Opinion
Solving Africa’s Leadership Puzzle (1)
The most critical problem I have identified, plaguing democracy in Africa, is Quality and Selfless Leadership Vacuum. Leadership is the most glaring and fundamental need of all time in history of nations. By this I mean African democracy, at all levels, lack political leaders that have passion for the people and the nation they claim to represent.
Until Monday, the 30th March 2015, when the former President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) standard bearer for the March 28, 2015 Presidential Election, Dr Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, in a nationwide broadcast conceded defeat to his closest rival, the All Progressives Congress Presidential candidate, and the incumbent President of Nigeria, Muhammadu Buhari, I had viewed the polity as a self-serving, self-aggrandising game, where moral values are subsumed to the politician’s whims and caprices. In President Jonathan I found a leader whose love for his fatherland and regard for the sanctity of human life transcend the pecuniary gains associated with power, the inordinate crave of many.
No doubt, Jonathan is not only the best democrat Nigeria has ever had and the second in Africa after South-Africa’s Nelson Mandela, he lived true and exemplified his avowed commitment to guarantee a level-playing field, free and fair elections for all parties and their contestants, broaden the political space and ensured that independence of the Independent National Electoral Commission was not a mere semantics and irony as had characterised previous administrations and the electoral bodies they set up.
At inception of office on the 29th May, 2011 Jonathan pledged that the indivisibility of Nigeria remained sacrosanct and upholding the honour and glory of Nigeria is second to none. By Congratulating Muhammadu Buhari for emerging victorious in the just concluded presidential elections, President Jonathan has kept faith with his words, the National Pledge, National Anthem and has proved beyond reasonable doubt that he is a statesman par excellence, a man of integrity and that he commands sterling leadership qualities worthy of emulation and replication at all levels of governance.
A man of integrity who can find in the political space, even as it is believed that integrity is alien to politics and that a man who wants to demonstrate honesty and integrity should opt for the clergy and not venture into politics. But this sentiment finds no expression in the life of former President Jonathan, marking him out as an exceptional politician in the annals of democratic governance in Nigeria. Former President Jonathan did not play the fool by lending support to the credibility of the Presidential polls, as some Nigerians misconstrue his action to be, but only acted his patriotic and nationalistic traits uncommon among politicians, religious and other secular leaders
. There is no head of Nigeria’s government, living or dead that has been insulted, disparagingly criticised as President Jonathan, yet he had remained irrevocably committed to Nigerian Project and sustenance of the vision of our founding fathers. Bravo to Nigeria’s meek leader who overcame pressures to wittingly abuse office as some of his predecessors did. Nigerians cannot forget in a hurry the wanton destruction of lives and property in the Northern part of Nigeria following the declaration of Dr Goodluck Jonathan as winner of the April 2011 Presidential election by the Independent National Electoral Commission.
The Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), whose presidential flag-bearer at the time was Muhammadu Buhari, had alleged wide-scale malpractices and had contested the credibility and transparency of the election and validity of Dr Jonathan’s emergence as winner but not without the unwarranted and unprovoked killing of innocent Nigerians in the North and consequent reprisal actions
Those who believe that violence is the veritable redress for loss at polls, cannot be said to be committed to the Nigerian Project, patriotic or nationalistic because the blood of the proverbial “baboons and monkeys” is too invaluable to be shed over an issue that does not translate to eternal value.
By: Igbiki Benibo
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