Ocnus.Net
Yar’Adua and a Sick Nation
By Okey Ndibe, okeyndibe.com 6/9/08
Sep 7, 2008 - 8:13:37 AM
Let’s be clear: Yar’Adua is only half to blame for the unmitigated
disaster of his impostor presidency. A great deal of the blame belongs
to former President Olusegun Obasanjo, the principal recruiter of
Yar’Adua, and the man who, in the end, smuggled his ward into office.
Obasanjo had alleged that Yar’Adua was a tested performer. That’s now a
self-evident lie. Many residents of Katsina, where for eight years
Yar’Adua held gubernatorial sway, remember him as a mediocre governor.
>From the outset, it was an open secret that Yar’Adua has been battling
serious health problems. Obasanjo, a trader in superstition, told
Nigerians that Yar’Adua had been healed. Another lie. Since his
imposition on Nigerians, Yar’Adua has been flown to Germany for
treatment. His feeble health has also meant that he often can’t keep
scheduled appointments. When I visited Abuja in July, a journalist with
sources inside Aso Rock told me that the man retires to bed before 8
p.m.
Obasanjo lied on at least two fronts when he said that Yar’Adua had the
vision to continue the pursuit of political, social and economic
reforms. First, after more than one year in office, few Nigerians would
be in a hurry to put Yar’Adua and vision in the same sentence.
Sometimes the kindest thing to be said about the man is that he
occupies (presidential) space. The second is the fiction that Obasanjo
had reforms worthy of perpetuation. In a lot of ways, Obasanjo saddled
Nigerians with a legacy of deforms, not reforms.
A man with Yar’Adua’s health woes should have made the prudent choice
of retiring from public life to devote full attention to himself. It’s
a pity that the man didn’t have the strength of character to rebuff the
flattery of those who wanted to install him in Aso Rock as an enfeebled
stooge. Of course, it is not uncommon for a person, even one in weak
physical shape, to decide to make self-disregarding sacrifice in order
to advance the public good. But nobody who has watched Yar’Adua in
office would testify that he evinces passion about bettering Nigeria.
He is, at best, a confounded figure who is dozing while Nigeria sinks
into depths of despair.
During my recent six-week travel in Nigeria, I encountered many people
from different stations of life who bemoaned a country cast adrift. A
constant refrain from different quarters, whether it was in Abuja,
Yola, Lagos, Awka, or Asaba, was that Yar’Adua’s inability to govern
had put Nigeria at the mercy of some despicable forces. Some even
stated that a coalition of former and serving governors, with James
Ibori and Bukola Saraki as co-captains, had hijacked the country.
Yar’Adua’s self-effacement and weakness derive from two sources at
once. One is that the man is too beset by sickness to be an effective
manager of a complex, challenging country like Nigeria. The second
factor is the fact that, the ruling of the presidential electoral
tribunal notwithstanding, Yar’Adua and his sponsors know that his
mandate is—we need not mince words—stolen. When all is said and done,
Yar’Adua is a usurper, and one who came to office without the benefit
of any blueprint. Given the two strikes against him, it is no surprise
that he has resorted to making wooly promises about transforming
Nigeria into heaven on earth come 2020!
Many Nigerians who, for one reason or another, chose to accept the
imposition of Yar’Adua as “president” are, it is clear, now gnashing
their teeth. More than a year after his illegitimate inauguration,
Yar’Adua has proved, above all, the danger of putting the affairs of a
nation in the hands of a man too beleaguered by sickness to be
attentive to statecraft. Nigeria is a sick country that requires the
astute attention of an alert, visionary leader. Unfortunately,
Yar’Adua’s sickness has left Nigeria sicker than it ever was.
Yet, the beneficiaries from the Nigerian malaise persist in playing
ostrich. Last week, Ojo Maduekwe and John Odey combined their
ministerial voices to retail a white lie to Nigerians. Emerging from a
federal executive council meeting, the two men tried to debunk an
online publication’s report that Yar’Adua was being treated in a Saudi
Arabian hospital. They told reporters that Yar’Adua was quite hale and
fit, and that he was occupied with matters of religious piety in Saudi
Arabia, the headquarters of Islam.
What a pathetic picture the ministers cut in their effort to mislead
the world. Asked to explain why Yar’Adua’s scheduled state visit to
Brazil was hastily cancelled, Maduekwe thought he was scoring a point
by lecturing reporters that the trip was only “readjusted.” Nobody was
fooled. Not Nigerians, who are more knowledgeable than they get credit
for, nor Brazilians and other members of the diplomatic corps in Abuja.
To me, the shamelessness of the ministers’ canard was matched by the
media’s pitiable collaboration in spreading falsehood.
Maduekwe and Odey are products of a political culture that thrives in
the dissemination of misinformation. One often wonders whether the
Maduekwes and Odeys of our world truly believe that Nigerians are so
gullible, or whether they are they just caught up in a system whose
currency is to rearrange the truth?
Sadly, much of the Nigerian press lends a hand, I suspect wittingly, to
this process of deception. First, I don’t recall any newspaper, major
or minor, that published the report that Yar’Adua’s trip to Saudi
Arabia was for medical treatment. That story was told exclusively by
saharareporters.com, a website that has become a must-go destination
for Nigerians anxious to find out, in words and pictures, how their
country is misgoverned.
The website’s accuracy in reportage is nothing short of stunning. In
fact, the reliability of its exposes is posing a challenge to some
Nigerian newspapers and weekly magazines that now specialize in
recycling official fabrications. A few weeks ago, having a drink with
two academics at the staff club of the University of Lagos, I overheard
a lecturer speak glowingly of saharareporters.com. Since discovering
saharareporters.com, the man said, he hardly bothered to read Nigerian
newspapers. “Saharareporters tells me what’s going to happen in Nigeria
sometimes two weeks before it happens,” he said.
The website had reported, before Yar’Adua’s departure to Saudi Arabia,
that he was headed for medical treatment. It even reported that
Yar’Adua’s handlers had refined an official narrative to the effect
that he was off to observe the lesser hajj. I don’t recall that any
major Nigerian newspaper published this report, even as speculation.
Through their silence, the press allowed Yar’Adua and his handlers to
get away with deceiving Nigerians. Yet, the newspapers gave prominent
coverage to the government’s denial of story the press never had the
courage to carry.
Yet, a day after the government’s absurd denial, several newspapers
woke up to their reportorial responsibility. They reported that
Yar’Adua had undergone surgery in Saudi Arabia. What manner of
“president” would sneak out of the country and mislead his country
about the personal nature of his mission?
Yar’Adua’s friends and family ought to tell him that, much as Nigerians
would sympathize with any ailing person, they deserve an energetic,
intellectually vibrant, and visionary leader to run their affairs. Even
more, they deserve a man they choose in a credible election, not one
whose mandate is beclouded by electoral fraud. Yar’Adua has sound
health reasons to immediately announce his resignation from an
ill-gotten office. But if he won’t do it for the sake of his health, he
must do it to spare Nigeria its continued descent into the abyss.
Source: Ocnus.net 2008