By Olu Fasan
As a creative writing scholar at Oxford University, I have been reviewing the legendary literature Nobel laureate Professor Wole Soyinka’s latest book Chronicles from the land of the happiest people on earth. Reading the book, a political fiction, I’m enthralled by its linguistic and literary quality. Imagine my bafflement, therefore, when Professor Soyinka recently used the word “fascistic” to describe Dr. Datti Baba-Ahmed, vice-presidential candidate of Labour Party in February’s presidential election.
What drew Professor Soyinka’s ire was Dr Baba-Ahmed’s controversial interview on Channels TV. “Whoever swears in Mr Tinubu has ended democracy in Nigeria,” he said, adding: “Mr President, do not hold that inauguration. CJN (Chief Justice of Nigeria), your lordship, do not partake in unconstitutionality.” Baba-Ahmed argued that Bola Tinubu “has not met the requirements of the law”, having failed to secure 25 per cent of the votes cast in Abuja.
Radiant in his iconic aureole of
white hair and fruity voice, Professor Soyinka heaped criticisms on Baba-Ahmed
on Arise TV, accusing him of “blackmailing and threatening” the Supreme Court.
“That’s fascistic language,” he said, “and it’s unacceptable.” Later, in an
article titled “Fascism on course”, a response to the Obidients’ hysterical
reactions on social media, Professor Soyinka upped the ante. “The seeds of
incipient fascism in the political arena have evidently matured,” he
declared.
Well, what’s fascism? According to Encyclopaedia Britannica, it’s “a way
of organising society in which a government ruled by a dictator controls the
lives of people and in which people are not allowed to disagree with the
government.” For Cambridge Dictionary, it’s “a political system based on a very
powerful leader and state control.” And for Oxford Dictionary, it’s “a
political system that is in favour of strong central government”.
As someone who has immersed
myself in Nigerian politics as a weekly columnist since 2014, I categorically
affirm that the real fascists are President Muhammadu Buhari, Tinubu, their
party, All Progressives Congress, APC, and followers. Indeed, compared with
Buhari, Tinubu, APC and their loyalists, it’s a misnomer, a dysphemism, to call
Baba-Ahmed fascistic!
I watched Dr Baba-Ahmed’s
interview. What I saw was an angry person, speaking angrily. He indulged in
“parrhesia”, a Greek word for speaking boldly, bluntly, and freely. Some
speakers deploy parrhesia positively for moral purposes, and Dr Baba-Ahmed
would argue he was doing that, hence he justified his comment by saying: ”I am
taking this risk for the sake of my country.” However, he used negative
parrhesia, unleashing his views boldly and freely without forethought. But
politicians always indulge in negative parrhesia, their tongues often run
before their thoughts. That doesn’t make them fascistic. What’s truly fascistic
is not merely making angry statements but having the intent and power to act
out fascism.
Take APC. Even before coming to
power in 2015, its behaviour was fascistic. Through Lai Mohammed, its
spokesman, the party threatened to form a parallel government and make Nigeria
ungovernable if the 2015 presidential election was rigged. General Buhari, the
party’s presidential candidate, said, as widely reported, that “2015 ‘ll be
bloody” if the election was rigged, adding that ”the dogs and the baboons would
all be soaked in blood.”
That wasn’t an empty threat. In
2011, when Buhari lost to President Goodluck Jonathan, 800 people died in
post-election violence, widely blamed on his inciting comments. It was against
that backdrop and the apocalyptic predictions of Nigeria’s disintegration
following the 2015 presidential election that the world was laser-focused on
Nigeria during the election. But while Jonathan, who later conceded defeat,
repeatedly said that “my ambition is not worth the blood of any Nigerian”,
Buhari and his party stirred the embers of Nigeria’s disintegration should the
election not go their way. So, who are the real fascists?
Then, in government, Buhari
acted out fascism. In 2018, he said: “Rule of law must be subject to the
supremacy of the national interest.” Of course, he defined the “national
interest” tendentiously. For instance, he said those “who dare to question
Nigeria’s unity cross our national red lines”, and ordered the military to
“fight and destroy them relentlessly”. Well, that’s exactly what his government
did, brutally suppressing separatist agitations, rejecting political solutions.
Please refer to the definitions of fascism above!
In 2019, President Buhari
suspended and replaced the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Walter Onnoghen, on
corruption allegations, two weeks before the presidential election. The
allegations against Onnoghen predated his appointment as CJN, so why remove him
during the presidential election? Clearly, as I wrote in a piece titled, “2019
presidential poll: Buhari is fighting dirty”(Vanguard, January 31, 2019),
Buhari wanted to blackmail and intimidate the Supreme Court ahead of the
presidential election petition. If Baba-Ahmed is fascistic for making some
angry, but ineffectual comment about the CJN, what is a president who removed a
CJN in the middle of a presidential election?
Which brings us to Tinubu’s
fascism. Last week, Alhaja Sinatu Ojikutu, a former deputy-governor of Lagos
State, told journalists she would “renounce the citizenship of Nigeria” because
her life would be endangered under a Tinubu presidency. Anyone who doubts her
doesn’t know Tinubu’s politics, it’s mafia-like and takes no prisoners. That’s
fascistic.
In the early 1980s, a man called Adebayo “Success” terrorised Lagos during elections. Lateef Jakande, the governor, couldn’t control ”Success” because the Federal Government, led by National Party of Nigeria, NPN, protected him for political reasons. That’s exactly what Tinubu has done by empowering and protecting MC Oluomo, who habitually disrupts elections in Lagos, as evident in this year’s violent governorship election.
Under a Tinubu Federal Government, MC Oluomo and his
political thugs would be a national plague, just as Fulani herdsmen became a
national problem under Buhari’s government. By the way, can a Tinubu government
that includes Bayo Onanuga, Femi Fani-Kayode, Festus Keyamo, Nasir el-Rufai be
anything but fascistic? Absolutely not!
So, let’s be clear. The seeds of
incipient fascism in Nigeria’s political arena were sown by APC. They really
matured under Buhari butmight reach full maturity under a President Tinubu.
Therefore, Professor Soyinka is wrong to brand Dr Datti Baba-Ahmed fascistic.
He should point his finger elsewhere; yes, at Buhari, Tinubu and their party!
*Dr. Fasan is a commentator on public issues
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