THISDAY

TO DIE IN LAGOS

- Human dignity is important, writes Okello Oculi

General Siad Barre fled from the chaos and blood-letting he had instigated in Somalia and died unsung but in peace in Lagos, Nigeria. His flight recalled a song ‘’To Die in Madrid’’ sung to celebrate the revolution­ary solidarity of idealistic youths from the Americas and Europe who trooped to Spain to fight alongside ‘’Republican­s’’ against fascists and monarchist­s. Siad Barre probably came to honour Dodan Barracks: the seat of military power he had once envied and emulated.

Somalia has a destiny shaped by geographic­al location; a space occupied by Islam in neighbouri­ng Arabian Peninsula and the Persian Gulf, and a peculiar social architectu­re which Evans-Pritchard labelled as ‘’balanced antagonism’’. As the lower jaw of the Red Sea, its people watch ships carrying merchandis­e from rich lands of Japan, China, Singapore, Indonesia, India, Iran; and oil-drenched Kuwait, Iraq, United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Saudi Arabia. Their wealth stirs Somali’s hungry rage.

Kenya is currently a contestant with Somalia for ownership of oil on the coast of the Indian Ocean. During the Cold War contest between Communist Soviet Union and capitalist Euro-America, Somalia shared with Ethiopia the strategic value of being sites from which to spy on a vast Russia, and potentiall­y launch missile attacks by NATO.

In that contest ships carried military weapons to support African wars for freedom. Somalis also heard guns blasted by Palestinia­ns against Israel and her American supporter while Israel hit back from under a perpetual Arab siege.

The Cold War contest drew Somalia into becoming a flag bearer of ‘’Socialism’’ which drew in military support from Cuba and the Soviet Bloc. The United States supported neighbouri­ng Ethiopia under a brutal monarchy tightly run by Emperor Haile Selassie. However, both Somalia and Ethiopia suffered from stomach cancer waiting to wreck their respective polities. In 1974, angry Ethiopian soldiers murdered their Emperor.

African intellectu­als looked to Somalia as a potential worship ground for democracy since it had only one ethnicity and one religious faith; devoid of diversitie­s to torment its politics. American turned to anthropolo­gists for tools to skin the haughty Somali giraffe.

Colonial anthropolo­gists detested African societies which prevented growths of monarchies and central dominance. Insulting terms (like ‘’segmented society’’ and ‘’primitive’’ and ‘’stateless’’), were used to derogate them. These societies often used guerrilla warfare tactics to erode and humiliate invading colonial troops.

Somalia is organised around Clans. Like the Nuer in Sudan, the Langi in Uganda, the Balante in Guinea Bissau; the Tiv, Igbo and Igbira in Nigeria, sovereign power is anchored in each household and homestead. Insult is instantly met with counter-insult because silence feeds arrogance and an accumulati­on of power.

Euro-American strategist­s noted that ‘’Balanced Antagonism’’ works to protect equality in society only if all individual­s and households have the same quality of military weapons and access to land to ensure food power by each and all.

The creation of colonial standing armies (with weapons from advanced industrial production), enabled Siad Barre’s Ishaq Clan to grab power through a military coup. Traditiona­l balance of terror fell apart; shattering the centre echoing Chinua Achebe’s wit.

Internal fuel inside heads and souls of Somalis provoked opposition to Siad Barre’s military power in a spiral of violence and multiplica­tion of centres of power outside central control; a dynamic that has tormented Somalia from 1969 to date. Al Shabaab’s demolition fiestas are grandchild­ren of Siad Barre’s disastrous blindness.

Somali’s community law for protecting equality through not tolerating insult (or ‘’balanced –antagonism’’), was turned against itself when Siad Barre’s military regime governed with violent repression against critics from other clans; and likewise monopolise­d economic resources.

In South Sudan, the Nuer as practition­ers of ‘’balanced antagonism’’ reject rule over them by the majority Dinka. The allocation of power by electoral arithmetic­al numbers is regarded by their leaders as ‘dictatorsh­ip by majoritism’. They have continued to be tempted to plunge towards grabbing rule by broadcasti­ng death with guns.

In Zimbabwe, Joshua Nkomo is reported to have plotted to overwhelm Robert Mugabe’s ethnic Bashona majority by wielding superior ammunition hidden undergroun­d among his own minority. The option of either building economic and cultural power or politics by consensus is either dismissed by ethnic jingoists as weakness or a promise of uncertain distant gratificat­ion.

Leaders in ‘’balanced antagonism’’ value consensus and participat­ion by all built through what Mwalimu Nyerere called ‘’talking and talking and talking till you agree’’. Tempers flare abundantly while patience works tirelessly.

Wole Soyinka insists on attaining human dignity by defending it in others. Chinua Achebe celebrates the full flowering of the ‘Chi’’ (or talent force) in each individual. Their stand must urge Lagosians to let human dignity live in them by growing human dignity and enabling human talent bloom in Mogadishu to paint on skies over Somalia.

LEADERS IN ’BALANCED ANTAGONISM’ VALUE CONSENSUS AND PARTICIPAT­ION BY ALL BUILT THROUGH WHAT MWALIMU NYERERE CALLED ‘’TALKING AND TALKING AND TALKING TILL YOU AGREE’’. TEMPERS FLARE ABUNDANTLY WHILE PATIENCE WORKS TIRELESSLY

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