Daily Trust Sunday

Power play and the dangerous indulgence

- with Dan Agbese 0805500191­2 (SMS only)

Senate President Bukola Saraki, called it a show of shame. It was. No Nigerian, no matter his political affiliatio­n, could have been proud of the shameful siege on the National Assembly on August 7, by the hooded operatives of DSS. Its director-general, Lawal Daura, has been thrown under a moving trailer. Was it his own show, scripted and executed by him? Or was Daura made the fall guy, someone who was convenient­ly made to take the blame to protect his ogas at the top in order to assuage public shock and rage?

We do not yet know why it happened or the interest it was intended to serve. We have had hints of both. We know, however, that it left the country and its leaders, with gobs of shame on their faces. We know too that our country is in imminent danger of descending into chaos if the politician­s are bent on assured mutual destructio­n. We do not deserve this.

At his press conference August 8, Saraki spoke with obvious pain when he said: “In no circumstan­ces should this have happened. And we as a nation reaped the bitter fruits instantane­ously, as evident in media images relayed around the world, images that shame us as democratic nation.”

Nineteen years of democracy appear to have taught our politician­s nothing about the basic rules of the government of the people. Self-interest still subordinat­es the observance of the rule of law to the interest of the few at the expense of the many. The detestable African big man in one shape or another is the emerging face of our national politics today, thwarting efforts to help this country grow democratic­ally. Shame.

It is not the way to go. It is not the way to grow our democracy. And certainly, it is not the way this lumbering African giant can reclaim its potential and assume the position the rest of the world had virtually reserved for it: the incontesta­ble leadership of the African continent.

In 19 years of civil rule, our democracy has been repeatedly battered with the clubs of impunity and the cynical disinclina­tion to play by the rules of civilised political game. This should be the best of times; the time to savour the fruits and the dividends of democracy; this should be the time for us to showcase our democracy as a thriving system of government in a country that has scratched its head for so long to get it right. This should be the time to show that we have learnt the right lessons and are faithfully and dutifully applying them to guide our every step in our long walk to democratic nirvana. This is the time to show the world that we have recovered what we lost in the eight years of strong man Obasanjo when we could not distinguis­h between democracy and dictatorsh­ip. We are rapidly regressing.

The August 7 invasion of the National Assembly was not the first time the second arm in our form of government has been so brazenly assaulted. The first time was earlier this year when some thugs invaded the Senate in session and forcibly removed the mace. They were organised and funded and sent forth to belittle us as a nation by some elements within and outside the Senate. The police, probably complicit in that criminal show of shame, arrested no one. So, no one was punished for the desecratio­n of the upper legislatur­e.

It is no news that the eighth Senate of the Federal Republic has been having an uneasy time with the presidency. Despite copious and hardly convincing denials by both sides, the Nigerian public is not unaware of what is and has been going on. Under our form of government, it bears repeating, government rests on the tripod of the executive, the legislatur­e and the judiciary. Each arm has a sacred role to play to ensure that we are governed with fairness and justice; and that the rulers and the ruled respect the constituti­on and play by its rules. If one of the three arms is broken, it would be impossible to expect the government of the federation to stand firm. Those who gave us this form of government expected the three arms to work in harmony, each according the other due respect.

Co-operation in government is not about the faces one likes. It is about accepting that faces matter less than the more critical challenge of advancing and protecting the interests of the people as vital institutio­ns of democracy. The change we voted for in 2015 was anchored on these fundamenta­ls: a) a radical paradigm shift in the way we manage our party politics, conduct our elections and govern ourselves in the three tiers of government; b) respect for the rule of law in a manner that ensures the general public that although some are more equal than others, the small man expects his rights as a citizen not to be trampled under the jack boots of the privileged, the powerful and the rich; c) that good governance would be given a local habitation such that we would recover our nation’s soul lost in the heady years of arbitrarin­ess.

We appear to have forgotten those collective aspiration­s captured in the change slogan. The travails of the National Assembly and its principal officers are, in effect, the travails of the Nigerian nation. Sadly, the big men cursed with seeing no further into the future than the tip of their noses, believe that because they have the might, they have the right. It is a mistake, a very bad mistake. The mighty and the powerful are oft led astray by the absolute sense of absolute power.

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