Daily Trust

APC and Muslim-Muslim ticket

- Abdulhalee­m Ishaq Ringim wrote from Zaria and can be reached via haleemabdu­l1999@gmail.com

It is the realizatio­n that Nigeria’s presidency cannot be won by the sole or combined agencies of personal fame, resources or regional influence that informed the ideation of a merger of political parties that eventually birthed the APC.

And the essence of this merger, as it were, was the pursuit of a formidable confluence between Nigeria’s most politicall­y active blocs - northern and south-western regional voting blocs. The central representa­tive figures of the two voting blocs were Muhammadu Buhari and Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

Evidently, the merger would not have been successful without the uncompromi­sing commitment and consensus of these central figures. Lack of such a consensus was the sole reason why attempts at the merger failed in 2011.

In both instances, the dynamics of running mate selection constitute­d a major challenge; one that stalled the entire merger process in 2011 and almost jeopardise­d the efforts again in 2015 if not for last minute compromise­s.

The resumption of merger talks was principall­y premised on the assurances of improved mutual understand­ing and primacy of deliberati­on and mutual agreement on all issues before implementa­tion. Resultantl­y, the issue of

VP selection was agreeably deferred to the ACN side of the merger. And being the leader of the ACN and a southerner, Bola Tinubu was the first point of call.

However, such a suppositio­n was put to test by the concern of certain stakeholde­rs largely from the non-ACN merging parties over the feasibilit­y of flying a MuslimMusl­im ticket to victory against the PDP. And based on this singularit­y of a justificat­ion defined strictly on the bases of religious [in]compatibil­ity questions, Tinubu was dropped for Osinbajo.

Seven years later, the same political platform faces same dilemma. The dynamics that defined Tinubu’s emergence were largely characteri­sed by ethnic considerat­ions and the process of choosing his running mate seems to be greatly saturated by the influence of the overbearin­g conflict of ethno-religious interests.

Ironically, the hypocritic­al ultimacy of political convenienc­e as against principle has never been this blatant. Scores of politician­s who vehemently opposed the idea of a Muslim-Muslim ticket in 2015 are seen today to be championin­g the cause. Even more perplexing is the dismissal by some of these supporters of issues of religious affiliatio­n (of the running mate) as irrelevant.

As the elite slug it out, they keep deliberate­ly involving the masses whose minds have, over time, fallen victim of their manipulati­ve conditioni­ng. As a result, the Christian establishm­ent and followersh­ip, especially in the North demand uncompromi­singly that the VP be picked amongst their brethren. While the northern Muslim establishm­ent and followersh­ip in the usual feeling of mutual insecurity and distrust have threatened to actively oppose a ticket with a northern Christian as VP.

It sadly almost seems as though whoever clinches the VP slot officially and institutio­nally enhances the presence and validity of the religion he belongs to. But is that accurate? How is a peasant Muslim farmer going to be better off with a Muslim as VP? And how’s the Christian peasant farmer in the opposite situation? What of security? Buhari is president yet the North suffers from insecurity the most. What of justice?

This conflict is largely an in-house northern conflict. And we’ve consistent­ly been falling victim to these manipulati­ve tendencies because we’ve failed to understand certain political and social realities. But the most important among such realities is the glaring yet often forgotten fact that the allegiance of almost every elite in Nigeria is more to the power superstruc­ture than it is to religion.

And it is high time we understood that it is never about religion but about power and the spoils that accompany its acquisitio­n. The Muslim community should also be able to distinguis­h between manipulati­on and genuine allegiance to religious interest.

Our collective problems as the North do not respect such bifurcatio­ns same way the results of incompeten­ce of both Muslim and Christian political leaders of northern extraction do not too. And good and ethical leadership are not exclusive preserves of any of the two religions. In fact, there’s a strong convergenc­e of both religions on issues of political values, leadership ethics and principles of good governance. Insecurity; poverty; economic underdevel­opment; inefficien­t educationa­l and healthcare systems; infrastruc­tural inadequaci­es; etc are our collective challenges and our collective resolve should be of getting competent leaders to reverse the situation.

To these manipulati­ve elites, religion is only but an agency for the sustenance of relevance and power for selfaggran­dizement. We must rise above such manipulati­ve machinatio­ns and focus on building a formidable consensus capable of enforcing on the leadership a Northern agenda for developmen­t regardless of who becomes VP.

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