South Africa based- Nigerians now
returning from the home of vuvuzela are coming back with a mixed reaction. They
are meeting a nation whose president has just been ‘vindicated’ by a competent
tribunal over claims by the opposition that he wasn’t eligible for the office.
Their old hosts are used to taking up the local instrument as both a weapon of
intimidation and celebration.
*President Buhari |
South
Africans reach out for their 2 to 3-feet long plastic horn to make raucous
noise at football matches in support of their national teams. It was
popularised during the World Cup in South Africa in 2010. The myth is that its
beastly emission–some 120 decibels– can conjure victory for their club or
national side. Or it can cudgel opposition to concede goals for their players
to win the day. To their grief, these didn’t happen nine years ago.
Rather, vuvuzela drew gross global glare. A newspaper writer
called the trumpet ‘’an instrument from hell’. And because it nearly ruined the
first-ever World Cup in Africa on account of its noisome dispatch, FIFA, the
world’s soccer administrator, banned vuvuzela from the tournament in Brazil in
2014. The BBC has also been calling for ‘’vuvuzela-free broadcast’’.
But our fleeing compatriots from the former apartheid cave can’t find any room
for joy, whether for being back home alive or for witnessing an admirable run
of democracy as expressed by the Nigerian judiciary. Their trip home is
sweet-sour. They were forced home, leaving behind prized property and
enterprise it took them years of hard work to build. Here at home, the
condition of the state they ran away from years ago is the same, if not worse.
It makes the future somehow uncertain. They are home as strangers in their own
ancestral community. Where do they start, after what appears to be a pyrrhic
triumph? There’s been escape from the xenophobic hell of South Africa alright;
but it is inflicting a long-term fatal toll that disallows and disavows riotous
vuvuzela celebrations. Not a mood of mourning. But not a mood of music either!
Today,
nearly 20 years later, we are back to where we were then. What will make a
difference is how we rejoice when others, our opponents, are lamenting and
hurting. We drive our crying friends and neighbours into more agony when we
don’t moderate our wild festivities on V-day. No doubt, there will always be
losers and winners in any contest. But the winner in politics must not condemn
the loser through injuring his self-esteem in mindless jubilation. A loser is
already in the mud, as it were. He has enough to battle with. We can’t saddle
him with more, unless our goal is to break him into smithereens, out of
existence!
But
Buhari himself has been there before. He was the butt of ridicules that once made
him decide that he would no longer vie for the highest political office in the
land. He wept and claimed he had been robbed over and over again at the poll.
If he has now been given the elusive mandate at the ballot, with unanimous
judicial endorsement at the court of first instance, I think all he needs to do
is to ignore the hawks around him and walk the talk that his victory isn’t
personal, but for democracy and for all Nigerians.
I don’t think we should be asking the
opposition PDP to ‘’apologise to Nigerians for ‘’ wilfully distracting the
administration of President Muhammadu Buhari with a frivolous election
petition.’’ Litigations of a political nature enlarge the borders of the
process of nation-building; they don’t constrict them. All the years Buhari was
walking the length and breadth of the courts with his lawyers to seek justice
couldn’t have been reckoned as frivolous. Those who understood the dynamics of
the rule of law and its link to democracy and development of nations and their
citizens hailed him. Those cases have benefited the legal history of the
nation. That he didn’t win in the courts then does not dismiss the judiciary as
inept and corrupt as Buhari has erroneously believed for many years.
We should
remember there’s still the hurdle of the Supreme Court adjudication, if PDP
makes good its plan to go the whole length of the judicial journey. The party
must not be discouraged. We have learned much from the proceedings at the
Presidential Election Petition Tribunal to guide us in future electoral
engagements. How else would we have known that there is no perjury if you fail
to deposit what you claim to have in a sworn affidavit? How would the nation
have known that assumptions can sometimes be promoted to seat of the law? How
would Nigerians have known that contrary to what many citizens subscribe to,
their president doesn’t believe in his party’s winner-takes-all philosophy?
Which is why he has nobly stretched his hand of fellowship to his political
foes to join him in running the country, regardless of your politics.
Before
now, I did recommend to him the likes of Kingsley Moghalu, Tope Fasua, Omoyele
Sowore etc. who contested against him, to be part of his team. These are
illustrious Nigerians who can help engender the all-round breakthrough we need.
I stand by my counsel as Buhari shops for assistance in his next level mission.
*Mr. Ojewale writes from Ogun State
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