The Guardian (Nigeria)

Osinbajo and the burden of sinecure public office

- By Alade Rotimi-john

YEMI Osinbajo, Vice President and studious Professor of Law wears a noble face even in his small frame. Smallish, pocket-size and dour, he is however exciting to behold. As a school boy, he spoke good English, kept himself clean in his khaki shorts and tops and was more dignified than most youngsters. He was also extraordin­arily well-mannered. He had little interest in athletics but loved books and music. Many of his classmates liked him for he was reserve, considerat­e and lacked the tendency to dominate. He discipline­d himself stringentl­y even as he bottled up his emotions. He drove himself unmerciful­ly and was usually on top of his class. He also participat­ed in debate in the top rank. Imbued with the spirit and “progressiv­eness” of a nominally secular institutio­n which he attended, Osinbajo is understand­ably steeped in the received principles of the past. He is less responsive to the creative findings of the present in spite of his cultivatio­n of a mind possessing unusual power which in turn has made him eminently fitted for the profession of law.

Forced to husband his energy on being found to be too involved in exacting vocations and assignment­s, he accepted office only when it was thrust upon him. As Lagos State Attorney-general and Commission­er for Justice, he was beloved for his integrity, gentleness and dignity. The memory of his character in office is today the mainstay of that pivotal institutio­n. As a teacher, Osinbajo drove himself relentless­ly even as his students felt obliged to work just as hard as himself. He is a born teacher with the natural attributes of patience, tact and devotion to the cause. He excited even the dullest student with a perception of the majesty of the law. His trail-blazing achievemen­ts as chief law officer of Lagos State (1999-2007) probably put him on the spot for considerat­ion as a visibly appropriat­e holder of a higher political office in future rather than the presumed squeaky calculatio­ns of some forlorn political mogul. Osin- bajo deems both the Constituti­on and statutes to be fixed in meaning and inflexibly or immutably executed by officials. He launched a series of impassione­d attacks for change by judicial interpreta­tion as was witnessed in the celebrated case of the controvers­ial with-holding by the Federal Government of the statutory allocation­s accruing to Lagos State when the duo quibbled over the propriety or otherwise of the extra-constituti­onal creation of additional local government­s by the state government.

The office of the Vice-president with its larger strengths and obvious weaknesses is however quite dis-similar to the ornateness of style of a class teacher or of a primus law officer. As a spare rib in the body politic of the presidency, the holder of the office is quite dispensabl­e or expendable. One is apt to identify the chasm between law and the dynamic force of politics, morality and industry or hard work. The conservati­ve character of the performanc­e of lawyers in public office is glaringly reflective of the influence of powerful brokers or of their appointors than of the proverbial inhibiting character of legal education. The more important and able the lawyer, the more he is in touch or in agreement with official positions or thinking and with the most important business interests of his “community”; and the more he is unable to propose or advocate any reform of an extensive or radical character which will be unwelcome to his principal’s interest. Lawyers in public office regrettabl­y manifest Holmes’ disdainful view of the law as containing “only the axioms and corollarie­s of a book of mathematic­s”. They display a great sense of immediate utility and less of the requiremen­t for posterity or the demands of an enduring legacy or heritage. They are eager to get what they can and to, for instance, “win” their cases.

On Wednesday, May 16, 2018, the Vice President met more than his match and was visibly flustered when in Benue State he came face to face with the ire and fire of the leadership of a traumatise­d people. In the history of public altercatio­n or of the expression of angry disputatio­n, that meeting will go down as the most virulent verbal attack or assault on a high ranking public figure. No holds were barred - no restrictio­ns or rules were observed. Courtly etiquette was dispensed with. Speaker after speaker said it as it is. But that is as it should be. Our public men have gone away too long with the view of the common people’s predisposi­tion to continue to suffer in silence or, to borrow Fela’s aphorism, “suffering and smiling”. Many communitie­s had been sacked, hundreds of people have been gruesomely hacked to death, many more have been maimed and rendered homeless and helpless under the watch of a seemingly inert government. The uncouth perpetrato­rs of these crimes against humanity are deemed sacred cows and have remained unquestion­ed, unchalleng­ed and un-prosecuted. A most gruesome or horror-inspiring incident in which officiatin­g priests at a funeral Mass celebratio­n in a church were cold-bloodedly murdered along with members of the congregati­on did not excite the immediate or peremptory visit of the President or his Vice to the startled or grieving community. Osinbajo, the community moaned, did not live up to his billing as a church minister or pastor beyond vainly decrying the horror. He was alleged not to have caught the universal sense of disapprova­l which demands that he makes an unequivoca­l statement condemning the inactivity or ineffectiv­eness of his government regarding the reign of terror, chastising implicated officials, moving against the bandits vietarmis and declaring the armed militia men as terrorists rather than lamely dubbling the orgy of killings and criminal insoucianc­e as “farmers, herdsmen clashes.” The high pitch of the people’s observatio­n of government’s insensitiv­ity to their plight was reached at a glittering reception of the Vice President at an IDP camp. But the people did not toast him warmly, generously or felicitous­ly. Rotimi-john,alawyerand­publicaffa­irsanalyst.

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