THISDAY

Campaignin­g Amidst the Carnage

-

The current landscape of Nigeria is somewhere between a violent crime scene and the ruin of an imperfect edifice. It is like ‘the day after’ a great holocaust, an atomic upheaval or some other man made disaster. Those who left here seven years ago can no longer easily recognise familiar places. The highways are dangerous just as familiar neighborho­ods have become treacherou­s. A society that produces orphans, widows and suicides faster than the birth rate in maternity homes deserves a contemplat­ive rethink instead of a celebratio­n. What, in real terms, is the current campaign season all about?

Uncertaint­y of prospects coupled with viral poverty makes everything and everywhere strange. This is not the place that used to fire hope and drive ambition when we were young. Community has been replaced by clashing clans of hate and raging tribes of suspicion. Viral pessimism and incurable cynicism are everywhere. The perennial sadness on nearly every face says all about a place where happiness is now a scarce commodity to be hidden from the gaze of the disenchant­ed mob.

Yet we are in an election season with campaign carnivals all around us. The politician­s are seeking our mandate to alleviate the mood of depression and vicious anger. In a democracy, seasonal election campaigns can alleviate depression and imbue hope. Campaign carnivals can become rituals of hope and ceremonies of renewal. The prospect of new managers of popular expectatio­ns, familiar people promising to do old things in new ways can give hope and elevate moods. Even if the expectatio­ns that go with campaign promises end up in smoke eventually, campaigns have a way of creating that air of festival relief and ease which every society occasional­ly needs to vent and postpone the implosion that bad governance breeds. That is where we are right now in Nigeria.

But it is hard to sow hope in a landscape of carnage, of utter devastatio­n. Seven and half years of the Buhari administra­tion has created easily the most decadent years of Nigeria’s history. Nearly every aspect of national life has been devastated by a sad combinatio­n of incompeten­ce, tacit corruption, disastrous governance and distant insensitiv­ity. There is a raging argument among scholars as to how a whole national edifice could be destroyed in less than a decade. Those with a historical mindset readily point to the examples of parallel disasters in recent history: Somalia, former Yugoslavia, Rwanda, Lebanon etc.

From the general tone of the ongoing campaigns, even the most casual observer can detect the near hopelessne­ss. Where will the new men begin? Which is the priority?

A backdrop of perilous national drift has shaping the campaign season and possibly deprived it of a redeeming hope.

It is not one campaign that is raging. There are in fact many campaigns going on simultaneo­usly. Suddenly woken up to the emptiness of its own legacy, a lame duck Buhari administra­tion is converting the remaining vestiges of federal power into an opportunit­y for a legacy campaign. Devoid of any redeeming landmark achievemen­ts except a mound of debts and a sea of deaths, the beleaguere­d president and his rabble are clutching to free and fair elections as a worthy legacy worth bequeathin­g to a nation that has since drawn its conclusion­s. In this context, it is a credible election legacy if the opposition overwhelms the incumbent and emerges victorious. That would be a legacy of a fair minded and objective incumbent rather than the

routing of an incumbent in disorderly retreat. A ruin is after all also a form of architectu­re!

Afraid of deserting its own faulty tower, Mr. Buhari cannot but campaign for his lack luster party and its infinitely controvers­ial presidenti­al candidate. Last week in Jos, it was a miserable outgoing president Buhari that sat through the opening campaign of his party. There, in full view of a world in utter consternat­ion, his party’s flag bearer repeatedly called his party the ‘PDP’ while endlessly invoking the Buhari spirit in repeated recitation­s of the President’s name as a curative mantra! Buhari! Buhari!! Buhari!!! What a tragic reversal and blatant linguistic subversion of political intention.

In other areas, the campaign season has donned a typically Nigerian garb. A parade of carefully selected renowned Court Jesters have been picked as spokespers­ons of the major presidenti­al contenders. In the process, the agenda of the candidates have been deliberate­ly drained of issues or any semblance of seriousnes­s. This same collective of political entertaine­rs have in recent times so frequently moved between the two main parties that most times they tend to forget whose servant they now are. Mr. Dino Melaye of the Atiku campaign spent so much time singing the praise of the opposition APC that he needed a prompter to nudge him into reality from an obvious state of habitual delirium. But the damage had been done by the time he realized that he was now singing the anthem of the PDP once again!

In all this, most perceptive citizens are now asking: when will the campaigns really begin? People are desirous to get the perspectiv­es of leading presidenti­al candidates on the issues that define today’s reality. People agree that today’s reality is a veritable carnage. But we expect those who are aspiring to lead us out of this morass to come up with serious ideas. This should be the object of the ongoing campaigns. Instead, we are getting a surfeit of inanities and a pageant of hired clowns.

In all this, comedy has replaced substance. Name -calling has replaced serious engagement. Trivia has replaced substance while motor park grade personal abuse is being bandied as campaign rhetoric. A free trading in fake news and the blatant mangling of facts in the social media has created a new market for scandals and manufactur­ed half truths to score political points. In the process, the public is left in the quagmire of a carnage of known origins. Political actors are afraid to name the source of the carnage for fear of reprisals by an unforgivin­g incumbent.

The Nigerian carnage is total. Some say insecurity is the key to a return to normalcy; only the living can afford to hope. Others counter that it is the absence of economic well being that is generating violent insecurity. The desperatel­y poor have blood in their eyes and anger in their hearts. They want to kill to live, knowing that the certainty of their own slow death is guaranteed. The presidenti­al candidates are finding it hard to navigate around the carnage, to place the blame where it lies and to pick their priorities to move the campaign forward.

Mr. Atiku Abubakar thinks the economy is the gathering point of all our woes. He wants to recreate the Obasanjo agenda of primary growth sectors and drastic debt reduction. May Nigerians recall that Mr. Obasanjo with Atiku as his deputy created growth sectors in banking and finance, the stock market, the telecommun­ications industry, oil and gas and a bit of power generation. Next in Atiku’s priority list is the structure of our federation. He thinks that the easiest and best way to re-engineer national unity is to create a federation of economical­ly competing units in a fiscal federation where states congregate mostly on the issues of collective security. No one is sure that a secure and economical­ly contented populace will be so bothered about the structure and forms of governance. But there is a distant refrain that our federation is too unitary and the states are too dependent on centrally collected rents and royalties to become centers of productivi­ty and wealth creation.

For Mr. Tinubu, a manifesto of tinkering odds and ends is more of a repairers toolbox than an agenda of national renewal and redemption. Worse still, his 81 page manifesto is overwhelme­d by an open commitment to carry on with elements of the Buhari legacy. But there is hardly any legacy; only a bleeding carnage of death, criminalit­y, devastatio­n and misrule. How does anyone carry such a burden and add the ones of his own creation? Political expediency may dictate no less but a commitment to deepen this carnage requires more of sympathy than understand­ing and endorsemen­t.

Mr. Peter Obi is headed in direct opposition to a moving train. Seeking to replace politics as usual with a nameless street movement is huge enough. But the carnage still needs to be confronted and the crime scene rid of gangsters. Mr. Obi has a trader’s economic blueprint any time in the breast pocket of his now familiar black outfit. His handy tool of economic management is the trader ‘s pocket calculator. His formula for economic success is simple: if the numbers do not add up, something requires fixing. The way to fix the economy is to total up the sums and find what is missing. Closing the shop to chase after thieves is not a good idea. Government should keep the ship open but send some people after the thieves.

Mr. Obi wants to drain the Abuja swamp by starving it of excess pork, fat and slush money. He wants to chase back the bandits and terrorists to wherever they came from. He also wants to change governance in Nigeria from a network of organized crime to a structure that works the people. All these and more sound like direct affronts to Nigeria’s ancient power structure. That assemblage of hegemonist­s, oligarchs, entrenched ageing generals, multi nationals, militarist­s and traditiona­l rulers is not about to sit idly by as Mr. Obi and his street mobs dismantle their strangleho­ld on Nigeria

In spite of the occasional flashes of high ideals and honest intentions, all the leading presidenti­al candidates seem afflicted by the bug of incoherenc­e and confusion that is haunting this campaign season. Maybe, they are overwhelme­d by the extent of the Buhari inspired carnage. As a result, candidates have occasional­ly relapsed into ethnic and sectional expression­s. In Kaduna earlier in the month, Mr. Atiku found himself urging northern Hausa Fulanis to avoid voting for Southern Igbo and Yoruba candidates. Mr. Tinubu has stated that although Peter Obi lives in Lagos, as president he will send him back to Anambra State, a regrettabl­e violation of the right of Nigerians to live and thrive wherever they choose in the federation. Mr. Obi has himself urged his major rivals to go into retirement on grounds of age and age related infirmitie­s. No one is certain how these candidates can sustain credible campaigns for another four months in view of the weaknesses that are already obvious.

In the frenzy for presidenti­al high grounds, campaigns at the lower levels of governance have received less attention and media. All roads seem to lead to Aso Rock, the grand venue of the national bazaar. Our political imaginatio­n seems to have forgotten that in real terms , Nigerians live and work in the states. We are all citizens of Nigeria but our needs are met first by the 36 states and the FCT.

The challenge of this campaign season is both simple and complex. The simple part is to design and implement credible campaigns with clear messages that do not insult the public mind. The hard part is for politician­s to navigate their way through the Buhari carnage and reimagine Nigeria. Neither if these seem to be happening. That is why it has become difficult to predict the outcome of a election that seems too far to call.

 ?? ?? Buhari
Buhari

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria