatisation. He
deregulated telecommunications by setting up the Nigerian Communications
Commission (NCC). That was the beginning of private participation in
telecoms, ultimately leading to the GSM era. He deregulated the broadcast
media and licensed private TV/radio stations. He tried to address banking
distress and set up the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC). He
came up with Community Banks. He set up the National Directorate for
Employment (NDE)—which is what NAPEP is trying to copy. IBB, it was, who set
up NAFDAC, FRSC and NDLEA. He completed the then abandoned third mainland
bridge in Lagos. I can go on and on. All these are still with us today. So
much for those half-clever third term hooligans who say the exit of Obasanjo
will lead to the termination or discontinuation of reforms! Why didn’t
Abacha, Abdulsalami and Obasanjo wipe off IBB’s legacies? I insist: only a
mad man will terminate a legacy that is working well. Even Abacha did not
wipe off or reverse IBB’s legacies.
But this is my point: the moment IBB annulled June 12, his account entered
an irreversible deficit. Nobody talks about his monumental achievements
again. All we associate him with is annulment, Dele Giwa and Gulf War
windfall. IBB is finished and has nothing more to offer after tossing us to
and fro for eight years. It is only incurable boot-lickers who tell IBB
today that he should come back to power. If IBB had not destroyed the house
he was building, he would have been a hot cake today. How many important
international fora does IBB get invited to today? What is IBB’s standing
outside the country? Yet, he was an achiever by all standards. But because
he did not know when to say goodbye, only very few people remember him for
good.
That is the danger Obasanjo is walking into with his eyes wide open. His
obsession with life presidency will set this country on fire. Politically,
Nigeria is fragile. It always is. We all witnessed how that terrorist called
General Sani Abacha nearly suicide-bombed this country before his
unceremonious exit. The wise thing for any president to do is not to create
room for another round of crises. Obasanjo would do well not to drag Nigeria
into another political crisis (we called it “impasse” under IBB and “logjam”
under Abacha; what shall we call Obasanjo’s own?).
All the economic reforms he claims to be doing will lose relevance if we
descend into an Abacha-like crisis again. He should never think the rest of
the country will keep quiet if he succeeds in manipulating his way. It is
going to be another era of protests, demonstrations, riots, civil
disobedience, tear-gassing, arrests, detentions and killings. The animosity
between Hausas and Yorubas following the June 12 trauma has not been healed
till today. The tension is always there. At the slightest provocation, the
bubble bursts. Most Igbos are yet to overcome the bitterness of the civil
war. The Niger Delta is boiling. If Obasanjo extends his tenure without
regard for the feelings of the rest of the country, the consequences may be
unpalatable.
Remember Godwin Odiye? Obasanjo may end up like him. Odiye was a fantastic
defender who was a permanent feature in the senior national football team in
the 1970s and early 80s. But one terrible day in 1977, everything that could
go wrong went wrong. In a crucial 1978 World Cup qualifying match against
Tunisia, Odiye wanted to head the ball to safety towards goalkeeper Emmanuel
Okala, but he ended up scoring an own goal against Nigeria. The Green Eagles
were eliminated there and then. Today, nobody remembers Odiye’s good moments
and fantastic defensive skills. Anytime you hear Odiye, it is “own goal”
that crosses your mind. How many people even remember that he was part of
the African Cup of Nations-winning team in 1980? His name invokes nothing
else but “own goal”. That is exactly where Obasanjo is dragging himself
to—or where his five-man, one-woman “private sector” team is dragging him
to. It is left for him to choose what he wants: best of times or worst of
times? Age of wisdom or age of foolishness? Epoch of belief or epoch of
incredulity? Season of light or season of darkness? Spring of hope or winter
of despair? Everything before him or nothing before him?
A word should be enough for the wise…
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