The Guardian (Nigeria)

Chasing Shadows

- By Amanze Obi

THERE is something untoward about the Hope Uzodinma administra­tion in Imo State. The government is on a wild goose chase. It is obsessed with the past, and it is relentless­ly pursuing this through a needless publicity stunt. Because it has made the past its forte, it is failing, rather woefully, to get a hold on the present.

This jejune predisposi­tion amazes decent minds. How can a government which came to power through a predatory overreach continue to trample upon the prey it mindlessly hunted down? This obscene preoccupat­ion smacks of sadism. As if this negative overhang is not bad enough, a good number of those who are supposed to help the governor to succeed are strutting about vainglorio­usly.

Like the Yahoos of Jonathan Swift’s creation, they are crude, brutish and obscenely coarse. Many of them have actually constitute­d themselves into architects of the governor’s imminent failure. In their coarseness, they court trouble with reckless abandon. They stoke the embers of controvers­y with sardonic delight. They revel in unmerited triumphali­sm. There is no conscious effort to get the governor to focus on governance. Rather, this breed of lieutenant­s are busy throwing jibes. All of this eventuate in negativity for the administra­tion.

I had thought that an administra­tion that came into existence in the strangest of ways would act otherwise. The expectatio­n was that the administra­tion would be humble and seek to connect with the people. But that is not the case. Its preoccupat­ion borders more on shadow- boxing and witch hunting than anything else. The administra­tion is fixated with and consumed by yesterday. The past is actually its whipping boy. It appears to be incapable of looking forward without crying wolf over yesterday.

I have watched this ignoble dispositio­n of the administra­tion with amusement. I am amused because those who are leading the governor astray do not seem to understand what public office is all about. The ultima ratio of every administra­tion is governance. Government is expected to provide the greatest good for the greatest number. The howlers squirming around the governor like busy bees do not know this. They think that governance is a supremacy contest. They think it is the same thing as electionee­ring. They do not understand that governance should take the centre- stage once elections are won and lost.

In all of this, I pity the governor who is being led by overzealou­s aides into the wrong direction. The governor may not know this, but he will, in the fullness of time, appreciate the destructiv­eness inherent in the belligeren­t dispositio­n of some of his misguided aides.

Observers have had to say that the acrobatics, which has become the hallmark of the administra­tion, is aimed at gaining advantage over its adversarie­s, real or imagined. It is reasoned that the administra­tion, having gate- crashed into office, must make maximum noise in order to be taken seriously. It has to divert attention from the manner in which it came into office. The overall objective is to force legitimacy and credibilit­y on itself.

But I consider all of that an exercise in futility. The people cannot forget the strangenes­s that was foisted on them in a hurry. Its bizarrenes­s will haunt them for a long time to come. There is, therefore, no need trying to obliterate that unpleasant memory. It will not work. It will take its full course and then find an unenviable place in history books. Jobbers of the present order cannot help the situation.

They can also not rewrite history as they are seeking to do. Their scheme, from what we have seen, is to discredit the seven- month administra­tion of Rt. Hon. Emeka Ihedioha. But this indulgence is a double- edged sword. It must be wielded with caution. The danger of seeking to hurt a man who has done no wrong is already manifestin­g. The hoopla over the governor’s 100 days in office is already taking its toll on the administra­tion. Those who prepared the speech for the governor went off the mark when they made the Ihedioha administra­tion the focal point of the speech.

The speech was a jeremiad of sorts. The administra­tion ensured that the past administra­tion must take blame for whatever that was not in place. The speech gave the governor away as somebody who is being held hostage by jobbers and mischief- makers. Whoever put those words in the mouth of the governor in the name of speechmaki­ng did him a great disservice. The governor, if he was allowed to walk without intrusion, would have avoided the pit of darkness into which he was led.

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