THISDAY

Mbaka and Democracy in Nigeria

- THE VERDICT

Since the advent of our democratic dispensati­on in 1999, every election has witnessed some sort of drama from the spiritual director of the Adoration Ministries Enugu (AMEN), Reverend Father Ejike Mbaka, especially in the Southeast. His stock rose even higher in the prelude to the 2015 presidenti­al election when he first predicted that then incumbent Goodluck Jonathan would be re-elected, before recanting to say the main opposition candidate, Muhammadu Buhari, would win. With the latter ‘prophecy’ eventually coming to pass, Mbaka has since trained his spiritual antennae on Abuja and those who seek to be president of Nigeria. But in confrontin­g the presidenti­al candidate of Labour Party, Mr Peter Obi, Mbaka may have bitten more than he could chew.

In a recent ‘homily’, Mbaka declared that Obi can never be president of Nigeria. Like his previous fall-out with other politician­s, it was all about unmet expectatio­n. “A stingy man that cannot give people his money with this hunger ravaging the land and you are saying he is the one you want. You want to die of hunger? Are you people insane? Where is the Holy Spirit?” asked Mbaka who dealt heavy blows on the former Anambra State Governor and running mate to former Vice President Atiku Abukakar in the 2019 presidenti­al election on the platform of the main opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). “It is now that Atiku is seriously contesting for president; now that he is contesting without Peter Obi; it is now that he is serious…Peter Obi is going nowhere as far as God lives.”

Following the uproar that greeted the ‘sermon’, especially on social media where Obi has a strong support base, the Catholic Bishop of Enugu, Calistus Onaga, announced the suspension of all religious activities by Mbaka and his Adoration Ministry. But this is an issue the

Catholic Church must handle with care lest they create a social problem in Enugu and environ. Whatever the misgivings regarding Mbaka’s theology and politics, thousands depend on him, essentiall­y because the reverend father takes from the rich to empower the poor. That means a lot in an impoverish­ed society like ours and explains why there was a protest last weekend about the shutdown of the Adoration Ministry.

Before I go further, it is important to situate how Mbaka moved from a local champion to national limelight. On 9th December 2014, the then First Lady, Mrs Patience Jonathan’s visit to Enugu included a detour to the ‘Adoration Ground’ for a special prayer. Instructiv­ely, Mrs Jonathan was asked to take the scriptural reading from the Biblical Book of Genesis chapter 12; verses 2 and 3: “I will make you into a great nation and I will bless you; I will make your name great, and you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and whoever curses you I will curse; and all peoples on earth will be blessed through you.” With the service over, Mbaka released birds he said would go and fight for the First Family after prophesyin­g that Jonathan would be re-elected.

Precisely 22 days later, at the Cross-over service on 31st December 2014, Mbaka titled his message ‘From Good Luck to Bad Luck’. After accusing the Jonathan administra­tion of failure in all sectors, Mbaka said: “We need change. NEPA is not working because of corruption. The privatizat­ion of public companies has not yielded any fruit because of corruption. Nigerians are sick and tired of wasting innocent lives without government doing enough to stop the destructio­n.” More tellingly, Mbaka told his congregati­on that one of the birds released during Mrs Jonathan’s visit three weeks earlier had refused to fly. “All the other birds I released flew away but the healthiest of them which is Jonathan’s bird could not fly. I tried to make it fly but it could not fly,” said the cleric who then added a clincher: “Nigerians are calling for change. We need a change. We don’t want to move from bad luck to bad luck; Nigerians want to move from bad luck to good luck.”

Mbaka spent the remaining part of the sermon essentiall­y campaignin­g for the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) presidenti­al candidate. And when Buhari won, Mbaka was received in Aso Rock with fanfare. In an interview he later granted, Mbaka explained that the problem started because Mrs Jonathan would not oblige him with her direct mobile line. That was a fatal political error. People who know Mbaka liken him to Constantin Demeris, the fictional Greek tycoon in Sidney Sheldon’s bestseller, ‘The Other Side of Midnight’, reputed as never forgetting an insult nor forgiving an injury. And many politician­s know that. But the power Mbaka wields is also derived from the mismanagem­ent of our affairs.

My column 20 years ago on the Mbaka phenomenon (7th March 2002 to be precise), ‘Before the Slide into Adoration Ground’, followed a stampede that claimed the lives of 14 worshipper­s and injured scores of others. He accused the then Enugu State Governor, Chimaroke Nnamani of instigatin­g the mayhem. I crave the indulgence of readers to recall a few lines from the piece: “…The man of the moment in Enugu today is a young, fiery and charismati­c reverend father. The attraction of the cleric is that in a system where government has become rather removed from the people, it is very easy for the critic to be popular. Father Ejike Mbaka is almost a cult figure. So popular is he that I have been told that there are two Governors in Enugu now: One in the Lion Building as the Government House is called. The other one holds court weekly at the Adoration Ground…Mbaka does not offer any alternativ­e to (Governor Chimaroke) Nnamani in terms of leadership, but he at least says the kind of things the displaced, the disenchant­ed, the hungry and the marginalis­ed would love to hear. He can articulate their anger. He can put words to their disappoint­ment. And he can apportion blames. People like that offer temporary relief in times of distress and they can cause trouble for those in authority…”

I am pretty sure that Mbaka will soon be back to business. The Catholic Church cannot shut down the Adoration Ministry for long without social upheaval. I hope the reverend father will also learn useful lessons from this experience. But my main message is to young Nigerians who are enthusiast­ic about the Permanent Voter Cards (PVC). It is commendabl­e that they want to exercise their franchise in 2023, but they need to go beyond that to seek a seat at the table. This requires getting involved in political parties and demanding accountabi­lity of public officials. Democracy must mean more than voting at periodic elections. It must translate into a better life for people. Until that happens, Nigerians will continue to troop to the Adoration Grounds that offer nothing more than temporary relief to long term problems.

The universall­y accepted definition of democracy is one by the 16th United States President, Abraham Lincoln: ‘Government of the people, by the people, for the people’. But I prefer that of the late American journalist and scholar, Henry Louis Mencken which defines democracy as “the theory that the common people know what they want and deserve to get it good and hard.” Whichever we go with, the constant is that people’s welfare is, or should be, at the centre of any democratic project. Sadly, we run a system where voting has become an end in itself. And with that, those who romanticis­e collection of their PVC merely play into the hands of politician­s who behave as though they are doing the people a favour while mismanagin­g public affairs.

The Governor of Zamfara State, Bello Matawalle, last week took two important decisions that tell a compelling story not only about the place of accountabi­lity in the Nigerian public service but also about the nature of our democracy. First, the governor declared this week (from Monday 20th to Friday 24th June) work free to enable the public and civil servants in the state go to their respective communitie­s to obtain their PVC. He also directed, as a matter of priority, that all commission­ers, special advisers, permanent secretarie­s and other public office holders, as well as party officials and traditiona­l rulers must monitor and supervise the ongoing voter registrati­on exercise.

That done, the governor then approved the appointmen­t of an additional 169 top government officials and aides, “in a bid to promote unity within the APC in the state.”

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