By Malachy Uzendu
Nigerians are superbly interesting set of people. Every moment
presents itself as placebo for throwing away serious punches. We seem to love
to be dribbled; we enjoy flash in the pan situations. We seem not to have deep
thinking faculties. Our handling of situations is always on the ephemeral plane.
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*Buhari |
A few months ago, the issue on the lip of Nigerians were “Senate Standing Rules” forgery or no
forgery; whether it was the national leadership of the ruling All Progressives
Congress (APC) that holds the prerogative of determining who becomes a
principal officer of the National Assembly or not. It did not matter that
people who were elected to that arm of government from the different constituencies
in the country have even if we chose to call it some form of pedigree, neither
did it matter that they have a contract with their various constituencies. A privileged
few must determine who becomes what and what happens there.
Nigerians made a lot of noise on this issue: some people called
for the public execution of Senators Bukola Saraki and Ike Ekweremadu. Some
people who were obsessed by their self righteousness even postulated that
National Assembly members should not on their own aspire to any portfolio in
that arm of government but should wait for portfolio to be assigned to them by
the executive arm of government either directly or indirectly through the
instrumentality of the ruling political party.
Conversely, some persons who hold alternative view points insisted
that capitulating to that level was dictatorial, diversionary, myopic and banal
and had nothing to do with the essence of true democracy.
After
several months of legal fireworks, propaganda and public odium for Saraki and
Ekweremadu, the executive arm of government, withdrew the forgery lawsuit
slammed on the two principal officers. To Nigerians it was a matter of case
closed; no qualms, life moves on to the next issue. The master has spoken and
so be it. The public never bother about the economic and social costs. This
was a typical case of the executive distracting the legislature and the public,
the polity pays the price.