Opinion
Are We Ignoring History?
The statement made
by Mallam Nasir el-Rufai a week ago that there might be violence if the 2015 general elections were rigged pulled at my heart’s ‘s strings. And in spite of criticisms that have trailed his statement and for which he was detained for 15 hours at the headquarters of the State Security Services in Abuja on Monday, the former Minister of Federal Capital Territory and Interim Deputy National Secretary of the nation’s leading opposition party, All Progressives Congress, APC stuck to his guns and even dared the SSS to continue to arrest him in the course of exercising his freedom of expression.
Dismissing his critics as those who were “either not reading history or just ignoring history”, the dimunitive APC chieftain said, “There is nothing I have said that history has not shown. I said elections should be free and fair; if they are not free and fair, there is likelihood of violence. This has happened in our history in 1964, 1983, 2003, 2007 and 2011. So what is strange about that. Anybody that does not know that is either not reading history or just ignoring history”.
In as much as I do not subscribe to the threat of an impending doom lurking around 2015 general elections, El-Rufair’s statement I consider as a warning to the political class who may want to approach the 2015 elections with raw savagery of a narcissism.
Given the political antecedents of ruling parties in Nigeria, as recently witnessed during the Anambra State electoral abracadabra in November, last year, there is no doubt that the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) would want to wield the full and imperial power of a ruling behemoth to crush the opposition. We are already witnessing the signs of a holocaust foretold in Rivers State, where the State Commissioner of Police, Joseph Mbu enjoys the royal and presidential favour of an imperial majesty. With a bestial licence, the Police boss who ordinarily and by constitutional provisions is a subject of the State governor (read Femi Falana’s article below) has now turned himself into a monguous power monster from whom the citizenry, including the State governor must take order.
This antediluvian practice in a democratic setting is completely savagery and capable of taking us back to the days of yore when the country was held captive under military hegemony.
We can imagine the dangers that stand in the way of 2015 elections in Rivers State if Mbu is to provide security for the electorate that would vote in an election his arch enemy has an interest.
El-Rufai’s statement about possible violence if 2015 elections are not free and fair is therefore not out of place, except somebody somewhere wants to tell us that there would not be free and fair elections in Nigeria.
Besides, El-Rufai’s statement was not the first of such vituperations in recent time and may possibly not be the last. Statements that are worse than El-Rufai’s had been made without any arrest made. A former Niger Delta militant, Mujahid Asari Dokubo had, last year, threatened that “The day Goodluck is no longer the president, all of us who are on sabbatical will come back. There will be no peace, not only in the Niger Delta, but everywhere. If they say it is an empty boast, let them wait and see”.
The Ijaw leader, Chief Edwin Clark has also for sometimes now been issuing statements that threaten the corporate existence of the country. Yet, the SSS kept mum. Where then is the political equality? All these are symbols of colonial mentality, and of course a slide into garrison politics.
It is a sad irony that 15 years down the democratic lane and in spite of our horrible experience under military dictatorship, we still carry on with the bestiality of a military potentate. Our hope of political civility appears dim if it has not totally lost in nightmarish perpetuity and hopelessness. Those undemocratic tendencies we thought had been buried with military carcass still confront us with the most vicious potency.
Like I noted in one of my articles last year, we have travelled this path of political shenanigans before, when the country’s political elites wheeled the first two republics to ruin. We can do without the sure farce of a possible third only if we play politics by the rules.Or are we ignoring history?
Boye Salau
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