Before The Onset Of Obasanjo's Lame-Duck Presidency
By
Ropo Sekoni
culled from GUARDIAN, May 15, 2005
Cynics would
argue that President Olusegun Obasanjo started his two-term presidency in a
lame-duck manner. Such cynics would base their conclusion on Obasanjo's
accomplishments in his first term. They would say that apart from his
deregulation of telecommunication, Obasanjo was unable to make progress in
the energy sector. Second, he was virtually helpless in the face of efforts
by some northern states to compromise the time-honoured secularity of the
Nigerian state through the abrupt introduction of Sharia jurisprudence in
about 12 northern states.
Third, he was unable to prevent several interethnic tensions that led to the
killing of thousands of Nigerians on account of their religious affiliation.
The foregoing notwithstanding, Obasanjo's lame-duck presidency is yet to
come; it will arrive in 2006, given the recent public assurance of Nigerians
by Obasanjo that he is not interested in asking for any extension or extra
time of six, four, or two years beyond 2007. From all appearances, Obasanjo
is fast approaching the lame-duck phase of his presidency, and this is the
time for observers of his administration to remind him of areas that require
immediate attention before he starts to descend into the eclipse of his
presidency.
One
outstanding project that Obasanjo must face is the Identity Card scheme.
Shortly before the end of his first term and before the 2003 election,
Obasanjo put a lot of energy into the Identity Card scheme. It was even
rumoured by members of his team at that time that he was interested in using
the National Identity Card as a backup document for registration to voters.
Members of Arewa group cried foul about any effort to use the Identity Card
as a requirement for voting. General Buhari said that the level of education
or literacy in northern Nigeria would create enormous difficulties for his
people and thus disenfranchise them unintentionally. The noise about using
the Identity Card scheme as a means of creating a fairly verifiable record
of Nigerians over 18 years of age suddenly died down once Obasanjo was made
the flag bearer of PDP for the 2003 presidential election.
Two years
after the election, the presidency and the media are manifestly silent about
the ID card scheme, apart from occasional references to the corruption
charges against late Sunday Afolabi, the Minister of Internal Affairs in
charge of the ID card scheme in the days before the 2003 Presidential
election. For obasanjo not to be misunderstood or misconstrued on the
Identity card scheme, he should spend the remaining period before the onset
of the lame-duck phase of his regime to complete the ID card scheme. Every
Nigerian over 18 years should obtain and carry an ID card that is not prone
to counterfeiting before Obasanjo becomes a lame-duck president.
The ID card
should be used for all purposes of identifying its bearer for business and
civic purposes. It should be used as identification for obtaining legal
national, state, and local government documents. It should be used as
voter's registration card and for obtaining ballot papers during elections
at all levels. Otherwise, Obasanjo would strengthen his opponent's view of
the noise and activities regarding the ID card in 2003 as a bargaining chip
with states that were opposed to the use of ID cards as one way of drawing a
line between real human beings and ghost human beings in Nigerian politics
in general and census issues in particular. Obasanjo cannot afford to leave
a legacy of failure in a project he introduced as a military dictator in
1979 and had eight years of presidential power to carry out between 1999 and
2007.
Another
project that Obasanjo must bring to fruition before he becomes a lame-duck
ruler is the census. All over the world, census is organised to find out the
number of citizens and immigrants in each country and to collect relevant
data on people in a country for purposes of economic and social planning.
Knowing how many Muslims or Christians, Fulanis, Ijaws, Igbos, Yorubas, etc,
in Nigeria is not a volatile political issue and should not be presented as
such; it is an economic information that is capable of attracting investment
from within and outside Nigeria.
For instance,
a company that wants to manufacture rosary or print copies of the Quoran
would need to know the potential market for such goods in Nigeria. Almost on
the eve of the conduct of the Nigerian census, different parts of the
country are threatening to boycott the enumeration process for reasons of
inclusion or exclusion of questions on ethnic or religious affiliation on
the census form. The boycott of the census by any section of Nigeria for one
hour is enough to call the integrity of the census into question and throw
Nigeria back to the bad old days of political negotiation over what numbers
to use to describe Nigeria's population.
Obasanjo
should not give any impression that he is ready to collude with any section
of Nigeria that may be afraid of the truth of the numerical strength of each
ethnic or religious group in Nigeria. We have used false figures or
politically negotiated numbers to determine the population of Nigeria for
over 40 years, and we all know where this behaviour has landed the country
in terms of political and economic planning and accomplishment. The
presidency should not politicise the census unduly by giving the impression
that there are Nigerians that are afraid of knowing how many Igbo or Ijaw
people reside in each region of Nigeria. Knowing the number of people from
each ethnic group in Nigeria is not any different from knowing the number of
Ghanaians, Togolese, Ivorians, etc., in ECOWAS for purposes of rational
social and economic planning.
If we want to
convince our creditors about debt forgiveness, we must, in addition to
fighting bureaucratic corruption aggressively, be ready to convince the
Paris Club of nations about the number of people that share the money made
from petroleum. Although our able Minister of Finance used Nigeria's
population as a way of establishing Nigeria as a very poor nation, there is
no doubt that she too would have been fumbling for answers if she had been
pinned down by creditors to provide verifiable sources for the number of
people who share Nigeria's resources from petroleum.
Hoping that
the President's National Political Reforms Conference will be over before
Obasanjo becomes a lame duck, it is necessary for the president to use the
remaining days in his productive presidency to settle the issue of getting a
constitution that is approved by a referendum. All indications from Arewa
and northern senators are to the effect that whatever recommendations
emanate from the conference in Abuja may not lead to radical constitutional
amendments. Hoping to pass new constitutional provisions through the
existing legislatures may be futile, and thus increase the number of
failures to be put in Obasanjo's bag at the end of his eight-year tenure as
civilian president. The best option is to package the suggestions from the
National conference for a national referendum, well ahead of the advent of
the lame-duck period.
If Obasanjo
wants to be known as Nigeria's infrastructure President, he would need to
make sure that the deregulation of the energy sector leads to the
availability of energy for industrial and domestic use in the country before
he leaves in 2007, not just promises about the number of mega watts on the
way. This means that he must get all the local and foreign investors who
have shown interest in participating in Nigeria's energy sector on board and
in the trenches before the middle of 2006.
Obasanjo may
go down as a president that flouts the rule of law unless he releases the
statutory allocations to local governments in Lagos State. As Professor
Segun Gbadegesin said recently in "Mocking the Rule of Law", respect for the
rule of law and court orders is a sine qua non of democratic culture. The
final interpreter of the laws of a democratic country is the court, more so
the Supreme Court of the land. No president that is dismissive of the
judgment of the Supreme Court on any issue usually goes down well in
history. All that Obasanjo is going to have after 2007 is the judgment of
history; he needs to use the remaining part of his rule to do the right
thing, especially with respect to respecting the views of the court, as this
is the only way to expect the average Nigerian to be law-abiding.
One last
project for Obasanjo to conclude before his presidency becomes largely
ceremonial is to put to rest the charges in the United States that Nigeria
is a country with al-Queda presence. Newspapers and television programmes in
the United States have in recent days put a lot of attention on the
influence of al-Queda in Nigeria. This kind of publicity is not conducive to
growth and development of democracy in Nigeria.
Most people who live in Nigeria or visit Nigeria often would say that most
Nigerians are not interested in the kind of religious fanaticism that
produces and nurtures al-Queda; on the contrary, most people in Nigeria are
interested in a secular society that nurtures political, religious, and
economic democracy and pluralism. Nobody is in a better position to provide
the needed data for the United States about the truth or falsity of the
presence of al-Queda in Nigeria. This is one thing that Obasanjo must do
before he becomes a lame duck, and before thousands of Nigerians in North
America are viewed as products of al-Queda mentality. Should there by any
truth to the claim about al-Queda presence in Nigeria, Obasanjo should use
his reputation as someone who believes fanatically in the unity of Nigeria
to convince all sections of Nigeria that any form of jihadism is capable of
ruining Nigeria's unity or accelerating Nigeria's disintegration.
Gani Fawehinmi
just described Obasanjo as Nigeria's omniscient president. Without doubt,
Obasanjo's rhetoric and lifestyle since he came back to power subsequent to
his imprisonment by General Abacha suggests that he takes himself more
seriously than any leader in history about his intellectual prowess.
Consequently, he should have no problem envisaging that political historians
are getting ready to write their chronicles of Obasanjo's 8 years in Aso
Rock. Before professional chroniclers put their words in print, Obasanjo is
still in a position to right many of the wrongs that existed in Nigeria
before his coming to power, so that historians of his regime can see him as
part of the solution, rather than as part of the problem of Nigeria.
Prof. Sekoni teaches English and Mass Communication at
Lincoln University in the United States