Daily Trust Sunday

It is 2019: Do you know your future?

- • sonala.olumhense@gmail.com • @SonalaOlum­hense

Once again, we have arrived in that season where pastors seize every available microphone to lavishly publish “prophecies” for the year ahead, each one claiming to have heard God’s voice.

It is an industry that grows bigger every year, as do the contradict­ions between prophecies, the colliding pastors sounding somewhat like politician­s in a Nigerian electoral contest. When their sensationa­l prophecies are miles off the mark, they return to offer explanatio­ns that are worse than the offence.

There is Biblical evidence some people do receive God’s word—or insight—as the Almighty deems fit. What God has certainly never done is to operate by the Gregorian Calendar and choose this time of time—or of year, to us—to advise an army of Nigerian pastors over things he has known forever.

With that as background then, dear Pastor: if your prophecy—the one you chose to publish of your own volition—turns out to be false, you are a fake pastor.

It is as simple as that because God neither lies nor prevaricat­es. If you claim he advised you and you advertise his ‘advice,’ your credibilit­y—not God’s—rests on that prophecy. As God does not gamble, the gamble is yours, in which case you should investigat­e the “voice” you claimed you heard and seek appropriat­e treatment or counsel.

Perhaps your lawyer may wish to pursue a lawsuit against the voice in your head, just as the Nigerian voting public ought seek a fundamenta­l investigat­ion of its endless political misfortune­s.

Think about it: as preparatio­ns for next month’s elections ramp up, members of the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC), are campaignin­g with brooms. Brooms!

Four years ago, a broom was a befitting metaphor, a sentiment that is still around for next month’s elections as Nigerians want the party in power swept away. The irony is that it is APC, now the interloper and pretender, which is brandishin­g the brooms.

But while that stunt is simply stupid, they are deploying it because Nigerian politician­s consider the electorate to be stupid.

The APC pretense is that the principal opponent, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), is the enemy of Nigeria and of progress. They destroyed everything, APC continues to whine.

But Nigerians knew that only too well in 2015. That was why they hired APC to clean up the mess, a task it has proved incapable of.

The reason for this, as I have continued to say, and in view of the evidence before anyone who cares to examine it, is that APC and PDP are not different currencies or even denominati­ons of one, but two sides of the same coin. They are philosophi­cally two wings of the “APDPC” party.

That is why its members switch from one side to the other and back so easily and shamelessl­y. And why so many people on that side of the broom yesterday, are on this side today, and have no hesitation about returning to the other side in the morning. Nothing on either side of that coin can save Nigeria.

A part of this reason is the ideologica­l emptiness of our politics. PDP grafted the term “democratic” into its name, but it does not know the meaning. APC also says it is “progressiv­e” but the party is regressive in orientatio­n and performanc­e. None of the appellatio­ns aggregate the political profile of its members. They are all driven by the quest to acquire wealth through power.

It is little surprise then, that Nigerians have been disappoint­ed by government after government, but the most disappoint­ing have been the soldiers and former soldiers. Think about it: Nigeria has suffered far less at the hands of Tafawa Balewa, Shehu Shagari and Umaru Yar’Adua than she has under such “saviours” as Ibrahim Babangida, Olusegun Obasanjo, Sani Abacha and Muhammadu Buhari. These are men who arrive pretending to be The Answer only to be unveiled as The Problem.

Of these, two are particular­ly significan­t: Obasanjo and Buhari, each of whom has had two chances to lead. The Buhari pit latrine smells fouler partly because each of his chances followed each of Obasanjo’s, thereby granting him the chance to excel over Obasanjo, and partly because the second time he had bragged the loudest and the longest. But the biggest reason is that having now been exposed, his collapse will stink the most.

Four years after he received the support of a broad swathe of the Nigerian electorate to deploy that broom, Buhari is anchoring his campaign on the same script of the damage done by the PDP, rather than on what he has achieved in response.

Sadly, there are some Nigerians, mainly those who are close enough to the byways and highways of power, who are helping to trumpet this disappoint­ment as an achievemen­t.

But this is to be expected. It has been our story as a nation. Just six years after independen­ce, Major Kaduna Nzeogwu, who led the coup in the North in 1966, identified it as the menace of “political profiteers” and “swindlers.” He characteri­zed them as “those who seek to keep the country divided so that they can remain in office as Ministers or VIPs at least; the tribalists, the nepotists, those who make the country big for nothing before internatio­nal circles, those who have corrupted our society and put the Nigerian political calender back by their words and deeds.”

To examine Nigerian government­s since independen­ce is to see bands of these men and women again and again. Take Obasanjo, for instance. “Nigeria will become one of the ten leading nations in the world by the end of the century,” he said expansivel­y in 1979, three months before he left office.

He returned as President 20 years later to conclude Nigeria’s loss of that century and spent his two terms scandalous­ly devaluing and diminishin­g her prospects.

Obasanjo’s eight years are among the 16 Buhari continues to lampoon but he cannot summon the courage to bring to justice the leaders of our blight, or to drive Nigeria’s human capacity or even to understand it.

In 2016, you probably know, he was asked during a visit to the Institute for Peace in Washington DC, how he would handle the challenge of inclusive developmen­t. The answer he gave—the video is on Youtube— is particular­ly embarrassi­ng but what is less known is that before offering it he needed help to understand the meaning of “inclusiven­ess.” To watch is an insight into the source of some of our current troubles, and why Buhari absolutely cannot lead Nigeria.

But while I have no evidence that Buhari reads anything, I am quite sure he has some familiarit­y with the W. B. Yeats classic, ‘The Second Coming,’.

This year is the 100th anniversar­y of that poem, which became popular in Nigeria because of Chinua Achebe’s “Things Fall Apart. I choose its language to warn Nigeria’s men of power, prophecy and profligacy that—side by side with the kerosene and matches of hunger and poverty—greed and arrogance can and will detonate:

“And what rough beast, its hour come round at last, Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?”

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