Opinion
Solving Africa’s Leadership Puzzle (II)
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 the 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.I had expected those who by their actions called for the conflagration of Nigeria because they lost election, to show a sense of remorse and apologise to Nigerians and families of those who were gruesomely killed and sabotaged the administration of Jonathan through security breaches and the attendant colossal financial and manpower losses. But President Jonathan has in a litany of public statements unequivocally stated that the blood of no Nigerian is worth his political ambition. What a humane, God-fearing, selfless and sanctimonious leader embodied by President Jonathan. By the prompt and timely acceptance of the presidential election result as announced by the impartial umpire he instituted and congratulatory message to Muhammadu Buhari, President Jonathan doused the envisaged tension, unpleasant euphoria and reactions that could have spontaneously greeted the release of results and declaration of Buhari as winner especially when some electronic media organisations’ screen captured under-aged voting scenario in the North.
The Peoples Democratic Party deserves unalloyed commendation for creating a platform for the growth and development of our nascent sixteen years unnumbered democracy in Nigeria, PDP is indeed the pride of Nigeria and Africa’s Democracy. Today, Nigerians repose confidence in INEC, believe their votes count and their contributions and participation in deepening democracy are not exercise in futility. This is a hallmark of good governance. It is a plus for PDP and former President Jonathan who believe in the supremacy of collective interest of Nigerians instead of adopting hook and crook means to actualise their ambition to hold on to power at the national level for fifty years.
It is not saying a new thing that inordinate quest to perpetuate self in office has been the bane of Nigeria and Africa’s democracies. Besides the speculated ethnic sentiment, it was also for the reason of self-perpetuation that Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida annulled the June 12, 1993 Presidential election, which was before the March 28, 2015 Presidential election adjudged the freest and fairest by international and other independent observers, acclaimed to have been won by Moshood Kashimawo Abiola of the Social Democratic Party (SDP). It was also for the same reason that Chief Olusegun Obasanjo instituted a process to review the Constitution that will accommodate a third term. It is easier to assume power than to abdicate it. To the petty and mean, leaving power is as painful as a leap into the dark or worse still, tottering on the brink of death when life is at its best. No doubt, “Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely”.
This is why Africa had produced the worst dictators in the garb of democracy who prefer to remain in political power against popular will and die in it rather than leaving it when the ovation was loudest. The memories of leaders like Thomas Sankara, Idi Amin Dada, Moammar Ghadaffi, Ibrahim Babangida etc, who led their countries through the crucible of governance would have been venerated to idolatry if they had relinquished power on the demand of people.I see the God element in Jonathan, that though he has the power to truncate the process and damn the consequences which could snowball into an inevitable crisis, decided to decrease for Nigeria to continue to survive as a nation.Churches, Communities, Labour Unions and Professional bodies that are embroiled in leadership crisis should go to President Jonathan for a tutorial and imbibe such acumen and his selfless virtue.
President Jonathan has demonstrated to Nigerians and the world a reasonable goodwill unprecedented in Africa and that he is a parallel of the President-elect when he urged for peace and the people to accept the outcome of the presidential election with a sense of decorum, rather than making inciting and inflammatory statements which smacks of ethnic championship. Gubernatorial candidates of the various political parties and their supporters should borrow a leaf from President Jonathan. I believe that he who walks away from fight is greater and matured than he who stays to fight, no matter the level of provocation. Let all seekers of power, secular or religious adopt the maxim of President Jonathan: Unity and Peace are Supreme, Human life is Sacrosanct. A human organisation without a Jonathan needs to invent one.
By: Igbiki Benibo
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