Opinion
Cheat Chat At Chatham
On Monday, December 5, 2022, His Excellency, Senator Bola Ahmed Tinubu (BAT), former two-term Governor of Lagos State and presidential standard bearer of All Progressives Congress (APC), was the guest of Chatham House; and from that globally hallowed platform, he addressed the world. For Nigerians, who had longed for him to appear in such a forum, it was a veritable opportunity for them to, hopefully, determine the candidate’s employability (or otherwise) as the No. 1 Servant of the nation of more two hundred million.
Chatham House, also known as the Royal Institute of International Affairs (RIIA), is located at 10 St James’s Square, London, England. It is an independent policy institute and a forum for debate and dialogue. Focused on research and ideas that hold the promise of helping peoples across the world to understand the continuously changing human society in a dynamic and rapidly shrinking world that has, arguably, become more Hobbesian than when Thomas observed it, Chatham House has the enviable history of being a veritable venue for robust interrogation, independent analysis, and orchestration of influential leadership ideas for a century. Today, Chatham House continues to vigorously analyze global challenges and proffer solutions thereby intellectually empowering the next generation towards building peaceful, sustainable and inclusive societies across the world.
Chatham House has helped people, societies and governments understand and adapt to very great changes; provided thought leadership on key issues that defined the 20th Century; helped craft the multilateral institutions and mechanisms of global financial stability after the Second World War; gave African independence leaders a platform throughout decolonization; and was key to Anglo-Soviet track-two diplomacy initiatives. Its research influenced China’s establishment of low-carbon economic zones, and it has helped foster open dialogue and ideas-sharing.To the extent of the above, the credentials of Chatham House as a forum for dialogue on global leadership is impeccable; it is not in dispute by any stretch of the imagination. So, Tinubu appearing there was, ordinarily, a welcome development. However, one issue that put a sour taste in the mouth of many Nigerians regarding Tinubu’s appearance at Chatham House is that he had refused to honor invitation for such interaction from numerous media organizations in Nigeria. To many Nigerians, this is reflective of complex, borne out of what African social scientists dubbed colonial mentality syndrome (colomentasyn). It leaves the unfortunate impression that the Nigerian media is not good enough for him; the white man’s forum is better—a defeatist state of mind that has perpetuated underdevelopment in African nations for more than one-half of a century after independence.
Subjecting Tinubu’s performance at the House to critique, Aanu Adeoye, West African Correspondent at Financial Times, described it as “the height of incompetence”. Informing that he attended numerous events at Chatham House with some African Leaders, Adeoye offers that “none of the Leaders ever delegated questions meant for them to be answered by their aides”. For Morning Show Anchor, Rufai, Tinubu’s outing “was a disgrace for (Nigeria)” Expectedly, Otunba Biodun Ajiboye, the Assistant Director of Media and Publicity for the All Progressives Congress Presidential Campaign Council APC-PCC, spiritedly showered encomiums on Tinubu’s performance saying that “what he has done is innovative”. It is opined here that rather than being innovative, Tinubu was evasive. It is unimaginable that a presidential candidate could not directly answer a question on a sensitive subject such as the bilateral defense arrangement (Defense Pact) between Nigeria and U.K. Rather, he parried it to the Women Leader of his political part! If a joke, it was certainly a bad one. Again, to suggest that “[Tinubu] was proving to the world that Nigeria has not only capable leaders like himself but also capable disciples” as Femi Fani-Kayode did on Friday’s edition of Channels Television’s Politics Today is an insult to the collective intellect of Nigerians.
Granted that delegation is fundamental to administration and management of men, it has never been utilized at a point when the capabilities of an office seeker are being evaluated and subjected to scrutiny. What Tinubu and his handlers did at Chatham House is likened to a job seeker attending an interview with either a team of specialists in tow to answer questions on his behalf or having access to and utilizing an electronic device hooked on to the Internet. Either way, it is cheating; it will be written in the history of RIIA that in December 2022, a cheat had a chat at Chatham House. In another reaction to the interview, Jerri Jheto, a US-based Nigerian artist said: “with such backward mentality, I’m deeply troubled about the direction the most populous black nation in the world is heading. While every citizen has the right to seek any public office, office seekers should be people with the demonstrated capacity and competences to elevate the consciousness of the people towards creativity in all areas of human endeavor”.
Nigeria is not a banana republic; millions of its educated and public spirited citizens know better. It is sad that many public office seekers and their handlers take Nigerians for granted. With the level of consciousness that is currently pervasive in Nigeria, whoever emerges at the helm of affairs of this country come 2023 Elections should brace himself or herself for the unblinking scrutiny and persistent heckling from Nigerians at every level of government. No matter how you look at it, more and more Nigerians are transcending the divisive primordial sentiments that past leaders exploited to the detriment of the people and the wellbeing of the nation. With the explosion of social media and very impressive demographics of access to the Internet, critical and sensitive information are at the fingertips of millions of Nigerians, especially the youth who, hitherto, lacked interest in such information.
Nigerians now know that it is an us-and- them battle between the brutally selfish elite and the pauperized masses. For instance, the combined ANNUAL budget for Healthcare (N46b) and Education (N48b) is N94b for 200 million people while N125b is the budget for 465 legislators some of who earn N37m MONTHLY and refuse to increase minimum wage from N18k to N30k per month. More and more Nigerians from the length and breadth of the country, across ethnocultural and religious lines have realized that the dividing hedgerows are not ethnic or religious; rather, they are economic. They are more conscious of the divide between elites and the masses and how the elites have exploited them to feather the nests of their luxurious lifestyle in the face of abject poverty. The youth and the masses know better and they are a whole lot more emboldened; the proliferation of illegal arms has exacerbated this reality. Any sequel to ENDSARS will be hard to quell.
By:Jason Osai
Osai is a university lecturer.
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