By Hope O’Rukevbe Eghagha
Adamu:
A man who rigs his way to power carries a moral burden!
Orezime: A moral what?
Adamu: You heard me, didn’t you?
Orezime: I’m not sure I heard you right. Moral
what you said?
Adamu: A moral burden, I said!
Orezime: Hahahahahahaha! You make me laugh! Are
you from the moon?
Gani: Or Mars?
Gani: Yes! That’s why those two could only preach; they couldn’t really act decisively. A moral burden? They spoke from both sides of their mouths on the issue of corruption. Late President Yar Adua confessed that the election which produced him was compromised. An honest man, he didn’t live long enough to right the wrong of the period!
Orezime: That’s why I laughed when Adamu talked about a moral burden arising from rigged elections.Bankole: In the ideal world, any power that is stolen and acquired through a dubious means imposes a moral burden on the power holder. No matter what the person does, that power remains stained.
Orezime: What does that amount to in our country? Even the brigands who shot their way to power in the notorious days of military misadventure in Nigeria soon became legitimate.
Emeka: You are going too far in our history. See what happened in
Lagos State in the governorship elections of March 18. Ethnic jingoists went
about preaching hatred against Igbo people and warned them against coming out
to exercise their constitutional rights. Security officials looked the other
way when ballot boxes were snatched in broad daylight in places where the
opposition was leading.
Gani: A serving state governor personally went about snatching ballot boxes and
threatened to shoot whoever got in his way. The same governor declared somebody
wanted without recourse to the Inspector General of Police! He worked against
the party on which platform he won the seat to spite the party hierarchy!
Bankole: Rigged elections are so familiar yet notorious in our
land. It was the main trigger to the crisis in the Western Region in the First
Republic because the people reacted when they saw a rape of their rights and
wishes! It soon snowballed into a conflagration that consumed the nation in the
late 1960s. Already, the youths are talking about a protest in the ENDSARSNOW#
manner. I hope it doesn’t result in disaster. We have lost too many lives
already!
Orezime:
What I fear is the rise of ethnic profiling in a supposedly democratic society.
To be sure, Governor Sanwo-Olu and the party hierarchy did not single out any
ethnic group for verbal attacks. They even courted them. Yet they didn’t
caution their followers to stop the degeneration into ethnic hatred. It is a
dangerous curve what is happening in Lagos. I don’t subscribe to the Lagos is
no man’s land nonsense which some misguided fellows are spewing, but
threatening anybody not to vote their candidate is a new low! Can a Sanwo-Olu
victory be said to be legitimate if a significant percentage of the electorate
is disenfranchised?
Emeka: Good question. They did not stop there.
They rolled out the culturally dreaded Oro rituals on election night. Come on!
Who is fooling who? The Oro festival was designed to drive fear into non-Yoruba
in Lagos. In the 21st Century?
Gani: I am sure the reports from election
observers will be damning.
Bankole: I don’t care about those biased observers.
Adamu: Where are we headed in this country?
Orezime: We are on the road to Kigali!
Bankole: May we not travel that route!
Orezime: It’s a good prayer. But what are we doing
to avoid the descent into anarchy? Nothing. Those monkeys are simply interested
in acquiring power.
Gani:
The Obedient Movement seems to have lost steam once it was misbranded as an
ethnic agenda to grab power at the national level. Peter Obi needs to tread
carefully so he doesn’t become another June 12! Some people are egging him on
to challenge INEC through protests.
Orezime: If he decides to lead a protest, it would
be within his constitutional right to do so, especially as INEC is stalling on
the issue of inspecting elections materials despite an order from the courts.
Peaceful protests are guaranteed by the Constitution.
Adamu: No one can be sure whether a peaceful
protest will remain peaceful after it starts. That’s the experience the ENDSARS
people had.
Gani: It’s not enough to stop people from taking
to the streets. Protests are fundamental to democracy.
Adamu: We do not want dead heroes! Mark my words.
Bankole: That’s ominous!
Emeka:
It means nothing. Nigeria must change. We cannot go on like this forever!
Things are just going down. No cash. No fuel. No power supply. No security. No
nothing. Peter Obi gave a glimmer of hope. Now that has been dashed to the
ground.
Adamu: Rigging will remain a moral burden each
time our President-elect travels outside the country, each time he meets
foreign observers, especially those ones who have a dossier on him. History
will also judge him and assess how he came to power. This applies to all the
states as well where some politicians have turned themselves into demigods and
have compromised poor INEC officials with mouthwatering sums. This is not how
to build a democracy. The votes must be counted and must count. Seventeen
people lost their lives during the governorship and House of Assembly
elections. We are supposed to count ballot papers, not bodies. Sad!
Bankole: The moral burden of rigged elections is
on all of us. Without our connivance there would be no rigging. We can only
hope that this will end some day!
Emeka: Tough luck!
*Eghagha
is a professor of English, University of Lagos
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