Before Nigerian
independence, the youths played a vital role in wrestling political power from
our erstwhile colonial masters. Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe established the Zik Group of
Newspapers with the West African Pilot as it’s foremost in the group in 1937 at the
age of thirty-three after a three year stint in editing the African
Morning Post in Accra, Ghana. It revolutionized the newspapering
industry and was the most nationalistic while still maintaining a modest
modicum of financial success in its three decades of existence.
Chief Anthony Enahoro edited the Southern
Nigerian Defender one of the newspapers in the Zik Group in 1944 at the
age of twenty-one straight from the famous Kings College Lagos without any
university education. He went on to move the motion for Nigeria’s independence
in 1953 at the age of thirty. Chief Bola Ige became the organizing secretary of
the defunct Action Group at the age of twenty-three. Ambassador Matthew Tawo
Mbu became the minister for Labour at the age of twenty-three in 1954 before he
went to the United Kingdom to study law. Mazi Mbonu Ojike spearheaded the
cultural nationalism with his famous ‘boycott
the boycottables’ in his early thirties after his educational sojourn in
the United States and became the Deputy Mayor of Lagos long before he turned
forty. The list is endless of youths who achieved a lot in pre-independence
Nigeria.
Tragically, the twin combination of military
and civilian misrule ensured that youths were relegated to the background in
post independent Nigeria. They have been so economically strangulated that they
have been reduced to hewers of wood and drawers of water who eternally struggle
for less than crumbs in their own motherland. It was with joy when the then
forty year old Yahaya Bello was elected Governor of Kogi state in 2015 under
the banner of the ruling All Peoples Congress (APC). Even though the
circumstances of his election was rather controversial as the party ticket
which was supposed to have been given to Hon. James Abiodun Faleke who was the
running mate to the late former Governor and Gubernatorial Flagbearer, Alhaji
Abubakar Audu was unfairly given to him, the people seem not have minded
despite Faleke’s going to court. *Gov Bello and aides took to the streets to celebrate Buhari's return from UK medical trip |
The Igalas have been the dominant rulers of the state taking advantage of the
fact that they have the largest population size. There has been a clamour for
power shift which Yahaya Bello, an Igbirra man got. The controversial Senator
Dino Melaye even supported Bello despite the fact that they were from different
political parties as the handlers of the latter sold him to Kogites as a man
who will herald a breath of fresh air in the Lord Lugard House. No sooner had
he settled down to the daunting task of governance than Kogites were hit with
buyer’s remorse.
*Gov Bello and President Buhari |
While the civil servants wept and gnashed
their teeth, the young, man about time Bello did nothing to alleviate their
plight and was alleged to have constructed a choice property in his hometown of
Okene. He went on to have a war of attrition with his former deputy, Simon
Achuba. The now impeached ‘spare tyre’ alleged that his entitlements were
withheld by the Lord of the Manor who wasted no time in getting the pocketed
House of Assembly to hurriedly impeach the rabble-rouser.
The Federal Government sent a bailout fund of about ten billion naira and the
best thing the modern day dictator could do was to buy a Rolls Royce Phantom
for the Attah of Igalaland for his re-election bid. How cruel and insensitive
when the people he governs are groaning under the weight of terrible
leadership! The opposition Peoples Democratic Party sadly didn’t field a sturdy
candidate who could take Bello headlong. The flag bearer, Musa Wada has no
known political antecedents and his campaign is rather lacklustre as its devoid
of issues. His lack of grassroots appeal may also greatly work against the
party’s bid to return to the Lord Lugard House come November 16 this year. Some
pundits opined that the controversial Senator Dino Melaye would have given
Bello a run for his mandate because of his great grassroots appeal. Whether or
not that assertion is true is debatable as the powers that be clearly didn’t
want him to fly the flag.
The tragedy of the Nigerian polity is that
performance of candidates rarely matter in the election or re-election of
leaders. We remember the famous ‘It’s the economy stupid’ slogan of the then
Governor of Arkansas, Bill Clinton which got the extremely popular George Bush
of the Gulf war fame out of office in 1992. Such issues based campaigns is
lacking in Nigeria despite our two decades of democracy after the military
interregnum. The hunger in the land is an artificial creation by politicians to
keep the masses to vote for them in perpetuity in exchange for a few morsels of
rice which is now out of their reach no thanks to the recent border closure.
The proletariat isn’t ready for a revolution
as envisaged by their abandonment of Sowore to his fate when he called for one
on August 3rd which led to his incarceration. The Kogites may not be an
exception as the hunger that blows in Lagos is the same that blows there. In
the murky waters of Nigerian politics, one plus one isn’t necessarily two. Will
Musa Wada play the tribal card of the large population to defeat Bello? Will
Bello suppress the electorate with perishable items as is typical of the
average Nigerian politician? Will the masses surprisingly revolt and kick Gov Yahaya
Bello (GYB) out of the government house? Time the greatest purveyor of suspense
will surely tell.
*Ademiluyi wrote from Lagos.
*Ademiluyi wrote from Lagos.
No comments:
Post a Comment