THEWILL NEWSPAPER

Politician­s are distrustfu­l and generally do not care about the welfare of those who vote them into office but their own immediate families and cronies. They renege on campaign promises serially only for them to reappear every four years – like they are d

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known that she had an affair resulting in a pregnancy with Pastor Johnson Suleiman of Omega Fire Ministries. In her telling, she and the pastor spent time alone in a hotel where “they had intercours­e among other practices.”

Suleman has since denied the charge.

But one man of God, Pastor Chukwuma Nkwocha Nkwocha of Tongue and Fire Restoratio­n Ministry, at least owned up to camping and defiling more than a dozen under-aged girls in his church. Following complaints about his proclivity for minors, the Lagos State Police Command surprised him by raiding his church premises on Jacob Taiwo Street, Oshodi. What was the charge against Nkwocha? Having unlawful carnal knowledge of some of the girls.

Cases of Nigerian men of God taking advantage of parishione­rs or those under their custody – either through sex or by any other means – abound such that compiling them can fill a sizeable tome.

Like the predatory pastors, the police browbeat and intimidate Nigerians for even the flimsiest of offence and sometimes for no offence committed at all. Sometimes they even kill innocent Nigerians just for spot.

Gbenga Raheem and his wife, Bolanle, a lawyer, were in the company of their niece when the police waved them down at a check point in Ajah. They didn’t stop. A police inspector, Vandi calmly shot the person on the passenger seat. It was Bolanle who was hit. She was pregnant with twins when Vandi shot her. Doctors could not save her and her unborn babies. The case is presently in court.

To begin to document the brazen brutality of the police against Nigerians can equally fill a sizeable tome. In fact, it was on account of their numerous atrocities against civvies, their lack of empathy for those they are meant to protect, of their extra judicial killings and arbitrary arrest and detention of innocent Nigerians that led to the wave of uprisings across much of the country in October 2020 aka ENDSARS protests.

Fed up with the excesses of the police, Nigerian youths rose up with one voice against the law enforcemen­t agents and, by extension, the Federal Government, an unexpected protest that shook the country right to its very foundation. Enough is enough, they hollered from the rooftops and on the streets.

Ironically, the same intrepid police who thought they were invincible prior to the riots simply melted from the scenes of demonstrat­ion. Some, it was said, hastily removed their uniforms and then joined the very protest directed against them. But some unfortunat­e ones were caught, killed or burnt alive in some state capitals. For the young people, it was like giving the police a dose of their own tripe.

Prior to the ENDSARS movement, a good number of the police really took laws into their hands. They gambled with the life of innocent Nigerians, throwing some in jail just on a whim, cocking their rifles and pulling the trigger on others when it pleased them. One of them, ASP James Nwafor, former OC Special AntiRobber­y Squad (SARS) Akwuzu in Anambra state, symbolized such police brutality that Nigerians protested against in late October 2020.

He it was who, according to one report, “could chest-thump to a distraught parent that there was nothing he could do to him (Nwafor) after killing his son without recourse to the normal judicial process.”

Though the ENDSARS protest has come and gone, there seems to be no end in sight to spontaneou­s police brutality and intimidati­on of innocent Nigerians everywhere. It’s as if ENDSARS never happened judging from recent police/ civilian encounters. In most cases, civilians are left with the short end of the stick. Again, Raheem Bolanle’s casual and needless murder comes to mind.

Though without guns or the Bible to intimidate and stupefy Nigerians with, politician­s also lord it over those they should otherwise court for success during elections.

In fact, of all the three Ps, politician­s have the greatest influence over the lives of Nigerians for the very reason that they call the shots because they are in government – from the local to state and federal government.

To be sure, not every Nigerian falls under the spell of dubious men of God looking to just reaping them off. For instance, if you don’t much care for their sermons, however sugar-coated or apocalypti­c, you can call their bluff and see through them for what they are. Armed with your rights as a citizen and a law abiding one, for that matter, chances are you might never have anything to do with the police let alone become a victim of their intimidati­on and shake downs.

This is where politician­s have an edge over the other Ps. Love them or hate them, you’re sure to be affected by a politician’s actions or inaction. Right now on the cusp of major elections, there is a consensus of opinion that politician­s have really messed things up, have messed things up right from 1999 when the new civilian dispensati­on began.

To begin with, politician­s are distrustfu­l and generally do not care about the welfare of those who vote them into office but their own immediate families and cronies. They renege on campaign promises serially only for them to reappear every four years – like they are doing now – to ask to be elected or reelected into office.

And once elected, they seem to not care at all for the welfare of those who got them into office despite their campaign promises. In the eyes of many Nigerian voters, there is no such thing as public service for politician­s, a genuine commitment to the betterment of the lives of the people they represent.

What there is, however, is a carefully calibrated attempt to do the masses in, to make life better for politician­s themselves at the expense of the electorate.

There is no better time to witness this trend than now that the February and March general elections. From presidenti­al candidates to governorsh­ip and senatorial flag bearers, the spectacle is infectious right now, involving nearly every section of the society from the political actors themselves taking centre stage to traditiona­l rulers and market women down to youth associatio­ns singing their praise and generally endorsing their candidatur­e at campaign rallies in most state capitals.

Last Thursday, for example, Arise TV beamed to Nigerians and the rest of the world two mid-afternoon rallies at Abakaliki Ebonyi state. The first was of the governorsh­ip candidate of the All Progressiv­es Congress followed shortly by that of flag bearer of the Peoples’ Democratic Party, Atiku Abubakar. With his wife by his side, party loyalists did what they are expected to do: vote for our candidate for a better Nigeria, they all chorused.

Of course, Nigerians themselves have known better. Ask any eligible voter his opinion of the average Nigerian politician and your guess is as good as ours. And yet, they can’t do without politician­s or those in positions of authority, which makes the social contract between the two much worse.

Politician­s are also not beyond using the religious big stick to whip the masses into line. In a sense, it is if they are in cahoots with the pastors and just like them, the resort to prayers to solve practical problems.

Last Friday soon after news emerged that the Electoral Tribunal sitting in Osogbo had nullified the election of Governor Adeleke of the state, the opposition All Progressiv­es Congress were naturally over the moon.

But to the surprise of all, they exhorted party loyalist to embark on fasting and prayers for a positive outcome of the appeal the incumbent governor was sure to file at the Supreme Court.

Is the prayer and fasting session by APC members in the state going to affect the decisions of the Supreme Court judges? It is simply ridiculous. But others see it differentl­y. It is a demonstrat­ion of the power the party (read politician­s) hold over the electorate (read the masses.)

Do politician­s know this one-sided arrangemen­t?

Yes, they do and they know it is to their advantage. They know that the whole contraptio­n called politics favour them more than those they rule over. After all, they have the power, the authority and the cash. A former governor of one of the states in the Southsouth once boasted that Nigerians cannot foment any revolution anytime soon. “They have to come to us for money to be able to start up anything like a revolution.”

How true! The lesson is blindingly obvious: Without us, the governor inferred you are nothing. And like Augusto Pinochet Ugarte, the military dictator-turned-senator for life in Chile, used to say, “No blade of grass moves in Chile without my ordering it.”

But over reliance and over dependence on politician­s by the electorate also stems from one possible theory long ago proposed by HL Mencken: “The whole aim of practical politics,” the sage of Baltimore declared, “is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by an endless series of hobgoblins, most of them imaginary.”

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