By Emeka Alex Duru
Make no mistakes about it; democracy
is not a sure bet for emergence of good leaders. It is also not a guarantee for
good governance. But it allows the electorate a voice on how they are governed
and grants them the freedom of choice and participation in the affairs of the
state, at least, ideally.
It is this people-content that separates democracy from other forms of government. Abraham Lincoln, the 16th President of the United States, was therefore right in defining democracy as the government of the people, for the people, by the people. Take away the people-factor, it is no longer democracy, no matter how benevolent it may seem. A system that is shorn of democracy, is an aberration. But then, democracy, if not properly managed and protected by the relevant checks, can be abused by even elected leaders. This is part of the reasons why every Nigerian must ensure that the current democracy in the land, is not truncated.
It is equally why Nigerians must be vigilant on the creeping
designs by desperate individuals and interest groups at putting the current
democracy under threats. In this disturbing trend, the three arms of the
government; the executive, legislature and judiciary – incidentally, the touted
guardrails of democracy - are complicit. They have accomplices in corrupt
politicians, misguided ethnic, religious bigots and other unpatriotic citizens.
You will then understand why the surreptitious moves by the
administration of President Bola Tinubu and ruling All Progressives Congress
(APC), to compromise the 2027 general election and by extension, truncate the
democracy in the country, must be watched. The agenda at the malfeasance has
been steady and unrelenting, commencing with capturing the electoral umpire,
the Independent national Electoral Commission (INEC), blackmailing or coercing
elected officials at state and national levels to dump their original political
platforms and cross over to the APC. The result is that 34 out of the 36 states
of the federation are openly adopting the President’s re-election in 2027, with
the remaining two, in tacit alliance.
When therefore you notice such nouveau riche as Emeka
Okonkwo (E-Money), Obinna Iyiegbu (Obi Cubana), Pascal Okechukwu, (Cubana Chief
Priest), Cletus Uzoezie Oragwa (Zenco) and others in the so-called City Boy
Movement prancing about and literally seizing social media spaces for the
President, it is in line with the script. From his corner, Imo State governor,
Hope Uzodimma, adds to the drive with his Renewed Hope Ambassadors, with
mandate to rake in politicians from opposition groups, applying diplomacy and
subtle threats.
There have also been crude efforts
at causing confusion in the opposition camps and putting them in disarray. It
is in this regard that former Rivers State governor, Nyesom Wike, is acting the
spoiler in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), while Julius Abure, is the point
man in Labour Party (LP). Nafiu Gombe, is doing similar odd job in the African
Democratic Congress (ADC).
To consolidate the devious scheme, the judiciary is being
drawn into the fray. The recent ruling by a Federal High Court in Lokoja, Kogi
State, in favour of an amorphous group, Peace Movement Party (PMP), reversing
an earlier order directing the INEC to register the Nigeria Democratic Congress
(NDC) as a political party, falls into the arrangement.
To understand the gameplan, Harvard University political
scientists, Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt, in their publication titled, How
Democracies Die, summarise the unfolding antics as parts of how leaders
can subvert the democratic process to increase their power. They apply soccer
game for illustration. In it, according to the authors, power mongers
compromise the referee, sideline at least some of other’s star players and
rewrite the rules of the game to lock in their advantage. The institutions that
are readily targeted, include the judiciary, law enforcement agencies and other
regulatory bodies, that are ordinarily supposed to be neutral arbiters.
“Capturing the referees provides the government with more than a shield”, they
note. Nigeria’s democratic experiment under Tinubu fits into the scenes in the
book. In the frenzy to remain in power, the administration and its supporters
have undermined all known institutions of democracy in the land and have
trampled on the opposition.
Peter Obi, the presidential candidate of the NDC, is the
main target of attacks. To be sure, Obi is not a small fry in contemporary
Nigeria’s politics. From his days as Anambra State governor, where he left
outstanding legacies in good governance, to his aspiration for the presidency
in the 2023 election under Labour Party (LP) in which he broke the tradition of
name-calling and ran a campaign that focused on challenges facing the citizenry
and how to tackle them, Obi has come across as a new face of Nigerian politics.
For his audacity in doing so, for the nationwide reception
which his brand of politics has earned him among the downtrodden, he has become
a figure to watch in 2027. Tinubu and his supporters are not taking kindly to
the Obi phenomenon, knowing that the government has performed woefully and does
not stand any chance of reelection in any free and fair poll. To bring down
Obi, is therefore a task that must be accomplished by the foot soldiers of the
presidency.
This accounts for the barrage of attacks on him over issues
that ordinarily should not matter. When, for example, garrulous presidential
aides, Reno Omokiri, Daniel Bwala boasted that Obi would not be on the ballot
in 2027, they were unconsciously letting out a plot being incubated in the
presidency. This is, perhaps, where the significance of the order by the
Federal High Court in Lokoja strikes deeply.
There have, of course, been occasions when the judiciary
acted a willing tool in subverting democracy. Recall the instance of Justice
Egbo-Egbo, an Abuja High Court Judge, who, on Tuesday, July 22, 2003, granted
an ex-parte order restraining former Governor of Anambra State, Dr. Chris
Ngige, from acting or carrying out his job as governor, and ordered that his
deputy, Okey Ude should take over as governor.
The Judge was alleged to have acted at the prompting of the
then godfather of Anambra politics, Chris Uba, Okey Ude, and Mrs. Eucharia
Azodo, the former Speaker of the state House of Assembly, who were fingered in
a failed abduction bid of Ngige. For that ignoble act and others, Egbo-Egbo was
compulsorily retired from office in January 2004 by the National Judicial
Council (NJC). But the damage he brought to the institution remains.
Recall also that the intrigues that eventually led to the
annulment of the June 12, 1993 elections, had commenced with fleeting demands
by a nondescript organization, Association for Better Nigeria (ABN), headed by
Senator Arthur Nzeribe and his acolyte, Abimbola Davis, on the then military president,
Ibrahim Babangida to extend the political transition timetable of his
government.
Nzeribe and his cohorts were initially ignored by Nigerians
as mere rabble rousers. But by the time the enormity of their scheme had been
appreciated, they had procured a controversial midnight court injunction, from
Justice Bassey Ikpeme, that Babangida latched on to annul the election.
Babangida however ended up playing himself out of contention, following massive
reactions by Nigerians over the dastardly act.
These instances should serve enough lessons to Nigerians on
agenda of the opportunistic rulers in the days ahead. For now, sponsored
attacks and coordinated efforts at blocking Peter Obi from running in 2027, may
just be issues on the table. There could be other devious plots that may
truncate the democracy in the country, if Nigerians keep watching and assuming
that all is well.
*Emeka Alex Duru, Ph.D., is the Editor, TheNiche Newspapers, Lagos. (08054103327, nwaukpala@yahoo.com)


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