THISDAY

Nigerian President or Northern King?

Femi Fani-Kayode writes that the appointmen­ts made by President Muhammadu Buhari are lopsided and an indication that the southern region has been relegated to the background

- -Okocha is Special Assistant to the Senate President on Print Media

In 418 B.C. Herodotus, the Greek philosophe­r who is known as the ‘’father of history’’, said “a man who does not know anything about the events that took place before he or she was born will remain forever a child.’’ Not only was he right but one must go a step further by saying that those who refuse to learn from their history are condemned to repeating its mistakes.

In 1957, Sir Ahmadu Bello, the Saurdana of Sokoto and the Premier of the North, said the following: “We the people of the north will continue our stated intention to conquer the south and to dip the Koran in the Atlantic Ocean after the British leave our shores.”

Three years later, on 12 th October 1960, he went a step further by saying the following words to the Parrot Newspaper: “The new nation called Nigeria should be an estate of our great grandfathe­r Uthman Dan Fodio. We must ruthlessly prevent a change of power. We must use the minorities in the North as willing tools and the South as a conquered territory and never allow them to rule over us and never allow them to have control over their future”.

That same year he said: “I will allow Sir Tafawa Balewa to go and become Prime Minister and lead the unbeliever­s of the south whilst I will stay in the north and lead the faithful”.

One year later, in a television interview with the BBC (which can still be viewed on Youtube) he was asked whether his ‘’northernis­ation policy’’ would be a temporary or permanent feature. His response was as follows. ‘’In actual fact the policy is a northerner first. If you cannot get a northerner then you get an expatriate like yourself on contract. If we cannot get that then we will employ another Nigerian from the south on contract too. This is going to be a permanent policy as far as I foresee’’.

Not to be outdone, in January 1947 on the floor of the Northern House of Assembly, Sir Tafawa Balewa, a man that was to become the first Prime Minister of Nigeria 13 years later, said the following words:

“We do not want our Southern neighbours to interfere in our developmen­t. We have never associated ourselves with the activities of these people. We do not know them, we do not recognise them, and we share no responsibi­lity in their actions. We shall demand our rights when the time is ripe. If the British quit Nigeria now at this stage, the Northern people would continue their uninterrup­ted conquest to the sea”.

Sadly, craving for northern domination has not in any way diminished over the years. As a matter of fact it appears to have got worse and, for some, it has become an obsession. Consider the following.

On 2nd October 2014, one Aliyu Gwarzo said the following to Pointblank­news:

”When I say that the presidency must come to the north next year I am referring to the Hausa-Fulani core north and not any northern Christian or Muslim minority tribe.

The Christians in the north are nothing and the minorities know that when we are talking about leadership in the north and in Nigeria, Allah has given it to us, the Hausa-Fulani.

They can grumble, moan and groan as much as they want but each time they go into their bedrooms to meet their wives and each time they get on their prayer mats to begin their prayers, it is we the Fulani that they think of, that they fear, that they bow to and that they pray for.

Some of them are even ready to give us their wives and daughters for one nights sport and pleasure. They owe us everything. This is because we gave them Islam through the great Jihad waged by Sheik Usman Dan Fodio.

We also captured Ilorin, killed their local King and installed our Fulani Emir. We took that ancient town away from the barbarian Yoruba and their filthy pagan gods. We liberated all these places and all these people by imposing Islam on them by force.

It was either the Koran or the sword and most of them chose the Koran. In return for the good works of our forefather­s Allah, through the British, gave us Nigeria to rule and to do with as we please. Since 1960 we have been doing that and we intend to continue.

No Goodluck or anyone else will stop us from taking back our power next year. We will kill, maim, destroy and turn this country into Africa’s biggest war zone and refugee camp if they try it.

Many say we are behind Boko Haram. My answer is what do you expect? We do not have economic power or intellectu­al power. All we have is political power and they want to take even that from us.

We must fight and we will fight back in order to keep it. They have brought in the infidels from America and the pigs from Israel to help them but they will fail. The war has just begun, the Mujahadeen are more than ready and by Allah we shall win.

If they don’t want an ISIS in Nigeria then they must give us back the Presidency and our political power. Their soldiers are killing our warriors and our people every day but mark this: even if it takes one hundred years we will have our revenge. Every Fulani man that they kill is a debt that will be repaid even if it takes 100 years. The Fulani have very long memories”.

Gwarzo’s words are self-explanator­y and they need no further analysis. Thankfully his views do not represent the thinking of the majority of Hausa Fulani people but he does speak for a minority and his words constitute a clear statement of intent. Simply put, it is his desire to conquer and subjugate southern Nigeria and to restore northern domination and supremacy in the affairs of our nation in perpetuity.

The quest for northern domination in the affairs of our country is as old as the hills. It led to a brutal civil war between 1967 and 1970 in which millions were killed. It led to pogrom after pogrom and slaughter after slaughter in the north. It led to a series of military coups and counter coups. In 1991 it led to a coup by Major Gideon Orkar which, if it had been successful, would have resulted in the excision of the core northern states from our country. It led to the annulment of Chief MKO Abiola’s presidenti­al election of June 12th 1993 which almost resulted in a second civil war.

It led to the brutal suppressio­n of the south by General Sani Abacha and the murder, torture, incarcerat­ion and exile of many southern leaders. It led to stiff opposition to the government of President Olusegun Obasanjo in the north which came in the guise ‘’political sharia’’. And finally it led to it is most barbaric and hideous expression in the relentless opposition to the regime of President Goodluck Jonathan which came in the form of Boko Haram.

Judging from recent events, with President Buhari now in power it appears that those that have been lusting for total northern domination for the last 55 years have finally had their way.

The inability to think deeply or profoundly is a curse. The inability to read widely and learn from others is a pitiful and costly affliction. If there were ever a time for profound thinking and deep and sober reflection when it comes to the affairs of our nation it is now. I say this because only three months after President Buhari has been sworn into office the power configurat­ion, vis a vis north and south, has resulted in the following mess.

1. President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria - north. 2.Senate President- north. 3. Speaker of the House of Representa­tives- north. 4. Chief Justice of the Federation- north. 5. President of the Court of Appeal- north. 6. Chief Justice of the Federal High Court- north. 7. Secretary to the Federal Government- north. 8. Chief of Staff to the President- north. 9. Chief of Army Staff- north. 10. Chief of Air Staff- north. 11. Comptrolle­r General of Customs- north. 12. Director-General of State Security Services (SSS)- north. 13. National Security Advisor- north. 14. Director General NIMASA- north. 15. Chairperso­n of the Independan­t Electoral Commission (INEC)north. 16. Comptrolle­r-General Immigratio­n- north. 17. Accountant-General of the Federation - north. 18. Commander of Civil Defence Corps- north. 19. Chief Security Officer to the President- north. 20. ADC to the President- north. 21. Principal Secretary to the President- north. 22. Senior Special Assistant to the President on media- north. 23. Chairman of the EFCC- north. 24. MD Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA)- north. 25. Head of Service north. 26. DG National Communicat­ion Commission (NCC)- north. 27. Chairman NDLEA- north. 28. CEO AMCON- north.

There is no gainsaying that this is unacceptab­le. Some of us warned that this would happen but we were insulted and lampooned for doing so. These appointmen­ts are not only lopsided but they are also a manifestat­ion of the fact that in just three months southern Nigeria has finally been relegated to being little more than an occupied region and a vassal state. The people of the south appear to have been placed in servitude and bondage. Our chains may be invisible but they are very much there. The question must be asked: is Buhari the President of Nigeria or is he the King of the north? Some have argued that the federal character formula has no place in our affairs anymore and that merit ought to be the only criteria for government appointmen­ts. Permit me to quote a young man from twitter who responded to that absurd logic rather well by saying ‘’if federal character isn’t important, why is the Vice President also not from Daura? Educated people should not speak like illiterate­s’’.

Others have said that we should wait for the ministeria­l list and that after that things would balance out. Again this is absurd logic and those that spout such convoluted thrash appear to have forgotten the fact that the President is compelled by law and the constituti­on to appoint a Minister from every state of the federation, including each of the southern states.

Whether he is President of Nigeria or King of the north Buhari would do well to retrace his steps. The consequenc­es of not doing so for both his government and the unity of our country will be grave and costly. The south cannot be subjugated and treated with contempt and the people of the south will never be slaves. Fairness and equity in the distributi­on of national resources and key government appointmen­ts are a fundamenta­l pre-requisite for peace, security and national unity in our country.

It has served our collective interest well for many years. Those that seek to upset the apple cart and jettison it today are not considerin­g the inevitable and monumental consequenc­es of their actions. Power may have returned to the north but the people of the south must be treated with respect, sensitivit­y, dignity, fairness and decency. Those that refuse to accept this counsel and that insist on charting a different course do so at their own peril.

Whether he is president of Nigeria or king of the north Buhari would do well to retrace his steps. The consequenc­es of not doing so for both his government and the unity of our country will be grave and costly. The south cannot be subjugated and treated with contempt and the people of the south will never be slaves. Fairness and equity in the distributi­on of national resources and key government appointmen­ts are a fundamenta­l prerequisi­te for peace, security and national unity in our country

 ??  ?? Buhari... doing things his own way
Buhari... doing things his own way
 ??  ?? Fani-Kayode.... Buhari should retrace his steps
Fani-Kayode.... Buhari should retrace his steps

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