THISDAY

DEMOCRACY DAY: HOW HAS NIGERIA FARED?

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On May 29, 2018, Nigerians will celebrate their 18th anniversar­y of uninterrup­ted democratic governance which started in the year 2000. It will also mark the third year of Nigeria’s leadership under the All Progressiv­es Party (APC), after 16 years of the nation’s governance under the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). The day, therefore, represents the swearing in of the first president-elect, Olusegun Obasanjo, on May 29, 1999. What Nigeria has become of in the last 19 years of democratic rule calls for reflection­s. Howbeit, with the gradual developmen­t witnessed over the years, Nigerians deserve to remember their past and celebrate a determined leadership now in place.

The celebratio­n of May 29 as Democracy Day has been a subject of some controvers­y. While many Nigerians view the holiday attached to it as an opportunit­y to celebrate the goodies of democracy and basic human rights, others have kicked against it with the view that there is nothing much to celebrate in Nigeria as regards the new system of governance. Some Nigerians still believe that democracy has done more harm to the nation than before. Some blame Nigerians for their woes, not the system widely believed to have caused the developmen­t of many nations and liberated many from the shackles of slavery, ignorance and squalor.

Former President Obasanjo initiated it, surely, after wide consultati­ons. Even if it were on personal volition as some critics claimed, Nigerians needed to rejoice for their efforts of diverse magnitude in forcing the military back to the barracks. No one alive then would prefer the continuati­on of the military rule in Nigeria, witnessing the harshness, the lawlessnes­s and the uncivil regards to unarmed and non-uniformed citizens. But what has the system really brought to Nigeria? Is it just for Nigerians to gather at the Eagle Square in Abuja and state stadia across the nation to deliver and listen to written speeches laden with chronic sad and past experience­s as well as promises of elephantin­e projects that are never achieved? Or it is to spend the scarce resources on parties for nothing that truly has positive effects on the citizenry. Or what else!

When Obasanjo started this jamboree, many Nigerians were opposed to it. They were right, somehow. In fact, some citizens dragged him to court. I can remember of two human rights lawyers and pro-democracy activists, Messrs Kayode Adaramoye and Niyi Adeleke who went to a federal high court in Lagos, to challenge the constituti­onal competence of then President Olusegun Obasanjo to unilateral­ly declare May 29 of every year as a public holiday. Both lawyers had fought for the return of Nigeria to democracy. Besides, they were the heads of a pro-democracy organisati­on known then as Free Democracy. Yet, they found no tangible reason for celebratin­g May 29 or even declaring it a public holiday.

In the same vein, human rights lawyer and pro-democracy activists, Femi Falana (SAN), carpeted the celebratio­n. According to him, it was meant to spite those who celebrate June 12, 1993 which was the beginning of the anniversar­y celebratio­n especially by the people of the Southwest to mark the death of Chief MKO Abiola believed to have won the presidenti­al election annulled by then military administra­tor, General Ibrahim Babangida in 1992.

Falana juxtaposed the celebratio­n with celebratin­g an attack by armed bandits, an event that recounts grief and lamentatio­n rather than jubilation. There should be no remembranc­e of such bad experience. It is supposed to be a forgotten event. He said the military rulers behaved like armed robbers; they raped and robbed Nigeria; US$12 billion disappeare­d, US$5 billion was carted away, among others. He said that public holidays are declared to mark significan­t events and individual­s who positively contribute­d to the developmen­t of their societies like the United States did to honour Martin Luther King for his audacity to challenge racism and vast contributi­on to the political plurality of the USA. “No serious country in the world ever sets aside a day to mark the exit of military dictators”, he postulated.

Former Secretary General, National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG), Frank Kokori, was reported to have also described Obasanjo’s May 29 Democracy Day as a spite on late MKO Abiola. He said Obasanjo unilateral­ly made the day to belittle the late Abiola and others who fought for freedom and democracy for Nigeria. “He (Obasanjo) did it because he always wants to be at the top. His intention was to spite Abiola and those of us who fought for freedom and democracy”, he noted.

Another sound human rights, pro-democracy activist and director of Muslim Rights Concerns (MURIC), Professor Ishaq Akintola, believes that celebratin­g May 29 is a grievous mistake because it is not worthy of merriment. According to him, June 12 is the way forward on accounts that it represents the beginning of a democratic era in Nigeria. “That is where we are coming from. Let us go back to it in order to jog our people’s memory, ignite their passion and rekindle their patriotism.”

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