By Abraham Ogbodo
This is Nigeria ’s fourth attempt at democracy hence the
ongoing dispensation is aptly called the Fourth Republic .
Ordinarily, some measure of mastery should be assured having gone through the
same process four times over. But if nothing is learnt or mastered in
subsequent performance and the approach remains constant, sheer repetition of a
process is not going to translate to different outcome.
Last week,
Ondo State Governor, Olusegun Mimiko visited Aso Rock Villa. It could be
described as unplanned visit because the decision by Mimiko to be at the
headquarters only propped up after INEC had made statements about parties and
their candidates in the upcoming governorship election in Ondo State.
Specifically, the governor was in Abuja to tell
President Muhammadu Buhari that Ondo
State is being pushed to
the precipice following the decision by INEC to stay with Jimoh Ibrahim,
instead of Eyitayo Jegede, as the PDP candidate in the November 26 election.
The
background to all of this is rather familiar. There is a certain Ali Modu
Sheriff who has become like a shadow that cannot be detached from the substance
except darkness is induced. This is what has forced the PDP to have two
leadership faces. Modu Sheriff is one and the other is former governor of Kaduna State ,
Alhaji Ahmed Makarfi. This monstrous outlook has subsisted even when the party
has gone extra lengths within the prescribed rules to prove that it has only
one face represented by Makarfi. Somehow, the party is not able to use all the
means of communication available to it to say to who its national chairman is
and who is not.
Others who seek
to reap political benefits call the current state of affairs in the PDP
intra-party crisis. Because the crisis is not yielding to judicial arbitration,
the capacity of the party to attack and kill the snake in its house is greatly
weakened too. If nothing is done, the PDP could be obliterated to free the
democratic space of opposition politics. There is no other quicker way for a
conscious society to migrate on its own volition from democracy to
dictatorship.
For now,
this whole thing about the PDP’s inability to solve its problems may taste very
sweet. The official position is that the APC and the presidency have no hands
in what is happening in the PDP, contrary to the belief in some quarters. The
problem has been fully offloaded at the doorstep of the judiciary to crack. It
is taken that the courts have the powers to decide even, in spite of the PDP,
who between Modu-Sheriff and Ahmed Markafi is the authentic chairman of the
party. Consequently, persons and institutions central to the imbroglio and which
can at least voice opinions to create a refraction in the narrative are showing
an unusual degree of piety.