Opinion
Nigeria And Igbo Presidency
Very often, these questions arise, about whether Nigerians would vote an Igbo person, or what we have now created as common parlance – the “Nigerian of Igbo extraction” to be president of Nigeria. I have no doubt that on a good day, most Nigerians will vote a good candidate who is an Igbo as the president. But most Nigerians, in spite of the occasional quadriennial shows, have no franchise, and so it is indeed generally, not up to the Nigerian mass to decide.
On a number of occasions however, a few “Nigerians” raise the question of not “trusting” the Igbo to be president. I need to say here again, that in the current structure of the union, it is neither in the interest nor in fact necessary for any serious Igbo to be president of Nigeria. In as much as Nigeria is currently structured, an Igbo who aspires to the presidency will neither make a difference nor indeed accomplish much for the Igbo or the entirety of Nigeria.
The Nigeria state is what I would often describe as a khaki nation, whose foundations are neither based on the protection of the interests nor the sovereign rights of its citizens. Its allegiance are basically transnational, and its controls are not internal. This reality makes Nigerians, including in fact the Igbos subjected people, and not internal. This reality makes Nigerians, including in fact the Igbo subjected people and not citizens of the federation. It does not matter who occupies the presidency of the nation, being a republic only in name, such an individual is guaranteed to fail. Such an individual will be beholden to the international interests that have completely assumed ownership of Nigeria which they run by the creation of what I call the presidency by proxy. Such an individual will serve the current elite interests that have a grip hold on Nigeria. Such an individual will be a subject, not to any Igbo consensus, but to a criminal consensus that will neither bring succour nor prosperity to the Igbo.
He might indeed appoint a few more Igbos to federal positions, possibly even enrich a few more than is possible, but given the current nature of the state, there will still be a vast number of the Igbos, as I’m sure other Nigerians, who will fall outside the net of privilege. It is therefore foolish at this stage to talk about the Igbo president constituting the greatest power to affect the lives of Nigerians.
The president has no such powers. The constitution of Nigeria and the structure of the country and the capacity within the document and charters of state to create enforcement are the greatest guarantees to the lives of the citizens of the state. Serious Igbo understand this, and also understand that any aspirant to the presidency of Nigeria in its current structure and formation will certainly have a particular kind of power, but it will not be the power to transform the state. It is in the interest of Nigeria and Nigerians therefore to restructure the state, and deemphasize the powers of the executive and enforcement agency, no matter who is president and where he or she comes from.
It is in the interest of Nigeria, in short, to make the individual citizen as social factor rather than the ethnicity of the individual, which is our current model, thanks to late Chief Awolowo and his cohorts. The guarantee of the rights of every citizen to the minimum benefits of citizenship, good housing, adequate healthcare, sound education, employment, access to food, and other rights pertaining to citizenship irrespective of domiciliary will reduce this emphasis on who or where the president comes from.
The demand of the Igbos in Nigeria is precisely this: that all citizens have equal rights in the Nigerian federation wherever they live, to pay their tax, create an abode, and do their work. It is of course the fear of the competitive Igbo presence across the nation that is at the core of the current crisis of the state. Because Nigeria has an Igbo problem, part of that discussion towards reconstituting the fragile nature of the Nigerian state in its current fragments (apologies to Partha Charterjee) will have to deal with the security of the lives of the citizen irrespective of where they live or come from. This indeed is the subject of internal Igbo discussion. Not the Nigerian presidency.
That security will have to be guaranteed and enforced either by the state, failing which, by a uniquely Igbo alternative and response, the details of which I’m not at liberty to disclose here. But suffice it to say that the Igbo do not need an Igbo as president of Nigeria to enforce this in a nation that guarantees equal opportunity and equal protection for its citizens. For the Igbos, the presidency of Nigeria is indeed, as it is currently constituted, more of a personal rather than a state institution. The Igbo have an alternative, presidency of Nigeria as far as the Igbo are concerned. Until the Nigeria state is restructured and reconstituted to guarantee Igbo citizenship of Nigeria in concert with other free citizens, the authority of state will continue to reside in these increasingly homogenous state. The presidency of Nigeria will also continue to be mere puppetry. And serious Igbo do not want to be anybody’s puppet.
Igbeogu resides in Port Harcourt.
Joseph Igbeogu
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