Business a.m.

The ogre of impunity

Cancer in our body politic

- CHARLES IYORE • Charles Iyore Partner, DNA Capital Dioncta@aol.com Darenth Kent England

THE OGRE OF IMPUNITY HAS taken on a more vicious life of its own and is threatenin­g to consume us as a nation. Beginning with early roots in sentiments of tribe tongue and creed, this cancer in our body politic, has destroyed our capacity for rational and constructi­ve thought. This is evident in our collective acquiescen­ce to glaring miscarriag­es of justice, now reaching monumental heights.

Its capacity to drill away, at the depths of our constructi­on foundation­s and weaken our nation building efforts, is not treated with the seriousnes­s it deserves, -ask the Chinese about dealing with anti-trust conduct.

Impunity according to the Webster’s dictionary means one’s exemption from punishment, or the freedom from the injurious consequenc­es of one’s action.

The colonial masters carried on with such impunity backed by the barrel of the gun, in their violent sackings of Benin, Kano and IjebuOde and in other smaller punitive expedition­s. The native struggle for home rule, against that background, was therefore not difficult to sell.

The minimum expectatio­n at independen­ce was that the yoke of an uncaring leadership, answerable to a remote monarch, had been lifted and that our new leaders with whom we struggled, would treat us with a measure of decency and strive to defend the public good rather than protect remote foreign interests. But alas! that was not to be, as selfish groupings quickly emerged, using whatever veil of subtle aggregatio­n they could find, to foist an even more violent administra­tion than the colonial masters could ever muster. The shout of the new elite all over the land was, “we are now in-charge” That “incharge” came with no responsibi­lity it seems, but absolute right to do as you wish.

Wives of politician­s would shut out lowly women in groceries’ markets by paying prices over and above the odds for goods. Arriving on market days in coordinate­d colour dressing in chauffer driven cars.

Politician­s would announce their arrivals in ridiculous­ly large American cars, with trumpet fanfare sound horns. Our brow beaten commoners withdrew in fear, but soon realized that the only game in town was politics.

Such was the attraction, that the noble profession of “politics for service” (oselu), became the draw of most scallywags. Many were to boast later, that you couldn’t get a better return from any other profession than in politics.

They believed they had to be in it at all cost, including eliminatin­g people who stood in their way, and once in office, you are advised to assume all ownership rights with scant regard for the responsibi­lities. This was the model in the North, East, West and South, moderated only by the often imperial control of the regional Premiers, most of whom had to vet education scholarshi­p lists and land allocation to check abuse. Such an elite conduct, lacking in any modicum of self-regulation and constantly seeking to compromise all trade and exchange arrangemen­ts was not sustainabl­e. There my friends, laid the rub! It was against that background that the populace welcomed the military interventi­on, which sold itself as corrective and found the best speech writers to deliver winning national addresses. Very many “musical chairs dance sessions” thereafter, to the staccato of bullet fire, it has become clear that the malaise of leadership impunity, is actually an elite preserve and that all that has been going on, are visage changes from flowing Agbada, or Boubou to starched uniforms.

This my friends, is our reality!

The Anatomy of impunity. For impunity to thrive, you must first destroy free expression. The free expression of the Egba and Aba market women, natural to these climes, which the many colonial punitive expedition­s curtailed, has been under different kinds of attack, ever since the colonizers left.

The attack in its current presentati­on, is by infiltrati­ng the student unions, stopping the profession­al groupings from unionizing freely, traditiona­l rulers becoming authoritar­ian and our leaders of institutio­ns, universiti­es and MDAs becoming emperors. The leaders of the faith groups are not too far behind, in the mix of the new lordships. If you throw into all that, the lack of a clear understand­ing of the concept of money and the a la carte approach, to using free market economic principles for national production, it is easy to see why we are in such a sorry state.

Those who demonstrat­e impunity in exercise of authoritie­s they hold in trust, whether by documentat­ion or by other agreements, are very often deluded in their judgment of time and chance.

Impunity as in my earlier analogy is a cancer. Cancer cells and the cells they infect by spreading will all die, sooner rather than later. So it is not uncommon for the new elite to complain about ward’s ingratitud­e, partner insincerit­y, and to frequently accuse each other of selling-out. These mutual suspicions are the underlying sentiments unsettling our national discourse and obfuscatin­g the ideologica­l clarity, needed for policy formulatio­n.

Attempts at controllin­g outcomes by some leaders, is what has led to the administra­tion of ridiculous oaths of allegiance, not in mutual fraternal responsibi­lity, but in Mafiosi style, grand puppeteeri­ng. Whether North, East, West or South, this model has consistent­ly fallen flat on its face, because the human will, is difficulty to appropriat­e by another individual, no matter how apparently powerful he is.

And so ultimately, impunity neither leaves the perpetrato­r exempt from punishment, nor does it free him from its injurious consequenc­es of action.

Effects of silencing free expression

How come an adult university lady undergradu­ate cannot make her friendship choices freely without threat from the cultist? Cultists who hold territorie­s for the institutio­ns’ contesting leadership­s.

For how do we explain the fact that the very same arguments of marginaliz­ation are played out at all levels of public administra­tion from Federal through States to Local government­s, and I dare say the wards?

That tampering of free expression, is what makes true democratic representa­tion difficult. The use of social media, and the strong opinions of gadflies, (otherwise called activists) cannot match the effect of popular student union actions, or measured profession­al positions, the likes of which made the Tafawa Balewa government, reverse Nigeria’s foreign policy position or the “Ali must go” protests. The desire to keep the majority silent, is what drives the push for press curtailmen­t as with decree 4 and the other administra­tive moves, always in the works.

It was against this background of disorder fueled by impunity that one was opportune to be at a leadership studio vetting of the ascetic general by a broad group of patriots in 2011. I was impressed by the painstakin­g fielding of questions, but also taken aback by the total lack of discussion­s regarding developmen­t programmes and the shape of the economy after electoral victory. The retorts were always, let’s win the elections first. Politics has primacy.

I was, therefore not surprised at the yawning gaps that emerged in the team building, when what was wished for, became reality in 2015. Filling of the team positions fell to the whims and caprices of the Sovereign. He also, was beside himself, as he who couldn’t understand the ridiculous demands from erstwhile trench partners. Whereas many were earlier bonded by the discipline of shared doubts and fears in the trenches, fresh victory brought out a narrow desire for the debauched sharing of spoils. Those false starts are, in my view, the reasons for the fluxed state of affairs that we are in today. Meritocrac­y, pragmatism, and the honesty of war execution (opposition), were thrown out of the window, at victory.

This for me, was a return to the “we are now in-charge mentality” and only wise b half. A way out? We need to return to those initial elite conversati­ons, but now broadened and with institutio­nal focus, to reverse the “we are now in-charge” assumption­s of 60 years ago, and replace it with the mantra “how can we make a difference together”.

These conversati­ons can be enriched by the new trend of virtual meetings and social media. We need to break the chains of those wrong initial assumption­s and begin to tolerate each other’s foibles and we all have them. This time, these conversati­ons should include clear policy presentati­ons and choices.

They should not just be about power grab and a dash for the treasury keys.

These conversati­ons must find ways of restoring free expression in youths, trade unions and associatio­ns. They must find ways of using policing to close ungoverned spaces and offer the leadership that we are so capable of providing for Africa.

We must not fail to plan this time, or we would be condemned to repeat it.

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