Daily Trust

Drafting a people’s manifesto

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It is now appropriat­e, indeed imperative, for the Nigerian Left to present its own manifesto to the country. This should be in form of a people’s manifesto, a people’s charter of demands in a situation of national emergency. A people’s manifesto at this point in our history is not a dissertati­on-like programme of social transforma­tion, the type of thing any Left formation should be able to produce in 24 hours. Rather, it should be a clear and concise statement of not only what the Left believes should be done to reprieve the nation from a threatenin­g catastroph­e, but also a statement of what—in alliance with other socio-political forces—the Left can mobilize the Nigerian people to do.

To put the matter differentl­y, a people’s manifesto at this time is first and foremost a Nigerian Left’s manifesto in the ordinary sense of the word: a “public declaratio­n of intentions, motives, or views” or a “public statement of policy or opinion”. Yes; but beyond this, a people’s manifesto is a people’s charter of demands presented to the Nigerian state and government­s by the Nigerian Left. A people’s manifesto has this double character because although it can be used for an election, it is not election-bound.

This opening declaratio­n should, however, not be misunderst­ood as implying that without an explicitly Left interventi­on, the country is doomed. No. Nigeria can still be reprieved—as it was reprieved in 2015—and before that, in 1993 and at some other critical points in the country’s post-civil war history. What my propositio­n should be understood as implying is that if the country continues in its present course, a reprieve from catastroph­e will again be a temporary or false one. And a temporary or false reprieve will, again, make the nation’s fundamenta­l problems more acute and complex when they explode again in a conjunctur­e— as will surely happen again. The problems will then be much more difficult to resolve in the context and framework of a single country.

This article is, however, not the people’s manifesto as advocated. It is rather the initiation of a discussion on its contents, nature, parameters and politics. An illustrati­on will also be provided.

A Nigerian people’s manifesto drafted and presented by the Nigerian Left should not begin with a catalogue of what a Nigerian state or the incumbent or future government should do for the people. Rather, it should begin with a self-introducti­on of the movement, organizati­on or platform presenting the manifesto. There are at least three reasons for this. In the first place, the Nigerian masses have, for decades, been recipients and victims of deception from personages and entities in power or seeking power. The people are, therefore, increasing­ly cynical. In the second place, the Nigerian Left has a strong and enviable record of involvemen­t in popular struggle and patriotic selfless service which it should be proud to present to the public.

In the third place, we know that in this era, it is not only speech-writers that can be hired; manifesto-writers are also hired. In other words, manifesto-writing has been profession­alized. Just put the money down and say what type of manifesto you want and the scale of lies you wish to be included, and the job will be done. Although there are always difference­s between fake manifestoe­s—however beautifull­y written—and genuine manifestoe­s, most readers may not be patient enough to spot the inconsiste­ncies and incongruit­ies in fake declaratio­ns.

I wish to propose that the difference between a people’s manifesto drafted and presented by the Left and other manifestoe­s cannot be found in the “lists of contents”, a comparison of what the authors and publishers promise to deliver to the people: roads, bridges, hospitals, schools, airports, electricit­y, jobs, “stomach infrastruc­ture”, etc, etc.

The difference lies in the “totality” or “packaging” which shows whether the manifesto is a revolution­ary and populardem­ocratic declaratio­n or a pack of lies, deceptions and illusions. On the one hand, the “totality” or “packaging” indicates not only what will be done but also how it will be done, with what resources it will be done, where the resources will come from, and when exactly it will be done. For, even if you swear by all the deities known and unknown, that you will run from Lagos to Calabar in three hours I will be a bastard to believe you.

On the other hand, in this period of extended emergency, the “packaging” or “totality” unambiguou­sly answers the question: Whose desperate needs are being articulate­d and planned for: those of the Nigerian masses or those of exploiters, predators and state-robbers who always present themselves as “the nation”? To put the matter more bluntly, does the manifesto unambiguou­sly indicate plans to immediatel­y redeploy the nation’s resources in favour of the hungry, the endangered and the forgotten?

An appropriat­e “table of contents” for a people’s manifesto in this particular period of extended national emergency in the lives of the Nigerian masses may be structured in several ways. For instance, it may have the following eight-point structure: Who are we (that is, the authors— the Nigerian Left)?; The country we now have; The country we wish to have and are committed to fighting for; Fundamenta­l human rights; Directive principles of state policy; Social transforma­tion; National unity, federalism and populardem­ocratic restructur­ing; and Immediate steps (on pressing needs and current crises).

Back to history. The Nigerian Left is one of the oldest ideologica­l tendencies in Nigerian politics because the Left grew out directly from organized anti-colonial and labour struggles—both of which started in the early 1930s. By the eve of independen­ce in 1960, popular democracy and socialism had become the clear aim of the Left.

As early as May 1961, a Leftist group in Lagos, organized by Gogo Chu Nzeribe, Peter Ayodele Curtis-Joseph, Tanko Yakassai, M.O. Johnson, J.B. K. Thomas and a few others, had, in an extended public declaratio­n, described itself as the “organizati­on of workers, women, farmers and farm laborers, peasants, artisans, teachers and intellectu­als, small businessme­n and women, profession­als, lawyers, youths, students, the unemployed, the maimed, the deformed …”

This was a clear ideologica­l selection which the authors justified this way: “These are the people who know misfortune and therefore are capable of waging limitless and courageous struggles until victory is won”. Left out of this long list was the “indigenous Nigerian capitalist and feudal class that had emerged as the virtual successors to the British colonialis­ts”. The group pledged to “organize, unite and lead the peoples of Nigeria in a relentless and uncompromi­sing fight against capitalism and capitalist exploitati­on of the Nigerian peoples”.

Significan­tly, these young Nigerians opposed regionalis­m and declared their commitment to “one undivided Nigeria, under unitary and centralize­d government”. And, consistent­ly, they declared their belief in the creation of a “Union of African States” and “one common nationalit­y for all Africans”.

The revolution­ary Lagos group—let us call them so here— advocated a 40-hour week for all workers, full employment, unemployme­nt benefits, social security, worker-participat­ion in management, special allowances for “all labour that is especially risky or dirty”, adequate minimum wage, free medical treatment, free education, paid maternity leave, paid rest-time during nursing period ….”.

Putting itself forward as a vanguard in post-colonial nationbuil­ding, the group concluded its public declaratio­n by repeating that it was formed to “lead the peoples of Nigeria in their just struggles for peace, friendship, national reconstruc­tion, a better future, democracy and the triumph of socialism”.

That was the Nigerian Left about 57 years ago, just six months after independen­ce. A contempora­ry people’s manifesto can proceed from here by indicating what has changed, what has remained and what has emerged.

Madunagu, mathematic­ian and journalist, writes from Calabar, Cross River State.

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