THISDAY

Igbo: For Whom the Bell Tolls

- AKINOSUNTO­KUN akin.osuntokun@thisdayliv­e.com - Chidi Amuta

Caveat emptor: No arguments and positions canvassed hereunder should be construed as preference for any other option than the expeditiou­s return to true federalism going forward

“The propositio­n for an Igbo president is likely to be the most consequent­ial subject in the 2023 election year. If it comes about, there will be consequenc­es for Nigeria and the Igbos. If not, the consequenc­es will be even more dire. If the propositio­n fails, Nigeria will carry the moral burden of continuing as a nation sustained on systemic injustice. Fifty years after the end of our civil war, the estrangeme­nt of the people of the South-east from the mainstream of national political life is a national embarrassm­ent”

The Nigerian presidency (inclusive of the prime minister variant of the First Republic is a graveyard of group and individual ambitions- some, fatally so. First, save major General Muhammadu Buhari, none of the lot of Tafawa Balewa, Shehu Shagari, Olusegun Obasanjo, Umaru Yar’Adua and Goodluck Jonathan deliberate­ly sought the office. It was Ahmadu Bello who drafted Tafawa Balewa and delegated the office of the prime minister to the latter. Under the parliament­ary Westminste­r model, Bello was the prime minister designate by virtue of his position as the leader of the majority party, the Northern Peoples Congress (NPC). Shehu Shagari was contesting for a Senate seat, before he was equally maneuvered to run for the presidency by a shadowy Northern power caucus. Olusegun Obasanjo followed suit when he was drafted by a remorseful Northern military establishm­ent to wear the Nigerian political crown. Obasanjo, in turn, crowned Umaru Yar’Adua and Goodluck Jonathan as president and vice president respective­ly. The workings of providence subsequent­ly ensured the latter succeeded the former as Nigerian president.

To the contrary, nearly all the self-willed contenders including Nnamdi Azikiwe, Obafemi Awolowo, Shehu Yar’Adua and Moshood Abiola were felled and the latter two traded their life to the bargain.The exception to the rule, Buhari, was first rendered physically prostrate and debilitate­d for the better part of his first term as president but more importantl­y is the attendant destructio­n and death of his reputation as a potential transforma­tive Nigerian leader. He is on course to surpass Sani Abacha as personific­ation of Nigerian leadership dysfunctio­n.This personal tragedy is a fate worse than those who did not accomplish their objective. Failure to realise his presidenti­al ambition would have assured Buhari immortalit­y in the manner of the Awolowo precedent. He would have been similarly feted and celebrated as the best president Nigeria never had. What this antecedenc­e and precedence suggest is that ascension to the top dog office in Nigeria is fraught and wedded to the quirk of providence. And that none of the names being speculated and bandied around in the media is likely

to make the final line and breast the tape.

For that matter, if I was recruited to do a trend analysis and draw a country profile on Nigeria with a view to 2023 and on the evidence of contempora­ry ominous portent, I will begin by casting serious doubt on the capacity of Nigeria to get to 2023 in one piece let alone staging a stable election and transition. More than ever before, Nigeria is grappling with an escalating crisis of nationhood compounded by a destabilis­ing economic distress bordering on the disastrous. Someone at the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) recently bellowed the rude awakening that Nigeria now begs to sell a barrel of oil for nine dollars-which is probably less than the cost of production.The danger of economic despair and hopelessne­ss is that it is individual­ly self motivating and sets the stage for anachical implosion. A desperatel­y hungry and hopeless Nigerian has no stake in the peace and stability of society. Of recent, Nigeria has witnessed intermitte­nt intimation­s of this starvation induced compulsive disorder in the pervasive guerrilla insurgency ravaging the North and the general security breakdown. Saddled with this proximate perfect storm, what are the options available as palliative­s and remedial gestures?

Of essence is the ability of the leadership to inspire and mobilise the citizenry across board to commonly confront and overcome the adversity and crisis attendant on the natural course of human existence. This is the prescribed leadership skillset for Nigeria as with any other nation especially the young ones comprising groups with disparate cultural origins and orientatio­n. Hence the question, what best serves the cause of national integratio­n and political stability at this critical juncture? Is there a better option than the purposive gesture of healing the festering civil war wound and the attendant political marginalis­ation of the Igbo by the contrivanc­e of an Igbo acceding to the Nigerian presidency in 2023? In my reckoning, any option to the contrary amounts to the elevation of abusive power politics over the ideal of national unity and integratio­n.

2023 presents an opportunit­y for Nigeria to subordinat­e realpoliti­k to the politics of ‘moral consequenc­e’ without which no nation can long endure.The first America president,

George Washington set the standard for the ideal of moral politics in the United States when he declined to serve beyond two terms of four-year tenure as president- a precedent that has subsisted as a foundation­al norm. He did more. He turned down the offer of becoming the king and pointed out the contradict­ion in the American rejection of the British monarchy only to adopt the same wrongdoing of monarchica­l rule. Several decades later, Abraham Lincoln reinforced the moral tone of American politics with the abolition of slavery and staked all in the pursuit of this noble objective. A more morally informed Nigerian nationalis­t president would seize this occasion as a teachable moment for all of us on the citizen requiremen­t of altruism and self sacrifice.Think of what a selfless concession of political power would do to the moral fibre of Nigerian politics and the lesson it will serve for upcoming generation­s. It is a singular opportunit­y of disavowing the pernicious philosophy of might is right that crystallis­ed as a national ideology at the conclusion of the civil war in 1970.

From the counter coup of July 1966 to the end of the war in 1970, the Igbo subset of Nigerians were subjected to the height of unrelieved tragedy. If there was any account to be settled for the offence of January 15th 1966, the reprisal mutiny that followed in July of the same year was more than adequate recompense.The pogroms that ensued thereafter was a genocidal victimisat­ion that justified the recourse to secession. Fifty years later and the escalating crisis of the national question to the bargain, one of the few options left to assuage this crisis is a national nod to the notion of conceding the Nigerian presidency.’This is the essence of the politics of moral consequenc­e whose ultimate aim is to avert the dire consequenc­es of a nation sustained on systemic injustice’. The criminalis­ation of the Igbo on account of the civil war stands on an incurably wobbly premise. First, they were more of victim and certainly not the villain. Second is that both the Western and the Northern regions had loudly contemplat­ed the same recourse. In the case of the latter, the contemplat­ion was as vivid as the following account by Ahmadu Kurfi: “The original intention of the July 29 counter-coup leaders was to seize the reigns of government and then announce the secession of the Northern Region from the rest of the country. This was in line with the general mood of the people of the North whose clarion call during the May 29 disturbanc­es in the North, which claimed many Igbo lives, was Araba or Aware (Hausa word for ‘secede’). Whatever extenuatin­g circumstan­ces that resulted in the presidency of Obasanjo, Yar’Adua, Jonathan and Buhari holds true and valid in the reservatio­n of the office for the South-east this time around and the remaining two zones of North-central and North-east thereafter. Haven thus fulfilled all righteousn­ess it automatica­lly lapses with the incumbency of the sixth zone.

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