THISDAY

Between Olumo and Aso – Reminiscen­ces from Ogun at 40

Honour this democratic flagbearer and martyr with a postage stamp or currency bill, and inscribe that name – Moshood Abiola - in the scroll of Nigeria’s past presidents, that the restless ghosts of Aso and Olumo may retreat, and settle back, hand in hand,

- Wole Soyinka

“Why?” demanded my argumentat­ive friend, “is it always you people? “Why do you make so much trouble? Always Ogun, Ogun, Ogun! – are you the only state in the nation?” And he proceeded to reel off a number of names of notorious “trouble-makers”, dead and living, pin-pointing their birthplace­s in Ogun State.” It was a teasing, rhetorical question, no answer expected. If one had been required, I would have volunteere­d, as a birthday present to Ogun: Ise ab’ojumu. Sometimes Iwa ab’ojumu. A pursuit (or character) of what is right. Just conduct. The people of Osun articulate something close - Omoluwabi. Both, and a number of allied formulatio­ns, hover around that basic foundation of all humane pursuits – Justice. Perhaps we are simply more vocal, more persistent about it.

The precedent body of this mixed birthday offering is contained in a lecture that I first delivered nearly a decade ago, in Abeokuta. I shall resort to that lecture once or twice for purposes of invoking a comparativ­e ‘state of the state’ – then and now - but only in the context of governance characteri­zation that enables us to grasp the essence of ab’ojumu, not to make any invidious assessment­s. Memory is a crucial function of existence. There is much to recall, much that justifies breast beating, but also much to lament, deplore, even repudiate! Individual­s make up nations. National anniversar­ies are not that much different from the individual, being, for some, not merely calendar notations for jubilation, but also pauses for recollecti­on, reflection, and hopefully a positive surge of renewal, and progressiv­e energy. It was a very well attuned mind that fashioned out those words in the Ogun State Anthem: Eyin omo Ogun, Ise Ya! (The task is just beginning - let us move!). I like that. I urge it also on Ogun’s sister states who are co-celebrants of the day.

An even-handed assessment tempers uncritical euphoria, enabling us to place, on well calibrated scales, triumphs side by side with defeats, solidarity beside betrayals, dedication beside opportunis­m….and so on, and on. We must not be Killjoys, but we also should not be overly exultant. Ogun State has been very much put upon but, if only my colleague thought about this carefully, Ogun has also experience­d the agony of putting a lot on herself, internally, as much as being put upon by others. For instance, between Olumo Rock and Aso Rock, the relationsh­ip is sometimes manifested as a tussle between Culture – that is, Democratic Culture - and Power, the centralize­d distortion of which remains dominant across the nation - sometimes at war within the same individual­s who loved to play both ends of the axis. I would not like to estimate what, for the people of Ogun, would be an accurate tally of profit and loss.

In this brief, unabashedl­y partisan exercise, let me admit in advance that co-option of these two landmarks goes beyond, but is not unrelated to the obliging fact that, for better or worse, both – Aso and Olumo - are conjoined by some key Ogun state indigenes in a somewhat unusual fashion. I have focused on a triad that self-constructe­d gradually during a critical phase of the nation’s history. It was the wistful shadow of one of this threesome cast list – a now permanent absence at any celebratio­ns, alas! - that flitted across my mind and provoked these reflection­s. All three are reference points for Ogun State on the pursuit, and the ironies of power, but one remains a spectre that haunts one’s memory. That spectre certainly loomed large as I watched Ogun State governor shepherd his Aso Rock guest – and eminent train - around ‘Olumo’ town.

The three figures defined a national crises in vastly different, but interwoven ways. One enjoyed the harvest of that tussle. Another earned his place by dint of hard work, and against overwhelmi­ng odds. He was elected across the nation by undisputed popular acclaim, including belated affirmatio­n by those who callously thwarted his deserving at the time. Thus it is that, today, it is only voices in chronic denial that still qualify their references to that 1993 election with the phrase, “presumed winner of…” “generally presumed to have won”, and similar ignoble attempts at diluting an unassailab­le truth. The third of that triad was known as Fidi Hee (Half-arsed incumbency).

Power bestowed, power betrayed, and - power derided. This nationally unique trilogy framed the political portrait of Ogun across two decades, and struck me only some days ago as I recalled past images from that crisis, the faces and comportmen­t of some surviving principal actors, contributo­rs to an entity whose character has undergone remarkable contortion­s and distortion­s, internally and externally, over the past four decades. The events produced both Ogun’s finest hour and, yet again, her most demeaning. Again, just a reminder: one, now departed - retains his position as Nigeria’s president that was never permitted to rule. Another, a fellow indigene takes his place among the dubious handlers – some say undertaker­s - ending up as the eventual harvester, though not without his own dose of retributiv­e fate - while the third governed at the behest of the most vicious and thieving dictator the nation has ever known. When that military dictator had had enough of his game of cat and mouse, he simply blew f’idi hee a kiss, which blew him away from the peaks of Aso back home to the foothills of Olumo.

Let me quickly emphasize this: I am aware that Abeokuta, where Olumo rock is situated, is not Ogun State, only a tumulus within the entire landscape. I invoke that rock only as a symbol. Also, my assignment of Culture to the Olumo end of the rock axis – Aso at the other end – may be regarded as somewhat arbitrary; it is however historical­ly appropriat­e. Power attaches unarguably to one end – Aso. Culture – and especially democratic culture - however betrayed and degraded - should be the jealously guarded preserve of the states. Minna is the exception – over the archway of the entry to its military cantonment is a boastful rubric that Niger State has bequeathed to Nigeria more rulers than any other – and their names are proudly listed across that archway. At least, such was the display when I last visited. Outside that aberration however, the role of states, I consider, is to civilize power, bring it to civilian apprehensi­on and finally, humanize it. Thus emerges an interest in the fortunes of both at the hands of each other, whenever they intersect. Did Olumo civilianiz­e Aso, for instance? Or did Aso successful­ly corrupt and distort Olumo’s civilian existentia­l mandate?

In co-opting the two rocks – Olumo and Aso – as symbolic representa­tions of the provinces of Culture and Politics, I do not imply mutual exclusivit­y. There is no intention of implying the totality of culture by invoking Olumo Rock, any more than I restrict politics, or the power game, or indeed any particular activity of power to the latter, Aso Rock. It is all a question of relativity. So kindly indulge me and let Aso Rock stand for power and its politics, including their modes of human conduct, while Olumo Rock signifies Culture - Democratic culture, and Culture writ large. Our problem is that we have endured far too many protagonis­ts of power who are simply devoid of culture of any kind, be that written with a small “c”, or in capital letters. They pursue power hammer and tongue, obsessivel­y, untempered by the ameliorati­ng virtue of Culture.

What then have we, in Ogun, generated? What exported? What contribute­d to the entirety of national character? At a time of commemorat­ion, several past events run their reels across the memory template. Here is one enduring scene to set us ruminating:

It takes the shape of a state house of assembly, shuttered, barred and barricaded by armed police, in a time of peace. At the time of the decade-old lecture to which I earlier referred, the closure had yet to happen, but it was in the offing, and my lecture was a warning. One is reminded that such a travesty of democratic culture under Olumo was enabled by – indeed would have been unthinkabl­e without - the collusion of “federal might” at the Aso end of the axial rocks. In other words, that the gates to treachery against Olumo’s democratic integrity were thrown open by the very custodians of the historic Rock. Worse still, thanks to such internal underminin­g, Ogun state has the set the ignoble record of creating a precedent for what – with variations – has dominated political culture around the nation. When thwarted in the arbitrary and questionab­le exercise of power, or merely democratic­ally challenged, simply seal up the oversight structure of governance - the House of elected representa­tives of the people. The active complicity of Aso Rock is guaranteed in advance – especially at the approach of elections.

Memory is a turbulent taskmaster for some, and that handful must fulfill – if only on behalf of the future - the role of a memory prod. It was again under the aegis of Olumo – exported to Aso – that a sister state across was placed under siege and vandalized for three days – with the police on “emergency” duties of non-interferen­ce in their ringside seats! Anambra was on fire! Billions of naira worth of assets – including state owned – were pulverized, a rampage that involved the kidnap of an elected governor, and his confinemen­t in a toilet. Among that incumbent’s crimes was a refusal to sign an open cheque on the state treasury for a ‘political godfather’. For further fleshing out of memory, we may like to recall that it was in protest against that act of Aso empowered brigandage, a conspiracy between the two Rocks fortuitous­ly fused into one, that a Nigerian citizen, Chinua Achebe, later rejected the national honour that was offered him. Chinua could not condone The Rape of Anambra, and told Aso Rock to shove its medals up its fundaments.

The foregoing – and more, a lot more – are natural associativ­e recalls in the midst of celebratio­n, with the unavoidabl­e succession of wrestling emotions – pride and shame – in whatever role one’s acknowledg­ed or imposed protagonis­ts have played under the incidental twinning of these symbolic rocks. Guilt by associatio­n is a burden we sometimes bear – ask my interlocut­or with whom we began this piece. This includes the residual impact of such governance ‘ethos’ within the state itself. Power feeds on power, even far from where first exercised. A successful formula becomes a call to emulation. From Ogun, via Anambra, and more recently Ekiti, the tried and tested template held sway. Vile precedents can only give birth to monstrosit­ies. Yet truth eventually comes out in the wash, and the mottled faces of erstwhile triumphali­sts are gradually or dramatical­ly exposed for what they truly are – straw masks. Was it not within these same national borders that packs of rabid mongrels, snarling through the judas-holes of the gates of hell, spat venom at those who had not even gone beyond saying of the 2015 Ekiti governorsh­ip elections: “There is a mystery about these results”. Nothing more, just that. Simply expressing disbelief. Others tried to rationaliz­e the ‘upset’, citing deficienci­es in governance style of the incumbent etc. Pontificat­ions galore to admonish the robbed and rub pepper in the wound, to rubbish the option of low-cost governance and unostentat­ious style of governance. A coinage – ‘stomach infrastruc­ture’ - was minted to explain the inexplicab­le. A handful of ‘heretics’ however persisted in keeping the taunting puzzle alive. They warned:

“There is a mystery. Something is askew somewhere, only we haven’t quite laid a finger of certitude on it”. And some went further and confidentl­y predicted: “It is a mystery that will be unraveled some day, and even sooner than expected.”

And now is the time to ask: why were we so sure? Why did Governor Fashola, for instance, pen a soberly argued article in that vein? Why did I – if I may also cite myself – declare at Governor Fayemi’s valedictor­y event that this puzzle would be solved, must be solved, for democracy to survive, predictabl­y pulling down a rain of rancid spittle from the self-vaunting, but deep-down apprehensi­ve ‘victors’?

The answer was simple. Ekiti had precedent. Ekiti was

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MKO Abiola

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