By Okey Ndibe
As a novelist, I frequently experience the
sensation that I could never invent imaginative events that, in their tragic or
absurd extraordinariness, can stand beside the strangeness of life, as it is
lived in Nigeria .
Indeed, I follow public events in Nigeria with a certain sense that some grand
master of fiction, versed in absurd tragedy, stands just out of sight to shape
and orchestrate these events. For me, to read the pages of Nigerian newspapers
is often akin to reading the most wrought fabulist fiction. Except that the
events one encounters in news reports, bizarre as they may appear, are deeply
rooted in and describe the shattering realities of Nigerians’ lives. These are
often events that trigger the declaration, “Only in Nigeria …”
Before I get to recent illustrations, I must quickly cite some classic examples that have become so woven into the essential fabric of Nigerian life that they hardly strike Nigerians anymore as odd much less astonishing.
It’s only in Nigeria that God “votes” in
elections – and, in fact, casts the decisive vote. So, Nigeria ’s
election riggers invented the disingenuous mantra that only God gives power. If
Candidate B is declared winner of an election, even though everybody knows
Candidate A won it handily, all the imposter has to say to settle it all is,
“God has given me power.”
It’s only in Nigeria that public officials
fatten their bank accounts from funds budgeted for public purposes – and then
demand that the people whose lives they have impoverished must fast and pray
for better electric power, to be spared death in road accidents or death in
ill-equipped hospitals.
It is only in Nigeria that a governor would
declare that he has “totally transformed” every sector of his state – and then
promptly fly abroad for medical treatment the instant he experiences a
headache.
It is only in Nigeria (as happened in Ilorin, capital of Kwara State in January 2009) that a commissioner of police would call a press conference and point to an “arrested” goat, as a robber who turned himself into an animal just as pursuers were about to grab him. Newspapers around the world reported the absurd drama. It is only inNigeria
that the said officer would make such a global ass of a major national
institution and retain his job.
It is only in Nigeria (as happened in Ilorin, capital of Kwara State in January 2009) that a commissioner of police would call a press conference and point to an “arrested” goat, as a robber who turned himself into an animal just as pursuers were about to grab him. Newspapers around the world reported the absurd drama. It is only in
Last week, as I read numerous online news site, I
was reminded of how absurdly fictive life in Nigeria can seem.
There was the case of Father Ejike Mbaka, a priest
who has turned himself into a maestro of double-speak. And what’s Fr. Mbaka’s
latest message? The priest claimed that some forces he did not name were
planning to kill President Muhammadu Buhari in order to forestall the
president’s anti-corruption policy.
The reverend, who fancies himself the vessel of
divine revelation, urged his audience to refrain from speaking ill of the
president. “So, I want to tell you that, so far, God is happy with Buhari. And
him whom God has blessed, may you not try to accurse, because God will curse
you,” the priest said. And then he made the astonishing claim: “Many people are
planning, as it is revealed, to kill him. There are many plans on how to
eliminate his life so that corruption will continue, so that quantum
embezzlement will continue. But the Lord says, ‘God who put you there will not
forsake you. Be firm, be resolute, remain focused and be unbiased. Refuse to be
intimidated and refuse to be distracted. Go ahead and war against evil.
President Buhari, go ahead and war against corruption.’”
One is used to religious figures weighing in on
political subjects. But Nigeria ’s
league of super star preachers will claim the Olympic gold for making weird
pronouncements in the name of divine inspiration. If any spirit, much less a
holy one, told Mr. Mbaka about a plot to kill President Buhari, you’d think
that the spirit would name names. You’d also think that the spirit, out of
prudential concern, would counsel Mr. Mbaka to quietly take the names of the
murderous plotters to the country’s law enforcement or security operatives.
To claim openly that a cabal was plotting to kill anybody, more so the president, is no joking matter. That kind of speculation or prophecy, taken seriously, could precipitate the flight of investment capital, the crash of the stock market. That’s whyNigeria ’s
security agents ought to summon Mr. Mbaka. They should demand that he give them
the source of his information and identify the ostensible plotters. If he
cannot validate his claim, then he should be unmasked as a trader in falsehood
and fiction. At any rate, Mr. Mbaka’s supervising bishop ought to rein in the
priest’s diarrheic mouth. Mbaka’s astounding claim was far from the only event
that provoked that phrase “only in Nigeria .”
To claim openly that a cabal was plotting to kill anybody, more so the president, is no joking matter. That kind of speculation or prophecy, taken seriously, could precipitate the flight of investment capital, the crash of the stock market. That’s why
There was the latest assertion by Abdulmumin
Jibrin, a former chairman of the House of Representatives committee on
appropriations. Late last week, Mr. Jibrin alleged that a few senior lawmakers
had collected illegal allowances, exceeding more than N10 billion. He said
these legislators, including Speaker Yakubu Dogara, had bilked Nigerians out of
billions of naira in the name of “office running costs.” To assure that he was
not leveling the accusations lightly, he admitted that he, too, had collected
N650 million.
I doubt that the Buhari administration, which bills
itself anti-corruption, will react with anything more significant than a yawn.
Officials of the ruling APC have already served notice to Nigerians that any
allegations of corruption between party members would be treated, as nobody’s
business but the party’s. It doesn’t matter that the cash in question belonged
to every Nigerian; the party, in the fashion of the deposed PDP, is determined
to settle such scandals within the family. And I say, only in Nigeria .
And how about Governor Rochas Okorocha of Imo State ?
For weeks, the governor’s whereabouts were unknown. As speculations spread that
the man was gravely ill, his spokesman stated that he was abroad harvesting
foreign investment for his state. Then, last week, Mr. Okorocha reappeared in
the state and admitted he’d been sick. “I went to the land of the dead and our
ancestors turned me back, saying it was not yet time,” said the governor.
Who paid for this trip to the land of the dead?
Whether the taxpayers of Imo
State did or not, they
deserved to be told the truth from the outset about the governor’s health
condition. To be a governor is no part-time assignment.
And Mr. Okorocha should answer this: What has he
done to ensure that those he governs have access to the kind of healthcare he
received “in the land of the dead”?
• Please, follow me on twitter @okeyndibe
• Please, follow me on twitter @okeyndibe
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