Let me say straight away that as a
Catholic, I have been following the concern of our Catholic bishops and their
periodic retreats in which they put in the front burner, issues that are not
unconnected with governance and social justice or the lack of it in the polity.
And for good measure, such brainstorming engagements by the bishops are usually
followed with a communiqué and circulated for information and action as
necessary, of the flock at homilies on Sundays. If you profess the Catholic
faith, then you will be aware that in the dark days of the dark goggled supreme
ruler who played God until we were all relieved of his stranglehold by his
sudden demise, that it was from one of such retreats by Catholic bishops, that
we had a “Prayer for Nigeria in Distress.” I am sure you will be able to recall
that not a few Nigerians attributed the death of the then maximum ruler to
divine intervention and the reasoning being peddled then was that God in his
overflowing love for our country, may have reasoned that it was better that one
soul came over to the great beyond, than for the country, then already perched
precariously on the brink, to be plunged headlong into an avoidable war.
Well, it may be neither here nor there concerning what happened and why it
happened in the way it did, but one thing, however, is clear: Ours is a nation
that believes so much in the efficacy of prayers, that you cannot miss the
trademark public resignation and despair wherever you go, to the effect that “
na only God go fit solve Nigeria problem.” But this is where even as a
Christian and a believer, I do have a problem. For, is it not the case as with
faith which without good works is dead, that prayers, without the efforts in the
right direction, can only be an exercise in futility?. As I was saying, it was
from one of such outings from our Catholic bishops that the Catholic flock was
handed the prayer titled, “Prayer for Nigeria in Distress.” But let us leave the
realm of the divine to those put in place by God and who, we must agree, know
better in these matters.
Our focus in this article really, is on electioneering, in particular the
preparations or the lack of it, for the 2007 elections. Well, in my odd 50 years
on planet/ Nigeria, one can say we have had elections – the frequent
interruption by military interregnums, notwithstanding. There is no gainsaying
that some of these elections can pass for the farcical and perhaps for a few
others, we would have been pleasantly surprised at how we were able to pull off
such a huge success in the face of overwhelming odds! In such rare instance, as
we saw in June,1993, I am sure even the unrepentant atheist would be charitable
enough to accord divinity a fair hand in the outcome of that historic election.
But of that exercise, my interpretation really, is that “Maradona” having
dribbled Nigeria and scored so many “goals” against “conquered territory”
already, it was only a matter of time for the infamous “hand of God” not to be
so invisible anymore. In which case, he would only have needed some assistance
– and if you ask me, that came promptly with the advent of one gentleman, and a
Professor of Political Science that goes by the name of Humphrey Nwosu, to score
an own goal!
As Nigerians, we have the unenviable record of memories that do not endure,
especially in matters of this nature. So it will be in the normal course of
things if we have forgotten that the man referred to above and Chairman of the
then NEC (by this is meant National Electoral Commission), came up with the
Option A4. We may not all agree, and of course, that would be quite
understandable and consistent with what we are as a people, but it was easy to
see that the electoral wonders that we were lucky enough to witness at the time
had their “roots” in Option A4.
However, what the “genius” in his overflowing capacity for evil did with the
result of that watershed election is too well known, even in spite of our short
memories, for any mention or repetition here. And if you had thought that
elections to be held in subsequent times only needed to borrow from the gains of
what was already a “tested” process in order to build on it, you would have been
thoroughly mistaken. In these shores, that’s not how things get done. And so
what do we have on our hands today? A tale of another professor, this time of
chemistry, we are told, as Chairman of INEC, and by this, we mean Independent
National Electoral Commission.
The thinking, by those who concoct these names, I am sure, is that as soon as
the word 'independent' is prefixed to the NEC, then you and I, in our
gullibility, would be stupid enough to believe that this body, this time around,
is not an appendage of the appointers of the Commission. But what is in a name,
you want to ask? When Professor Iwu – by the way, haven’t we seen that the
man is now being decorated with the appellation of “wuru wuru”, argues so
passionately and with finality, as to the relevance and desirability of e-voter
registration machines, one was naïve enough – let us not go back to the word
gullible this time, to believe there could be some sense in this innovation.
Afterall, are we not supposed to be in the age of technology in which case we
should be able to join in the league of users of e-gadgets, even if, as it were,
we are unable to be makers of technology?
register. To me, it hasn’t come as a surprise that we have not been able to
locate just one of Iwu’s e-voter registration stations. What would have been a
surprise would have been for us to find voter registration in 21st century
Nigeria with people queuing up and performing their civic responsibility of
registering to vote in a forthcoming election! After the frustration of the
fruitless search for a registration station in the Warri area, off I went to my
local government area. Well, are you one of those who like me have nothing
better to do than to worry over what is the normal course in electioneering
politics in Nigeria? If so, then here goes.
I switched from searching for registration stations, from the reasoning that
it certainly would be more difficult to find these stations, in places more
rural than the Warri conurbation where my earlier exercise did not yield any
fruitful results. So I got talking to just anyone who may have been luckier to
have got registered by Iwu’s e-voter machines. Again, no luck. But what I
consider should pass for some luck came later one evening at the beer joints in
town. First I was thoroughly jeered at for my ignorance at matters pertaining to
elections – with state power over immense resources and the ever present
opportunity to stupendous wealth, beckoning. It doesn’t pass as news, does it?
But it came to light that the local council area was “lucky” to have been sent
one Iwu’s e- voter registration machine. So where do you put this machine in a
local council that is arguably the largest in the state for people to have their
civic responsibility discharged? Then you get to know that this machine gets
“ferried” from the house of a local chieftain – don’t ask me of what political
persuasion, because I know that you know, to another where those “qualified” to
register, do so secretly behind closed doors!
Well, Nigeria We Hail Thee. When the late sage, the one who to me is the
genuine Baba, I think in 1979 and again in the 80’s lamented that our generation
may not witness democracy in Nigeria, the import of his frustration over
electoral “mago mago” plus dubious judicial interpretations of 2/3 of 19 states,
not to talk of the “moon slide” victories of the then NPN in Ondo State, amongst
others, may not have registered well enough at the time. But I am sure that the
late sage himself, were he to be alive today, would shudder at how he may have
understated the problem! When you hear people mouth platitudes as to why Nigeria
must be one country, it is easy to see that the proviso to this, is that it must
be their prerogative to perpetuate themselves in positions of power as, in their
primitive ethnicity and thinking, this could be the only way it may be possible
for the natural gas of the Niger Delta to be piped some 500km away from source,
to build the most modern and biggest LNG plants! But is anybody still worrying
about the sorry state of an exercise that is anything but voter registration?
Well if you were still foolish enough to worry, we have been told by the
mouthpiece of baba of the central fortresses that the INEC helmsman is doing
such a wonderful job that his sack, immediate or remote, is not in the cards.
In any case, we are told, baba is on top of the situation. Hear! Hear!!
Which should take us to the next stage a few months from now, to April 2007 when
voting by the “millions” of voters who, you can be sure, does not include you
and me on the streets, would take place. If we are lucky enough at that time we
will be able to find polling booths where voting by Iwu’s “e- registered voters”
would take place. But as I am sure you know too well already, whether we find
polling or not, winners will emerge, not by your vote and my vote, but by some
electoral concoction or voodoo by which as a country, we have gained odious
notoriety. And if at that time there will be as much as a whimper of discontent,
we will be promptly assured that baba has given a clean bill of health to the
exercise and that should be it, QED. In all these, you wonder whether we have
any parties at all, in the opposition. Well, well, do you blame them?
They may have resigned themselves to their fate that head or tail, you lose
against the people organized to destroy democracy in Nigeria. And so why waste
your time? Well, I started by the prayers of our catholic bishops and I know
that somewhere in the “prayer for our country Nigeria” there is a stanza where
God was requested to “……give us God fearing leaders”. Lets not mince words. So
far, that has not happened.
We do not know when that will happen if it will happen at all. What we do
know, is that God’s time is not our time and His ways are not our ways.
Sometimes, what we ask from God may not be what He wants for us and that is why
often I am wont to ask God to let His will be done. I believe that in spite of
these later day democrats, nay destroyers of democracy in Nigeria, God will have
His supreme will prevail because it is not in the natural course of things that
there is one country so richly blessed in both human and natural endowments, but
so strangulated and held back by a visionless leadership and their twin cabal of
forces of reaction and mismanagement, that its teeming masses are abjectly
pauperized, for so long. All said, how do you and me figure in all these? Well,
I see no better recipe for a nation to be held down in perpetuity, than a docile
populace, uncaring even of its own affairs, in combination with an utterly
selfish leadership reeking in clanishness and mediocrity.
•Mr. Agbroko, an engineer, writes from Effurun, Delta State.