By Moses Ochonu
Political vanity is a particularly
Nigerian affliction and has been an ancillary scholarly interest of mine. I published
an academic article in 2004 on the subject, citing several examples from Nigeria ’s then
fledgling experiment with civilian rule. The article dwelled extensively but
not exclusively on the cases of late former governors Abubakar Audu of Kogi State and
Mohammed Lawal of Kwara
State .
*Okorocha
The former had an obnoxious penchant for naming
every government project after himself and his family members. The latter was
so consumed by a need to personalize his power that all mass transit buses
belonging to the Kwara State government during his tenure were boldly marked
with the moniker “UP LAWAL.”
Since the publication of that article, similar
examples of personalized power and political vanities in high places have
proliferated. I am reliably informed that in Kayode Fayemi’s Ekiti State ,
a remarkable record of infrastructural investments was marred by an
inexplicable insistence on naming all projects after the former governor and
his wife.
Public office holders in Nigeria adorn
their offices with all manner of silly award plaques. One former minister, God
rest her soul, had an entire wall of her office covered in awards from all
manner of organizations — some of them concrete, others clearly made up by
sycophants to curry her favor. She liked to take pictures against the
background of this wall of vanity. The pictures made it to newspapers and then
to the Internet, where they live to date. It was a vulgar form of political
narcissism, a kind of self-deification.
The said former minister was so in love with
her own image that she invested energy, time, and resources feting and
garnishing herself in awards and other accouterments of self-validation. She
built a shrine to herself, reveling in her own proclaimed greatness.
Fortunately, she was a largely effective, achieving public servant, so her
political vanities didn't matter that much. She could be forgiven for her vain
indulgences.
Gov Okorocha's Xmas Tree
Governor Willie Obiano of Anambra state is
another vain politician. Whether by design or happenstance, Obiano has emerged
as one of Nigeria 's
most conspicuously vain public servants. It is comical to see him surrounded at
public events by aides and appointees wearing Obiano-emblazoned Ankara . Obiano, for good
measure, literally wears himself, dressing in the same Obiano-branded Ankara fabric as his
aides.
I can't even imagine the embarrassing
awkwardness of seeing your own face on your own clothes — on your own body. It
is spectacle to behold in its vacuous vainglory. It looks like something out of
Chinua Achebe's novel, A Man of the People.
But, all things considered, Governor Obiano is
a performing governor. He is building and commissioning things and, I am
informed, does not owe Anambra civil servants a single month salary arrear. He
even paid them a Christmas bonus! His vanity should therefore be excused and
forgiven. He has earned the right to be vain and to celebrate himself in
flamboyantly self-adulatory terms. I have no problem with a little vanity to go
along with purposeful leadership.
Former Governor Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso of Kano has a certain strain
of political vanity in him. As Kano
governor, he built a personality cult to himself — a movement labeled Kwankwasiyya, with its own esoteric
chants and its own ubiquitous emblem of the red cap. During his tenure, it was
always amusing to see the sea of reds whenever and wherever the former governor
appeared. Kwankwaso was and still is a man of bombast and arrogant
self-flattery. He is seduced by his own hype. But like Obiano, he largely
backed up the boast and hype with his performance as governor.
Recent revelations that Kwankwaso left a
crippling debt profile for his predecessor, commissioned heavily mortgaged
white elephants, and owed contractors billions of Naira have dented but not
diminished the essential reality of his successful governorship tenure. His
vanities too should therefore be understood as tolerable footnotes in his
larger political biography.
*Obiano
Then we have the clownish Governor of Imo
State, Rochas Okorocha. Among other comically cringe-worthy acts of vanity,
Okorocha has apparently erected a Christmas monument to himself in Owerri, a
lavishly decorated Christmas tree that is at least thirty feet tall. Some
accounts estimate the contract for this giant public Christmas tree to be 600
million naira. Some of his supporters may dispute this figure, but I don't want
to hear that the contract was awarded for 50 or 100 million naira, not 600
Million. It does not matter. It's not the amount but the principle.
A governor who has not paid pensioners their
entitlements for 21 months has no business spending any public funds, even if
it's "only" 10 Million
Naira, on a Christmas tree that will be removed and trashed in two or three
weeks.
A governor who owes most of his state workers
at least six months salary arrears has no business investing state funds in an
ephemeral religious symbol, especially since the said religious symbol stands
for a religious festival that, because of the failure to pay salaries and
pensions, many Imo citizens will not be able to celebrate.
This is the same governor who caused or allowed
— take your pick — the infamous Obama handshake billboards to be erected in
Owerri upon his return from Washington DC, where he had been part of President
Buhari’s delegation on his official visit to the United States. Owerri residents
woke up to a picture of a grinning Governor Okorocha shaking hands excitedly
with President Obama on huge billboards, a vain attempt to publicly memorialize
a fairly routine diplomatic encounter.
So, when we speak of political vanity, Governor
Okorocha is for me its poster boy. His investments in the instruments of vanity
and grandeur are not accompanied or mitigated by any appreciable performance
indicators.
Okorocha takes the end of the year award for
political vanity. At least in my book.
*The author can be reached
at meochonu@gmail.com
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