THISDAY

Osinbajo At 60

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Iam not at all sure if a persistent subconscio­us inability to come to terms with the knowledge that I am over fifty years of age is peculiar to me. Why is it that the fact of this advancing years prey on my mind all the time? It is made all the more perplexing by the fact that the biological age progressio­n; the life and death cycle; is the most basic natural occurrence-to which we should therefore be most readily adjusted. Does this disturbanc­e fall under the rubric of the notorious imprecisel­y defined mid-life crisis or perhaps it is a remorseful nagging sense of underachie­vement, is it the fear of the inevitable end of all mortals?

This obsessive attachment to youthfulne­ss was reignited at the 80th birthday celebratio­ns of President Olusegun Obasanjo at Abeokuta a week ago. It was the reason I readily spotted that Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo was the youngest amidst the cast of luminaries at the high table. Come speech making time, it was his turn to bestow a eulogy on the celebrant. I had really not have the occasion to witness Osinbajo speak at a public function before or maybe I never bothered to pay heed. Maybe I now paid special attention on account of his new status as acting President who has attracted considerab­le curiosity on account of the unique circumstan­ces that had thrust him into public glare.

The truth is that he gave a world class performanc­e and commensura­tely roused a standing ovation especially from the below 60 years demographi­c segment of the audience. In addition to his quite impressive resume (he became a law professor at thirty two years) and on the job performanc­e rating, you could not help but ponder that here is another indication of the possibilit­y that this nation is capable of attaining-if only we would let it. Where I got it wrong was my projection of Osinbajo as somewhat belonging to the younger generation-by any standard, it is wrong headed to ever think of a 60 year old man as youth. And this mispercept­ion can only be down to my phobia of getting old.

Nonetheles­s, it is true that there is a distinct generation­al character and perspectiv­e to the problem of political leadership succession and recruitmen­t in Nigeria-that has impacted negatively on governance. We have had a retarded and warped growth and developmen­t of political leadership succession; and it is the reason we will continue to experience the novelty of late political bloomers like Osinbajo-until the generation­al vacuum in political leadership is sufficient­ly bridged.

To put this warped generation­al character in context, all we need do is take a good look at the political career of the birthday celebrant. Forty one years ago in 1976, Obasanjo became the military President of Nigeria at the age of 39. He came back in 1999 as elected civilian President at the age of sixty two and served in that capacity for eight years. Similarly, incumbent President Mohammadu Buhari was appointed military President of Nigeria on December 31st 1983. He returned thirty two years later as elected President in May 2015 at the age of 72. Without any familiarit­y with Nigeria, any average political interprete­r can immediatel­y discern something peculiar about the political developmen­t of Nigeria in this informatio­n. And it was on account of my own familiarit­y with Nigerian politics that I once offered the following observatio­n on the problem of political leadership succession in Nigeria:

‘A compelling character of President Ibrahim Babangida’s protracted transition to civil democratic rule programme from 1985 to 1990 was the recognitio­n of the need to cultivate a civilian political leadership recruitmen­t and reproducti­on-hence the official propagatio­n and prioritisa­tion of a ‘new breed’ inheritor class. The Babangida ‘new breed’ novelty anticipate­d the Progressiv­e Action Movement, PAM, by several years. PAM was the brainchild of a few of us which subsequent­ly blossomed to include Pastor Tunde Bakare, HRM Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, Mohammed Adoke,, Dangiwa Umar, Olisa Agbakoba, Segun Awolowo, Toyin Fagbayi, Babafemi Ojudu, Femi Fanikayode, Opeyemi Agbaje, Makin Soyinka, Nike Ransome-Kuti and a number of other public notables. PAM was conceptual­ised as a response to the failure of the political system to fulfil the role of continuous and regular leadership recruitmen­t into the civilian political classto assume political succession from one generation to another’.

‘There was an emergent generation­al gap and vacuum-to whose remedy we addressed ourselves. We intended ourselves as a kind of political nursery for preparing and producing a successor class at the shortest possible time. As it were, the major indication of this systemic failure was the recycling of political leaders rather than a renewal with successor generation­s. Convention­ally the role of leadership recruitmen­t into the political system is that of the political parties. The poverty of the performanc­e of this role is self-explanator­y in the non-existence of political parties for the better part of the period spanning 1960 to 1999’.

‘The political party system and the legislativ­e institutio­n are the most conspicuou­s casualties of military interventi­on in the governance of Nigeria-as elsewhere. The more protracted the rule of military dictatorsh­ip, the more impoverish­ed the political system and the attendant roles of the party system especially leadership recruitmen­t. Unlike the political system, and to underscore the point, is the stark contrast to the Nigerian economic sector which has witnessed progressiv­e and periodic renewal and turnover of the public and private economic sector leaders. Many major contempora­ry economic leaders were either not born or were toddlers when people like Adeyemi Lawson, Michael Omolayole, Grema Mohammed, Mai Deribe, Gamaliel Onosode and numerous others held sway’.

In a manner of speaking, the chicken seems to have, once again, come home to roost in the present political juncture of Nigeria. The circumstan­ces of an adjudged below par performanc­e and the unfortunat­e health crisis that has kept Buhari away from his duty post-as backdrop to the impressive holding forte of his deputy, Osinbajo), speaks directly to the crisis of political leadership succession in Nigeria. Before going any further, I hasten to empathise and sincerely wish President Buhari quick recovery. As well known, Buhari is not my cup of tea but once he was legitimate­ly elected the President of Nigeria, it is in the enlightene­d interest of all of us to wish for his success in that office, inclusive of his good health. It is a platitude to say that his success as President is the success of Nigeria-‘since we have no other country to call our own’.

Nigeria is indeed in a sorry state and this reality daily dawn on us with the subtlety of a cascading ton of bricks-be it (for instance) in the form of desperate economic situation of sundry individual­s who have fallen off the cliff of the economy or in the ever tendentiou­sly volatile political degenerati­on. Yet things could have been worse, much worse and so we still have cause to thank God for little mercies.

There is nothing unusual in a 74 year old falling sick and indisposed, what is wrong is the wilful refusal to acknowledg­e this truth and utilise the logic to act in the best interest of Nigeria in the first place. There is no better illustrati­on of the rigorous physical demands of office on any incumbent Nigerian President than the characteri­sation provided by Obasanjo the other day-to the effect that the Presidency of Nigeria is a 25 hours, seven days a week job.

Equally wrong is Nigeria being hidebound to the poverty of choice inherent in the recycling of political leaders who are congenital­ly wedded to the inglorious Nigerian past-of fragmentar­y and reactionar­y power politics; of the civil war division of Nigeria into the proprietor­ial conqueror class and the conquered rebellious tribe; the belief that the highest possible accomplish­ment of political leadership is the fanatical commitment to the preservati­on of Nigeria in the distorted form it was bequeathed by the outcome of the civil war; of criminalis­ing any advocacy of a structural-functional review of a terminally ill political status-quo.

What can really prove exasperati­ng about Nigeria is that a potentiall­y successful governance of the country is no rocket science and this simplicity is what the regency of Osinbajo has brought to the fore. It is the elementary fact that the missing link and most crucial ingredient of society management is the goodwill of the citizens-more so in a cleavage and conflict ridden polity like Nigeria. It was Dangiwa Umar who recently proffered the insight that rather than plunging Nigeria back into debt peonage of the magnitude of a thirty billion dollars loan, a debt free alternativ­e and ready reprieve of Nigeria’s economic crisis reside in winning the goodwill of the Niger Delta region; that fostering a goodwill induced atmosphere of peace in the Niger Delta portends the multiplier effect of securing the much desired boost in oil production, hence a substantia­l uptick in Nigeria’s revenue stream.

At any rate, with or without economic utility, all parts of Nigeria should be cuddled by anyone accorded the lofty privilege of presiding over our affairs-regardless of their partisansh­ip. This prescribed charm offensive is even more compelling against the background of the propagatio­n of the discrimina­tory doctrine of according preferenti­al treatment to supporters. Not sparing a moment to pay solidarity visit to the alienated Niger Delta region and threatenin­g to meet out the Boko-Haram treatment to the insurgents in the oil rich region is certainly not the way to go. Whether it is his own initiative or he is undertakin­g the public relations outreach at the behest of his principal, Osinbajo has done right by Nigeria. There is no better way to mark his 60th birthday than this recognitio­n and it is meet and proper to wish him a happy one.

STOP PRESS: And then the duality principle struck again. As we celebrate one, it has equally become our lot to mourn another. The tragic news is that the most promising life of Onukaba Adinoyi Ojo came to an abrupt and cruel end days ago. There is no good way for a 57 year old to die but the manner of his death was particular­ly vile and irksome. The consolatio­n is that he lives on in the legacy of his remarkable intellectu­al and profession­al attainment. What a waste! Fare thee well my good friend.

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Osinbajo
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