Showing posts with label Bad Leadership. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bad Leadership. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Now, Will President Yar’Adua Be Kind?


(First Published July 12, 2008)

By Ugochukwu Ejinkeonye

About forty days after Mr. Umar Musa Yar’Adua was sworn in as Nigeria’s president and the nation was saturated with loud calls on ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo to leave alone the new man he single-handedly imposed on Nigerians to implement his own ideas and programmes to “move the nation forward”, I published a piece in my newspaper column and on several internet news sites entitled, “In Nigeria, Yar’Adua Reigns, Obasanjo Rules,” asking those trying to shout our heads off whether they were sure “Yar’Adua himself [was] even desirous and eager to be rid of the overbearing influence of Obasanjo?”

I said: “Is he really ready to take charge? Are we sure that the ‘Servant-leader’ is not even too grateful that Obasanjo’s meddlesome and looming shadow are providing perfect alibi for what is gradually appearing as his stark visionlessness? I would certainly want to know those great ideas of Yar’Adua’s which Obasanjo’s meddlesomeness is preventing him from unfolding! The truth, as we know it, is that Yar’Adua never wanted to be president, and so, he never sat down to draw up anything that vaguely looks like a blueprint for the country’s redemption. When he was conscripted by Obasanjo and imposed on both the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Nigerians at a time elections were merely a couple of weeks away, he was too preoccupied with the thought of winning elections to have any time to concentrate and think about how he would rule Nigeria … it soothes Yar’Adua, [therefore], to still have Obasanjo in charge, while he enjoys the perks of office without the responsibilities that go with them. And at the end of the day, when another four years of devastating failure must have been successfully enacted, Yar’Adua can conveniently come up with the theory that he was not allowed to implement his ‘superior ideas’.”

The essay, judging by the reactions it generated, won me many friends who thought that my judgment of the ‘Servant leader’, though too early in the day, could hardly be faulted.
But there were a few who maintained that it was unfair to state like I did that the president (who was barely a month in office) presented the perfect picture of “a pitiably confused leader groping his way through an impenetrably dark alleyway.”  

Umaru Musa Yar'adua U.S. President George W. Bush (R) meets with President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria Umaru Musa Yar'Adua December 13, 2007 in Washington, DC. This is the first meeting between the two presidents after the U.S. criticized election of Yar'Adua.
President Umar Musa Yar'Adua and Pres George Bush of USA: What Lesson Did
He come Away With From Meetings Like These?


Well, I have since been vindicated because the crippling directionlessness and benumbing passivity which President Umar Musa Yar’Adua presides over in Abuja today have clearly validated the ‘heresy’ I dared to utter about forty days into his regime, so much so that it has since become a permanent feature in virtually every public commentary or formal and informal discussions on the present regime. Unlike the time I first expressed it, the view has now become all too common and very obvious to elicit any more surprises. In fact, I doubt if it still has the capacity to make the president feel embarrassed.

Okay, I have been proved right, but where has that left us? Nigeria is presently weighed down by so many big problems, but here we are, stuck with a president who can neither be hurried nor bothered that the nation he is supposed to be ruling is dying every day.

Yes, we have a ruler who cannot be made to allow even the slightest hint of urgency in his moves and seems not to have the barest idea of what it means to be perturbed that he had flopped on virtually every promise he had made to the nation. In fact, it does not appear he can even be brought to lose any sleep that he has failed even before he started, and that most Nigerians have since lost every confidence in him. Many are no longer able to feel there is a government in Abuja! What is plastered everywhere are utter hopelessness and despair.
Hapless Victims Of Leadership Failure (Pix: Caboose)


Here is a president who evidently came into office without any ideas, focus, any coherent action plans or even an average understanding of what he was coming to office to accomplish. And so, each time his attention is called to the mounting problems begging for his urgent intervention, he appears startled and looks as if he feels he is being unduly bothered. It looks very much like what he would prefer is to merely sleep through the problems with the blissful hope that he would wake one day see all of them solved.

Maybe we should not even blame Yar’Adua, because, come to think about it: what exactly did he promise Nigerians   during his so called campaigns in which he was an imposed, “unwilling” candidate?

Okay, I remember that he kept saying something about “Energy Challenge” which he intended to tackle headlong. But since he came into power, the energy situation has worsened beyond what anyone had imagined was possible in a richly endowed and high-earning country ruled by a human being. The Obasanjo junta had allegedly squandered about $16 billion to plunge Nigeria deeper into thicker darkness, and the toxic revelation had caused Nigerians untold mental torture. But to demonstrate his utter disdain for the feelings of Nigerians on this heartless pillaging of the nation’s resources, and his unambiguous opinion on the astounding revelations at the power probe panel, President Yar’Adua recently appointed three governors (Liyel Imoke, Segun Agagu and Danjuma Goje) who had served as Ministers of Power in that darkest period of Nigeria’s history to serve in the so-called Presidential Implementation Committee on Power.

NIGERIA: Yearning For Purposeful Leadership

What this should mean is that in the thinking of the   president, these men deserved to be applauded by all of us for colluding with Obasanjo to ensure the nation remained in impenetrable darkness. What Yar’Adua has dropped is a bold hint on what he would do with the power probe report once it gets to his table.  What an unlucky nation!

If till now there is hardly any evidence that Yar’Adua has been able to achieve an appreciable grasp of the enormous task facing him as Nigeria’s president, then it would be most foolish to hope that he would still not be groping for direction even after two years from now. In fairness to the man, it could well be said that since he had raised no hopes from the beginning till now, no one can justifiably accuse him of dashing any.

But how long can a continuously decaying nation defer its reclamation by endlessly waiting for a president who is yet to start charting a very clear direction?

If Yar’Adua would be kind, that is, to himself and Nigeria, he should put a halt to all these blind pursuits and dumb guesswork, hand in his papers, retire to Katsina in peace, and save the nation further trauma of having to perennially wait for a man who may never be able to either comprehend or respond to the challenges of such a high and strategic office.

Although hangers-on and parasites feeding fat on the grounded system may hold a different view, certainly, the line of action I am recommending to Yar’Adua would attract a kinder verdict from history to him than going on confusedly like a child handed a terribly complicated, strange toy to decode, and traumatizing the whole nation in the process.

Indeed, quitting now would be more redemptive of Yar’Adua’s person than being remembered later as the groping undertaker of a richly endowed but seriously ill nation?    

Monday, December 13, 2010

Why Nigeria May Go Nowhere

  By Ugochukwu Ejinkeonye 
I am sad today. The dangerous old men whom we have foolishly (or is it helplessly) allowed to run our affairs in Nigeria have once again demonstrated their demonic resolve to ensure that this nation never experiences any progress in their lifetime. President Olusegun Obasanjo and his Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), together with their licensed agent, Prof Maurice Iwu, and his “Independent” Electoral Commission (INEC), have allocated the votes as they liked and announced their pre-determined results, whether voting took place in the areas or not. And to ensure we dared not open our mouths to say anything, they quickly filled everywhere with a swarm of stern-faced, gun-wielding soldiers, to intimidate us into silence, and force us to accept the very unappetizing products of election robbery.  

In Imo State, for instance, the Governorship elections were cancelled because of alleged eruptions of violence in several parts of the state, yet in some states where worse things happened, the elections were announced and applauded by the PDP/INEC, because, the PDP had “won” in those states. And because the PDP achieved a “fraudslide” victory in the “elections” into the State House of Assembly in Imo State it was NOT cancelled. I am waiting for Iwu and his INEC to unravel the mystery of how  they were able to determine that “the violence” that occurred in Imo State was only perpetrated in respect of the governorship polls, even though both the Governorship and House of Assembly elections ran simultaneously. What do these people really take Nigerians for? A bunch of fools?

Well, everyone knows that INEC/PDP cancelled the Gubernatorial elections in Imo State because the PDP, as a result of the strange politics it plays had no candidate for the Governorship elections to rig in. So, INEC/PDP has now fixed a run-off election on April 28, to enable the PDP field a candidate (whether a new one or the one it had expelled) and equally rig him into office. Nothing can be so outrageous and provocative. Indeed, Iwu does not even care to pretend anymore that he is working for the PDP and no one else. 

Just before the Presidential “election results” were announced last Monday, President Obasanjo made a broadcast to the nation, perhaps, to prepare our minds for the bitter pill. He admitted that there were cases of electoral malpractices but failed to inform us when those who perpetrated those criminal acts would be charged to court. Obviously, since they were working for the “right” party, they may have merely been cautioned, paid handsomely, and asked to “go and sin no more”.

And from the way the president and his party members are eagerly and enthusiastically singing to everyone who feels shortchanged in the votes allocation process to go to the Election Tribunals, my guess is that, just like the so-called elections, the verdicts of the election courts may have been written already. It would seem that those who have strong cases against the “elected” people may have to wait till beyond May 29, when the lawless dispensation may have, hopefully, expired, to go to the normal courts to get fair hearing. 

*Olusegun Obasanjo on Election Day
In the entire South East, reports say virtually no voting took place. I was dismayed when I saw the Presidential Candidate of the Progressive Peoples Alliance (PPA) and Governor of Abia State, Orji Uzor Kalu,  on TV casting his vote in pitch darkness.  In most places in the South East, election materials arrived as late as 5pm and before they could be distributed to the various polling centres, darkness has already enveloped the whole place. And considering that the PDP government had plunged the nation in darkness due to the total collapse of the power sector under its watch, one can now imagine how voting could have been carried out in those areas so late in the day. Maybe it served their purpose very well. With darkness engulfing the land, and the people having dispersed with the belief that no voting would take place again, all it would remain for the INEC/PDP gang to achieve their habitual “fraudslide” victory would be to gather their men of darkness to some darker corner to mass thumbprint the ballot papers and declare victory for the “victorious, largest party in Africa”. 

Now, in all these brazen display ungodly desperation, where is the interest of the masses factored in? Can we find a single candidate out there who is minded to improve the welfare of the masses? Everybody is pursuing his or her narrow interests, including those who would soon start calling on Nigerians to accept the “vote allocations” in the interest of peace.  

Indeed, the Nigerian state thrives on a very a solid foundation and enduring, pervasive culture of very crude selfishness. Maybe, “selfishness” is not the most appropriate word to convey the exact meaning I have in mind; but there is this consuming desire and deep craving by the average Nigerian to always have an unfair advantage over his neighbour, to ensure and emphasize the exclusive, distinct nature of whatever he does or possesses, and ultimately become the envy of others. This should, however, not be confused with healthy striving for excellence and distinction. Rather it is a mindset that makes someone to value whatever he has, only when it is obvious that no one else has it, or that only a select, privileged few have it. 

I don’t know whether it was the British that planted this insidious seed in Nigerians or merely helped to water and tend it, for their own self-serving reasons. The British had created the Government Reserved Areas (GRAs) and several other segregating and divisive facilities, and took some special “natives”, the educated and privileged few, away from their own people, put them in those secluded areas and planted in them a deep feeling of being “special” or “different” from the rest. This may have helped the British to perfect their divide-and-rule policy, but it equally succeeded in engraving in the minds of those lucky natives this consciousness of being better or higher than the rest. And so, when the British unwillingly granted what they called Independence to Nigeria, they ensured that this iniquitous status quo remained. Through this privileged class, which they had created and successfully alienated from their own people, the British still ruled Nigeria. That is why our rulers live in fortresses, far removed from the people they claim to be serving, unlike what obtains in almost every other nation. 

In Nigeria today, a successful man is one who has “left the others” to join the privileged, eating class. In most cases, this does not happen as result of hard work, but merely because of the “lucky” fellow’s sudden acquaintance with some other fellow in the corridors of power. Indeed, one may just start swimming in boundless opulence tomorrow just because he had got the “right connections”, which may just be that he is a distant to cousin to the hairdresser of  the girlfriend of the ADC of one of our rulers. When that happens, the person quickly leaves his fellows behind to “join them” to enjoy. And that is why, at the slightest opportunity, anyone with access to the public till would seek to corner all the juicy advantages there to himself, and create another world of limitless comfort for himself which would automatically place him far above the rest of the people. This is the situation that produced the “big-man” syndrome in the country.  

Sometime last year, one of my ardent readers sent me an email to say that in Warri where he grew up, what they call these toy generators from China is: I-Better-Pass-My-Neighbour. So, when NEPA/PHCN envelopes everyone with impenetrable darkness, and those who have these Chinese toys put them on to supply power to their places of abode, all they are trying to demonstrate to their “unlucky” neighbours choking with thick, oppressive darkness is that they are simply better than them. Yes, I better pass my neighbour! This mentality appears to regulate  the conducts of public officers in Nigeria. And when you look at the situation closely, you then begin to understand why Nigerians are suffering in the midst of plenty, and why people are still stealing and plundering even when they have accumulated so much. 

I-better-Pass-My-Neighbour. Once the president was asked during a phone-in radio/television programme why he banned tokunbo vehicles, and he immediately spewed up his grouse. What people understood by his outburst that day was that he was not too happy that too many cars were competing for space with his large convoy on the streets of Abuja! “Everywhere in Abuja, what is you see is Golf, Golf! Golf!” he fumed. Now “Golf” is that small Volkswagen vehicle which Nigerians call “pure water”, which the poor man, at his own level, too, flaunts, to show that he is now better than his waka-waka neighbour. Now the Oga up there is not happy that cars were becoming too common, that it was no longer the exclusive preserve of rulers and the rich, their children, cronies and “woman friends”.   

Now tell me, all these do-or-die struggles to gain power, are they because of any love for the masses? Certainly not. The deadly determination of Obasanjo to foist on the nation his own self-serving choice as his successor, was it done out of any form of love for the Nigerian people? Certainly, no! The people I pity so much are these people who call themselves party supporters who go out there to fight and die for those who would not even allow them to get near their gates once they gain power. These are the most unfortunate victims.  And the real tragedy is that even in 2011, we will still have people like that! 

Until we kill this spirit of “I-Better-Pass-My-Neighbour”, looting will never stop in Nigeria. The rulers would always ensure that mass poverty continue in the land because that is the only situation that emphasizes how “lucky” they, their families, cronies and “woman friends” are. That would also ensure that during elections, the poor can easily be manipulated with little gifts to sell-off their votes and even their lives. In many countries there is nothing like “inferior” or “superior” hospitals. Everybody, whether President, Governor, Senator, the jobless or schoolboy, is entitled to quality healthcare. But here, the craving is to show our advantage over others. Some even ensure they prepare their executive graves before they die, so that even in death, they would still be able to make the statement: I-better-Pass-My-Neighbour. Na waa for this country!


First published in SCRUPLES,  Ugochukwu Ejinkeonye's  Wednesday column in Daily Independent (www.independentnig.com) on April 25, 2007.