By Dan Amor
Every
real nation state is an historical product. It is, in Marx's celebrated phrase,
"the official resume of the antagonism in civil society", but under
historically determinate circumstances. As such, it is the product of the
historically specific constellation of class relations and social conflicts in
which it is implicated. It may, therefore, indeed, it must, if it is not to
rest on its monopoly of the means of coercion alone, incorporate within its own
structure, the interests not only of the dominant but of the subordinate
classes. In this quite specific sense, then, every real nation state has an
inherently relative independence, including, as well, the independence to
understand the dynamics of its made-made domestic crises. In consequence,
therefore, the general characteristics of the Nigerian nation state today may
be seen in terms of the enormity of its domestic crises and social
contradictions.
Therefore, those who murdered Nigeria, and are
still killing its residues include, but not limited to: a big and comprador
bourgeoisie that has abdicated its political aspirations and allied itself to
semi-feudal interests; a discontented small and medium bourgeoisie made up of a
certain class of professionals and intellectuals, potentially revolutionary,
but which hesitates to renew the struggle for its national liberation. There is
a sleeping working class which is supposed to be the prime revolutionary force
but which cannot define clearly its trade union tasks and political aims. There
is a large crowd of youths, the student body that constitute about 60 per cent
of the national population, which has abdicated its responsibility of serving
as light to the national ideal due largely to intellectual dishonesty,
ignorance or docility arising from poverty of ideas. There is also, a peasant
mass of small landless factory hands, artisans and motorcycle operators
otherwise known as "Okada riders", who need a clear vision of their
tasks and a framework within which to organize their own action in unity with
the working class. Above all, a group of shameless, opportunistic and sadistic
Generals (retired and serving), domestic tyrants and usurpers who, because of
their prolonged crime against the people of this country, do not want political
power to shift to its rightful owners for fear of being probed. And, of course,
a handful of totalitarian Devils called traditional rulers who, having been
aware of their gross irrelevance in a democratic society, strive to ally
themselves with dictators, expired warlords and anti-democratic elements in
power in order to entrench feudal power in the local government councils.
It is in this context that we must examine
critically the way forward to the present logjam in the country. It would be
recalled that the deepening crises that resulted in the Nigerian Civil War were
the aftermath of the cumulative anger of the forces of real change against the
reactionary superstructure that was the First Republic .
After the bloody civil war, and thanks to the oil boom which provided them with
the rare opportunity to line their pockets, the military rulers in
collaboration with the agrarian mercantile big bourgeoisie, together with a
small sector connected with industry, tied their future more and more to the
semi-feudal structure inherited from the colonial system. Because of their
quantitative and qualitative weaknesses and the fear of the workers' movement
and the surge of the masses, they were, at the beginning, disposed to ally
themselves with whatever was acceptable of foreign monopolist capital, then in
the process of conversion to a neo-colonialist framework.
The present situation in which the nation
finds it difficult to point to one remarkable advance politically, socially and
economically, with a bleak future, is characterized by a complete capitulation
of all the progressive forces in the country. In spite of their white lies and
deception over ideological divisions, Nigerian politicians speak ironically with one voice: "let us share the loot
and let the rest of the people go to blazes". Their collective position in
constitutional matters is only a result of this capitulation. Turncoat
reductionists who mouthed revolutionary and progressive sloganeering in the
past are now helplessly eating their words because they are calling the shots.
It is precisely in this sphere that the class interest of our rulers is very
clear in relation to the neo-colonialist and semi-feudal forces that have held
the country hostage over time. Which is why we should not harbour any illusions
as to their pretensions to an enduring and durable democracy. True, this
political capitulation is counterbalanced by real economic advantage for them.
Without doubt, trade tariffs and fiscal policies have safeguarded and tended to
foster the fundamental interests of the bourgeoisie at the expense of the
popular masses since the introduction of the Structural Adjustment Programme
(SAP) and privatization by the Ibrahim Babangida military junta in 1986.
Again, the Generals, because of their limited
knowhow, are comfortable with the same parasitic role as the semi-feudal
elements (sons of emirs, obas and obis) and have, out of sheer laziness, handed
all economic privileges to foreigners operating in the country made up of
Britons, Americans, dubious Lebanese, Chinese, Indians and others, who control
the oil and gas sector of our economy. One of the Generals, who apparently has
money more than his love for the country even reportedly boasted openly that he
made about $1billion from an oil well, and having spent $500million on
overheads, he did not know what to do with the other half. While this continues
unabated, our intellectuals who are supposed to be the trainers and producers
of the manpower needs of the country continue to see themselves steadily and
inexplicably impoverished. These highly educated Nigerian academics and
professionals constitute one of the factors that make the world refer to the Nigeria as giant of Africa .
They are visible in such fields as science, literature, journalism, sports,
law, medicine, etcetera. Unfortunately, these exceptionally gifted Nigerians
have been forced into self exile having been denied all they wanted most at
home: an atmosphere devoid of injustice, tribalism, oppression, discrimination
and nepotism. They are denied at home, an atmosphere that would not reward
mediocrity at the expense of excellence; an atmosphere that does not celebrate
retrogression in the name of a subterranean quota system in which an accountant
becomes minister of education while a professor of education becomes his
assistant; an atmosphere in which dreams and dreamers flourish unfettered.
Ironically, in Nigeria , the gap is widening
between the numerous contending social forces and the minority who control
capital in the field of industry, banking, technology and oil and gas. This is
the reason why, strange as it seems at first glance, the lackeys who got the
political power on a platter of gold at independence were not even capable of
assuming the positions that neo-colonialism was going to offer them. They think
it is the looting of public funds that matters. One cannot imagine a situation
where Arab nations that could not stand shoulder to shoulder with Nigeria at independence will recolonize Nigeria in
spite of our huge human and natural resources. Perhaps, it would sound like an
exaggeration to vigorously criticize Nigeria as an empty society in
which, among other things, members of the middle-class wander aimlessly across
the barren terrain of a consumer culture. But it is glaring that with the kind
of leadership materials being foisted on the people, the country would rather
continue to waste its dreamers. Some of our professionals are so proficient in
their respective fields that many countries would pay a fortune to have them.
Yet they remain without respect here in Nigeria as they labour daily under
conditions that astound them. Whenever they cry out for attention the powers
that be reply them in ways that make even notorious sadists cringe in
embarrassment. Small wonder then that many of them have fled to nations where
talent is not regarded as a curse, just to survive.
In
the present circumstance, it would be a fundamental error to believe that our
politicians who see power as a tool for personal aggrandizement and self
enrichment could be loyal to democratic calling just as
it would be illusory to expect them to undertake the task of economic
liberation. It is therefore imperative for all progressive minds to come
together and do everything humanly possible to resolve the socio-economic
contradictions that are threatening to destroy the very string that binds us
together as a nation. Never again will the progressives allow themselves to be
led by semi-feudal elements-members of the reactionary faction of the Nigerian
ruling whose major preoccupation is to take the country back to medieval
servitude. We must note the fact that these apostles of feudal revival will
always use tribal and religious shibboleths to cause confusion as they would
rather want the country to continue to wallow in a morbid attitude that
incinerates flowers that attempt to bloom. We must meditate on these contending
forces that have brought our country to its knees and close ranks to halt the
downward slide of Nigeria .
*Dan Amor, public affairs
analyst, writes from Abuja
(danamor641@gmail.com
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