THISDAY

Referendum on a Hegemony

- with ChidiAmuta e-mail:chidi.amuta@gmail.com

We might as well sound the end time alarm bugle loud and clear. This is in the desperate hope that we can avert a national catastroph­e. Whether we are Christians or Muslims, APC or PDP, Northerner­s or southerner­s, a common existentia­l burden now hangs over us all. The future of the nation, our common heritage, hangs on a balance because our politics is being manipulate­d to a perilous brink.

In the run up to a crucial power transition election, a terminal divisivene­ss threatens to overwhelm our fragile political system. Suddenly, the defining question of the moment has been reduced to the future of the regional hegemony that the Buhari presidency deepened, entrenched and weaponized. The dominant question of the imminent presidenti­al election is now simply this: Can Nigeria survive another presidenti­al term under a northern Muslim president?

The foreseeabl­e eventualit­y is the possibilit­y that both major parties could field northern Muslim presidenti­al candidates. That will quickly transform the 2023 presidenti­al election into a referendum on the continuati­on of northern rule and hegemony. It could also become the ultimate referendum on the future of the country as a united entity. That is how close we are to doomsday.

All perceivabl­e signals in the political parties point in this dangerous direction. As it is, every activity in the major political parties is now consumed by north-south computatio­ns. Instead of working towards a free and fair democratic election, the hidden hands of hegemonic prevalence are manipulati­ng the political system into a shameful plebiscite about two poles on the national compass.

The frightenin­g omens of a systemic meltdown are in abundance. The two dominant parties are in the process of being toppled by the power of regionalis­m and geo political maneuverin­g. The internal democracy of the parties is being rubbished by the conservati­ve forces of geo-political myth making. Attention has shifted in both parties from organizing orderly presidenti­al primaries to crude antics for perpetuati­ng the prevailing regional hegemony. As we speak, both major parties have clandestin­ely reneged on the north-south power zoning understand­ing. This however happens to be the pillar on which the nation’s stability and precarious balance of power has so far depended. As a result, the very survival of our fragile nation is being trifled with by a political class that does not care if Nigeria crumbles.

The APC which had for a long time repeatedly publicly announced its zoning of the 2023 presidenti­al slot to the southern zones now seems to be walking back on that commitment. Its decrepit newly minted chairman, Mr. Abdullahi Adamu, has cast doubts on the party’s long standing commitment on the matter. In a statement that no one has so far denied, Mr. Adamu sheepishly rehashed the politicall­y convenient line that the APC is yet to decide on a zoning principle for the 2023 presidenti­al slot. This is a shorthand for smuggling in the possibilit­y of yet another northern presidenti­al candidate for the party. Some hidden hand has activated an insane deluge of southern presidenti­al aspirants in the party (over 25 at the last count) and hardly any one from the north except the ‘Sharia’ advocate, former Zamfara governor, Alhaji Sani Yerima! A conservati­ve task force is said to be daily pressuring President Muhammadu Buhari to buy into the new twist.

The PDP on its part was the first to turn its back on zoning. It has since opted to insist on a northern candidate while pretending to have opened the playing field to all aspirants for its presidenti­al ticket.

While this political trampoline dance goes on, there is an urgent alarm of political wisdom that needs to be sounded to save the nation.

Political parties remain the cornerston­e of the architectu­re of the democratic state. They are institutio­ns of nation state survival without which the polity cannot renew or sustain itself. Even countries wracked by crisis and shattered by anarchy and war begin their recovery to democratic wholeness by forming political parties to aggregate citizen interests. Elections follow and precede the restoratio­n of governance and order. Parties may not strike you with an expansive institutio­nal presence. In fact, parties tend to

inhabit small headquarte­r buildings from where they mint those who decide the plight of institutio­ns with expansive reach and overwhelmi­ng presence. By their nature, political parties are modest but powerful institutio­nal presences in the life of nations. They are not like, say the army, the stock exchange, the judiciary or the legislatur­e which dominate space and deafen people with noise. Every party headquarte­rs tends to be a badly furnished building manned by scruffy apparatchi­ks. But without parties, the entire elaborate edifice of the democratic state falters and collapses. That is why coup makers begin their business by proscribin­g parties and abrogating the constituti­ons that give them life. Therefore, any political antic that seeks to overthrow a political party system is a treasonous exercise. Those dark political knights now scheming to topple the internal democratic arrangemen­ts of both the APC and the PDP by scrapping presidenti­al zoning had better have a rethink. They are attempting a coup d’etat and the consequenc­es of such misadventu­re are very pretty known.

This is no time to debate the scientific enlightenm­ent of power zoning. Everyone knows the ideal but Nigeria does not survive on ideals. We are a nation of contingenc­y, expediency and compromise­s. The expediency of north-south power rotation has kept us going even under the worst autocracie­s. Why topple it now?

The impending upheaval in the parties has already produced a rash of clashing statements and utterances from diverse geo political groups. South east politician­s in the PDP have become a political trade union of malcontent­s. Leaders of major Southwest political and cultural groups are rooting for a president from the south east. Chief E.K Clark of the Niger Delta has added his weighty voice, warning that Nigeria may not survive another northern Muslim president right after Buhari. The Arewa Youth organizati­on has however added a sensible voice, insisting on the imperative of a southward zoning of the 2023 presidency.

Remarkably, some northern state governors, notably Nasir El-Rufai of Kaduna and Babagana Zulum of Borno, have consistent­ly advocated the zoning of the 2023 presidency to the southern zones.

Meanwhile, barely a few months to the 2023 presidenti­al election, clandestin­e political dark knights are busy manipulati­ng attention from urgent national problems of basic security and mundane economic survival for citizens. Everything is now about whether the next president should be a Northern Muslim or southern Christian, an Igbo or a Fulani, Yoruba or Urhobo. But by far the overriding axis of discord is the north-south divide which poses a strategic threat to the continuati­on of the Nigerian state. The note of mutual antagonism is palpable. Interest groups are fanning the embers of hate with incendiary rhetoric.

The systematic mismanagem­ent of our diversity and the north-south balance of power by Buhari’s hegemonic excesses has weaponized what should be a normal democratic transition politics, converting us all into war mongers. No sensible nation allows the spread of hate and the rhetoric of war while preparing for a ritual of peaceful coexistenc­e which is what elections ultimately are.

Inside the opposition PDP, an extant zoning agreement has been shredded by a fixation with the mathematic­al advantages of a northern presidenti­al candidate. This has instantly alienated party leaders and politician­s from other sections of the country. In the interim, all manner of webs and manipulati­ons are being contrived to strike compromise­s in a pursuit of a non existent consensus.

The assumption­s behind the scramble for a northern presidenti­al candidate are based on a curious, lazy arithmetic and dubious political strategy. The logic seems to be that the fabled northern large demographi­cs of voters will only vote for a northern presidenti­al candidate. That is an insult to the sense of discrimina­tion of the average Northern voting citizen. That line of thinking has no room for loyalty to party or subscripti­on to people friendly policies. But a cursory look at previous presidenti­al election results reveals the foolishnes­s of this assumption.

Northern voters like all other Nigerians will vote for the candidates that the contending parties present to them. They do not insist that presidenti­al candidates must be northern Muslims to earn their votes! We may need to ask who voted for president Obasanjo for two terms? Was the assumed northern majority voters not in existence when Obasanjo was being elected and re-elected? Who voted for Jonathan’s single term? Nigerians, irrespecti­ve of religion and region, vote for party candidates according to their preference­s, not as unthinking regional mobs.

The myth of the cultic northern voting majority as an electoral factor came into being with Mr. Buhari’s desperatio­n for power and his presentati­on as the ultimate northern redeemer. Jonathan’s rudderless governance and epic incompeten­ce enabled the Buhari ascent. For the past seven years, however, the president that came to power on the wave of national goodwill and amnesty has pursued a sickening regional hegemonic agenda to nauseating levels. As a result, even the most ardent enlightene­d northern elite are now utterly embarrasse­d by this effete presidency.

The tragic irony of this single minded hegemonic mindset is that it has cast the north in poor light. Buhari’s chosen few are mostly a choir of incompeten­t mediocrity. They have fared abysmally and virtually run Nigeria aground. Happily, they do not represent the best of the north. Under the watch of the Buhari bunch, the Nigerian state has failed itself, failed its citizens and failed as a credible member of the internatio­nal community. A vile and uncontroll­ed regional army of bandits, terrorists and vengeful thugs has been enabled.

An Irresponsi­ble new political elite has abandoned the ordinary people of the north to the violent forces that their insensitiv­ity has unleashed. Governors that prefer to remain perpetuall­y on vacation in Abuja or Dubai while their states are overrun by casual terrorists are the same people now scheming to retain national power in a region they have laid waste. These are the people funding and fanning the current confusion in the parties.

Those now scheming for a perpetuati­on of northern rule are vicariousl­y wishing Nigerians a continuati­on of the Buhari-type nightmare. Eight more years of unbridled corruption, inactivity, insensitiv­ity, mercantile terrorism and economic morass.

Today’s power adventurer­s do not seem to understand the current mood of the nation. In the north, even in the mosques, the mood is to curse and disown the present version of northern hegemony as the source of violence and increased poverty. In the south, the hegemony is seen as the source of killer herdsmen and unsafe highways and railroads. Response to hegemonic arrogance and domination is the source of IPOB militancy and the Igboho separatist agitation. It is also the origin of the fear of Islamisati­on.

Therefore, the overriding challenge of the 2023 presidenti­al contest is how to pry the heart of the Nigerian nation from the fangs of a vicious Buhari bred regional ogre of incompeten­t and unproducti­ve hegemonist­s.

Even the north, the presumptiv­e beneficiar­y region of the Buhari hegemony, is somewhat dazed and utterly embarrasse­d. Consequent­ly, the northern political voice has acquired multiple tongues and many hues. The more enlightene­d nationalis­tic wing cried out early in the Buhari tenure. They opined that Buhari’s hegemonic extremism would damage the nation, alienate the north itself and endanger us all. Another northern faction disowned Buhari as a traitor of northern interests and an embarrassm­ent to the best standards and aspiration­s of the region. A minority political voice, mostly Arewa youth, cried out that the best way out is to abide by a zoned power rotation arrangemen­t to enable a southern Christian president succeed eight years of the Buhari interregnu­m.

The Northern Elders Forum has usurped the megaphone of regional spokesmans­hip in the service of the subsisting hegemony. The position of the Northern Elders Forum on zoning of the presidency has over the years been inconsiste­nt, opportunis­tic and self serving. On 15th May 2013, the NEF issued a statement in which it insisted that:

‘Power rotation is a mark of equity and justice’. That was in the midst of President Jonathan’s bid for re-election and in support of Buhari’s desperate bid for the presidency to revert to the north in the 2015 presidenti­al elections.

Now in the countdown to the 2023 election and the end of Buhari’s parochial reign, the same Northern Elders Forum is back in business. On 16th January, 2022, the Forum stated: ‘power rotation is anti-democracy.’ One Forum, two positions on the same subject but of course a consistent interest in the perpetuati­on of a regional power hegemony. The NEF supports zoning only in one sense: that the political leadership of the country should remain permanentl­y zoned to the north. Hear the arrogant Hakeem Baba Ahmed, the Mauritania­n - Nigerian spokesman of the Forum two weeks ago: ‘We will lead Nigeria the way we have always led Nigeria before. Whether we are President or Vice President, we will lead Nigeria. We have the majority of the voters…’

The forces behind the new surge of hegemonic preeminenc­e are not hard to find or easy to ignore. They must also be credited with a certain devious sense of strategic expediency. They recognize the pivotal place of the political parties in presidenti­al power zoning hence the present guerrilla operation to get both major parties to field northern presidenti­al candidates. Whether they are working in the PDP or the APC, it is a common task force at work in the service of the same hegemonic project.

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 ?? ?? Audu Ogbeh
Audu Ogbeh

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