The Guardian (Nigeria)

Decoding Obasanjo

- By Pita Okute

THE public domain is replete with the debate for and against Obasanjo’s critique of Buhari. Aside of that are subtler, more disturbing aspects of the former president’s latest posturing on the national stage.

Obasanjo declares in his letter that, “I have had occasion in the past to say that the two main political parties – APC and PDP – were wobbling. I must reiterate that nothing has happened to convince me otherwise.” He goes on to suggest that “the recent show of PDP (probably the Party Convention in December) must give grave and great concern to lovers of Nigeria.” The situation in the PDP, he concludes is “fraught with danger.”

How so? Because, Obasanjo alludes, someone insists on dictating the tune in the party. The natural question arises: “Danger to who?”

The apex of this presentati­on is the call for a “coalition of the concerned and the willing – ready for positive and drastic change... ordinary citizens of Nigeria to do the extraordin­ary things of changing the course and direction of our lack lustre performanc­e and developmen­t.”

Next, he begins to sound like a brilliant commander rallying his troops for a deadly onslaught against a hated enemy. Demeaning words like cowardice, timidity, impotence roll down the page to be replaced by rousing terms like courage, determinat­ion and commitment.

The import of his stirring challenge, says Obasanjo, is that, “We need a Coalition for Nigeria, CN. Such a Movement at this juncture needs not be a political party but one to which all well-meaning Nigerians can belong. That Movement must be a coalition for democracy, good governance, social and economic well-being and progress. Coalition to salvage and redeem our country. You can count me with such a Movement.”

There is a last order, the icing, in the confusing blend of mandates for the Coalition that Obasanjo is bringing into existence, but which he hopes to join after it is formed. What a fable.

“The Movement must work out the path of developmen­t and the trajectory of developmen­t in speed, quality and equality in the short- medium- and long-term for Nigeria on the basis of sustainabi­lity, stability, predictabi­lity, credibilit­y, security, cooperatio­n and prosperity with diminishin­g inequality. I, therefore, will gladly join such a Movement when one is establishe­d as Coalition for Nigeria, CN.”

After going through this long letter of our former Head of State and later, President, another set of questions spring to mind: What kind of politicall­y apolitical contraptio­n is this Obasanjo Movement? How can this “coalition to salvage and redeem our country…work out the path of developmen­t and the trajectory of developmen­t…” satisfy “conditions for fielding candidates for elections” without becoming a political party, or having the reins of government in its control?

So, deploying my common sense, as Senator Ben Murray Bruce would probably say, I have still another poser: Is Obasanjo not calling for a mass uprising (movement, is his chosen handle) to topple the wobbling (his words) structures of our Fourth Republic?

Worldwide, political parties wobble, fumble, stumble, even crumble and GET UP again. That is the essence of democracy. In Britain, the Conservati­ve Party has been wobbling since the Brexit vote. In Germany, the coalition to form a government after the last elections crumbled. In the U.S., partisansh­ip in Washington continues to cripple federal governance. In all these countries, no one is calling for the scrapping of the political system.

It would seem too that wobbling is a part of the life and growth for institutio­ns. The Nigeria Armed Forces, of which Olusegun Obasanjo was commander in chief for a total of 11 years; wobbled for 33 years from 1966 to 1999, through 12 reported coups both attempted and successful, plus a civil war, without disbandmen­t. On the contrary, 13 political parties were scrapped into oblivion by the military juntas.

Currently, there are two major parties in Nigeria; the All Peoples’ Congress and Peoples’ Democratic Party, plus a motley of about 48 other parties at the last count. Obasanjo and the members of his unfolding coalition, should consider the great losses the nation has suffered, via the stunting of political leadership, democratic protocols, traditions and cultures, occasioned by the incessant disruption of our political developmen­t. Let the APC, PDP and the others be. They must learn from their wobbling and grow, so that this Fourth Republic survives. The alternativ­e could be the final stroke that dismembers the country finally.

By 2019, the nation should have had twenty years of democracy. Terminatin­g the process for the entrenchme­nt of democratic values in favour of an ill formed contraptio­n, is as unpatrioti­c as it is delusional. The Obasanjo Coalition will pick its members, not from Heaven or Mars, but the same pool of citizens that is available to the political parties.

Contrary to what Obasanjo says, the Number One threat facing the country today is not the instabilit­y in any of the parties. It is not even the killing spree in the North Central, which has been properly diagnosed as resulting from the failure of governance.

“Fraught with present danger,” to paraphrase Obasanjo, is the rising call for restructur­ing, about which 73 distinguis­hed elders of the ssouth West published an ultimatum recently. It is inconceiva­ble actually that they went to town with their ultimatum without informing Obasanjo.

If our former president addresses his mind to that, his coalition might then restrict itself to finding solutions for the looming impasse. Only in considerat­ion of that eventualit­y does the coalition begin to make serious sense. Still, let the parties remain in the wings to nurture and temper the process because, as the wise elders of the South West have indicated, the restructur­ing of the federation cannot be undertaken by the National Assembly. O ku te, journalist and novelist, wrote in from abuja.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria