Thanks for posting it.
Ebube
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tim Ukaoha" <uka...@look.ca>
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Sent: Monday, February 26, 2001 2:53 PM
Subject: Great article on the sorry Nigerian state.
>
> Included in this mail is a great article which summarizes Nigeria's
present
> sordid state.
>
> Enjoy it.
>
> Tim
>
>
>
> Is Obasanjo ordained by God to
rule
> Nigeria?
> And, other
> fallacies
>
> By
Prof.
> Sola Adeyeye
> Special to USAfrica The
> Newspaper . USAfricaonline.com and NigeriaCentral.com
>
> Because of a juvenile interpretation of Scriptures, especially the 13th
> Chapter of Paul's Epistle to the Romans, there are those who constantly
> assert that Obasanjo was raised by God to
> provide the only need of Nigeria-a good government. Such people should be
> reminded that God was alive when Mussolini, Josef Stalin, Adolf Hitler,
Idi
> Amin, Mobutu Sesesoko, Ibrahim
> Babangida, Sani Abacha and other despots ascended to power. The point here
> is not that Obasanjo belongs to this phylum of despots. Rather, one is
> debunking the fallacy of ascribing all
> events in history to God. My Evangelical Christian faith is
> comfortable with the notion of God's permissive will enabling Obasanjo to
> become our President. However,
> Christians know that sometimes, the permissive will of God is
> completely different from His directive will. The election of retired
> General Obasanjo (in pix) as the President of
> Nigeria was directed not by God but by a survivalist,
> self-serving cabal of current and retired Generals.
>
>
> Fallacy Number One:
> God loves Nigeria and Only God will save Nigeria:
>
> Whenever Nigeria's problems are discussed, it does not take long before
> someone asserts, with an air of sanctimoniousness, that "only God can save
> Nigeria." Sometimes, those who make such assertions cloak
> themselves in the toga of intellectual sophistry as they mockingly ask an
> activist: "What changes have been achieved on account of your activism?"
>
> Of course, it is easy to countermand such scoffers by asking
them
> in return: "Why has God not changed Nigeria despite your prayers and the
> religious fervor of Nigerians? Despite endless prayers,
> fasting, retreats, revivals and million-man jamborees, why do
> Nigerian telephones and power supply constantly fail? Most Japanese care
> nothing about the Bible or the Koran but their telephones
> work, as do their railway system and other public utilities.
>
> By contrast, why are Nigerian post offices, passport and immigration
> offices, educational institutions and public utilities in such state of
> chaos and dysfunction? Does God not love Nigeria? Can the omnipotent God
> not cure the problems of NEPA in an instant? Why do preventable diseases
> like meningitis, cholera, typhoid, malaria and malnutrition continue to
> denigrate the lives our people to a fragment of hell? Does God not
> care? Is He not able to save?
>
> The answers are simple: God cares; He is able to save. But we, Nigerians,
> deceive ourselves when we parade religious dogma as authentic
spirituality.
>
> In today's Nigeria, the name of Jesus has been reduced to a magical mantra
> invoked like a metaphysical abracadabra by those who are doctrinally too
> erroneous, intellectually too lazy, politically too obtuse, socially
> too reactionary and ideologically too confused. Because they are also
> spiritually too undiscerning, attitudinally too miserly, physically too
> undisciplined and psychologically too detached, they are of little use to
> God
> or man! For Moses, Joshua, Nehemiah, Esther, Ezekiel, Jeremiah, Nahum,
> Obadiah, Micah, Habakkuk, John the Baptist and yes, Jesus Christ, faith
was
> not a fatalistic resignation in the face of challenges.
>
> Indeed, even in the most supernal of tasks, that of saving of a soul, the
> Apostle Paul says, "we are laborers together with God" (1 Corinthians 3:
9).
> God loves Nigeria and will use Nigerians to rescue Nigeria from
> its rut. Those who use God's holy name as canopy for their inaction and
> dereliction of civic duty forget that the essence of true religion lies
not
> in sanctimonious creed but in sanctified deed.
>
> It is true that the Bible says that the just shall live by faith (Habakkuk
> 4: 2). However, faith without works is metaphysical hogwash. Indeed, the
> Apostle James bluntly calls it "dead religion."
>
> Fallacy Number Two:
> All that Nigeria needs is a good government, and God has raised Obasanjo
to
> provide it.
>
> Because of a juvenile interpretation of Scriptures, especially the 13th
> Chapter of Paul's Epistle to the Romans, there are those who constantly
> assert that Obasanjo was raised by God to provide the only need of
> Nigeria-a good government. Such people should be reminded that God was
alive
> when Mussolini, Josef Stalin, Adolf Hitler, Idi Amin, Mobutu Sesesoko,
> Ibrahim Babangida, Sani Abacha and other despots
> ascended to power. The point here is not that Obasanjo belongs to this
> phylum of despots. Rather, one is debunking the fallacy of ascribing all
> events in history to God.
>
> My Evangelical Christian faith is comfortable with the notion of God's
> permissive will enabling Obasanjo to become our President. However,
> Christians know that sometimes, the permissive will of God is
> completely different from His directive will. The election of Chief
Obasanjo
> as the President of Nigeria was directed not by God but by a survivalist,
> self-serving cabal of current and retired Generals.
>
> On at least two occasions, I published articles about Obasanjo's
antecedents
> showing why he would be a very bad President at this momentous pass of
> Nigeria's history. Of course, the view of one person, no
> matter how considered, need not prevail. Flawed as the electoral process
> was, Chief Obasanjo emerged as President and deserved the support of all
> Nigerians.
>
> In accordance with the finest tradition of democratic liberalism, I
> immediately not only offered President Obasanjo my congratulations, I
> pledged to him my daily prayers and whatever support I can render to
> ensure his success. Hence, despite the personal discomfort of the
exercise,
> I published a scathing article in six Nigerian newspapers taking the
> leadership of the AD and Afenifere to task over their objection to
> Chief Ige serving in the Obasanjo cabinet. Unfortunately, it is now
obvious
> that all Nigeria will get from President Obasanjo is administrative
> tinkering. A federalism gone asunder is the albatross strangling
> Nigeria's neck. Obasanjo has no intention to free us from this Draconian
> octopus with its suffocating tentacles.
>
> In any case, in the name of national unity, it was Obasanjo's earlier
regime
> that buried voracious termites beneath the wood of Nigerian federalism.
> Nigeria will never know peace or prosperity for as long as we
> adhere to the current overbearing, centralist system in which the Federal
> Government has the audacity to fix the salaries of state functionaries.
>
> Is it imaginable that the US Federal Government would establish a salary
> structure that binds the States of California, New York, Mississippi,
Texas
> and Minnesota? In what other federal system in the world are
> taxes collected from one state and dispersed to others? The fundamental
> defects in the structure of Nigerian Federation will still be with us
after
> Obasanjo leaves office. Unchanging changes: forbacky dance
> indeed!
>
> Why are Delta region states not given the control of the resources within
> their territory? Does the United States Federal Government control the oil
> of Texas, Oklahoma or Louisiana? Why should only the Federal
> Government have a police force? Some have argued that because regional
> police forces had sometimes been used as instruments of victimization in
the
> past, they should remain disbanded. By that very logic, the
> Nigerian Police Force and the entire Nigerian Military should be
disbanded.
> Certainly, they too have been used on too many occasions as instruments of
> oppression.
>
> Were we not eyewitnesses to the use of the Nigerian Police Force to
subvert
> the electoral wishes of the people in many parts of Nigeria during the
1983
> election? Was the apparatus of the federal police and the
> military not used to terrorize the Nigerian people during the dark days of
> Babangida and Abacha? Should they too be disbanded?
>
> As military dictator, Obasanjo's regime was the first in Nigerian history
to
> assign military officers as governors of states from where they did not
> originate. The fixation on unity, as if it is an end unto itself, was the
> pernicious foundation for the internal colonialism of the Babangida-Abacha
> years.
>
> As military dictator, Obasanjo's regime was the first to forcibly either
ban
> or acquire the ownership of private newspapers. Today, we still do not
have
> any constitutional guarantees against such acquisition.
>
> As military dictator, Obasanjo's regime was the first in Nigerian history
to
> sack Nigerian workers en masse without established due process. The
Nigerian
> civil service, once among the best in the world, collapsed
> under the weight of misguided passion for so-called national discipline
> because sober judgment and due process were recklessly trampled.
>
> Twenty-five years later, among Obasanjo's first acts as President was the
> sacking of workers who, again, were denied due process. As military
> dictator, Obasanjo's regime was the first in Nigerian history to
> forcibly acquire state properties and institutions without any
compensation.
> Twenty-five years later, Obasanjo has given us no indication that he now
> understands the deleterious consequences of this malignant
> centralism.
>
> As military dictator, Obasanjo's government eroded the autonomy of
> state-owned television and radio stations by imposing so-called national
> programs. As a consequence, those stations asphyxiated under the
> burden of intemperate centralism. For example, Western Nigerian
Television,
> once the best in Africa, became a caricature of itself. Indeed, Obasanjo
> prepared the ground for the use of those stations in furthering
> the satanic ambitions of more heinous despots that later ascended to
power.
>
> As military dictator, Obasanjo's regime was allergic to open discourse and
> criticism. Obarogie Ohanbamu, Edwin Ikechukwu Madunagu, Areoye Oyebola,
> Gbolabo Ogunsanwo and many other illustrious Nigerians
> were forced to lose their jobs when they dared criticize Obasanjo.
> Twenty-five years later, in Atlanta Georgia, when a Nigerian expressed the
> concerns of his people, our supposedly "democratic" President lashed
> out in an autocratic outburst: "Go to hell!" Without doubt, Nigeria needs
> good governance. However, there is no indication that Obasanjo now has
what
> it takes to provide the visionary leadership that this moment
> demands. In any case, even if by some miracle Obasanjo were able to
provide
> good governance, what happens when he leaves office?
>
> Wisdom dictates to us all that this simple question be given our urgent
and
> grave attention. We desperately need a better structure, a new political
> arrangement in which the Presidency does not suffocate our lives
> by its omnipotence and omnipresence.
>
> Fallacy Number Three:
> Nigerian unity is our highest national priority
>
> At independence, our nation adopted a simple motto- Unity and Faith. But
the
> metastases of military oligarchy and its centralist tendencies have ruined
> Nigeria's unity.
>
> Today, the Federation of Nigeria is a fatally flawed structural
abnormality.
> The inordinate concentration of power in the central government is a
mockery
> of federalism. For too long, by dishonestly touting unity as
> an end unto itself, survivalist dictators have created Federal monsters
that
> gobbled at our innate diversity as if our God-created diversity is, of
> itself, an evil!
>
> It is now certain that President Obasanjo can never lead us out of this
> political silliness and intellectual dishonesty. An African does NOT cease
> to be human simply because he is African; a Nigerian does not
> cease to be African simply because of being a Nigerian. For heaven's sake,
> the diversity of our nationalities as Tiv, Jukum, Ijaw, Ibiobio, Hausa,
> Igbo, Ogoni, Fulani, Yoruba or what have you, in no way detracts
> from Nigerian patriotism.
>
> In any case, our checkered history leaves us with absolutely irrefutable
> evidence that the harmonious coexistence of Nigerian nationalities will
not
> be erected on the foundation of a coercive, centralist structure
> that discountenances our diversity. Moreover, contemporary events in many
> parts of the world clearly reveal that the issue of nationality is not one
> to be buried under the carpet of mere pretense and coerced
> relationship.
>
> Ask the people of Bosnia and of Yugoslavia. Ask the people of our former
> colonial masters, the so-called "United Kingdom" of Great Britain where
the
> Scottish, Welsh and Irish now assert their nationalities after
> centuries of rigmarole.
>
> Recently, I read a brilliant and most evocative article entitled "Stop the
> bus" by Orok Edem. Edem likened Nigeria to a bus that perennially travels
in
> the wrong direction. He opined that Nigerian Minority ethnic
> groups will be better by getting off the Nigerian bus. One wishes that the
> Nigerian experiment will succeed and the Nigerian bus will commence
> traveling in the right direction.
>
> Without question, a big size confers some advantages to a nation. But if
our
> size and heterogeneity remain a hindrance to our prosperity, all of us
will
> be better served by getting off the Nigerian bus.
>
> The legacies of Chief Obafemi Awolowo in Western Nigeria bear witness that
> even without oil resources, the Yorubas will be far better off the
Nigerian
> bus. Awolowo demonstrated that with Spartan discipline
> and judicious husbandry of limited resources, quantum leaps of progress
are
> possible even if a people have no oil.
>
> Likewise, the Hausa-Fulani would be better off the Nigerian bus where they
> can resume the tremendous multi-faceted development that took place under
> the leadership of the Sardauna of Sokoto, Sir Ahmadu
> Bello.
>
> Needless to say, the legacies of Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe and Dr. Michael Okpara
> resoundingly prove that the Igbos would have been far better off had they
> not been forced back into the Nigerian bus.
>
> Needless to say, the Nigerian Minorities such as those in the Delta region
> or the Middlebelt would have done far better on their own. What is the
logic
> or morality of this fixation on unity? Let us stay united if and
> only if being "united" will foster peace, liberty and prosperity for our
> people. Otherwise, let us convoke around a mahogany table and discuss the
> terms of our parting of ways.
>
> What we call unity today is nothing but coerced co-existence in which all
of
> us are equal opportunity victims of distrust and concomitant
> marginalization.
>
> Fallacy Number Four:
> Our part of Nigeria is marginalized
>
> In traveling across Nigeria, one commonly encounters the fallacy of the
> greener grass. "Those in the other parts of Nigeria are doing much better
> than "we" are; "they" have better schools, hospitals, roads etc."
> Quite commonly, southerners portray the north as a region flowing with
milk
> and honey; easterners think the westerners are doing swell; the westerners
> think that life is more abundant in northern and eastern
> Nigeria!
>
> This myth is echoed daily across Nigeria. In sad reality, Nigeria has been
> reduced to a fragment of hell, from Port Harcourt to Kaura Namoda and from
> Lagos to Nguru.
>
> Today, a Yoruba is the President in Nigeria. But how has that
preferentially
> benefited the workers of Osun State whose salaries are rarely paid on
time?
> We must not discountenance the ethnocentric
> undercurrents of Nigerian politics. But we must not allow corrupt leaders
to
> exploit the concern about marginalization for their self-serving purposes.
>
> In any case, when a Nigerian politician decries the marginalization of his
> people, his primary concern is often for himself not the people; he is
> craving more opportunities for graft and embezzlement.
>
> If a Yoruba Stealator enriches himself by inflating the cost of procuring
> computers, does that make Yorubas less marginalized than their Ibiobio
> compatriots? Our elite, regardless of ethnic origin, are plundering
> Nigeria's treasury while sentencing the masses of all ethnic groups to
> marginal existence.
>
> How many of our senators or ministers are concerned that after 30 years of
> service, the total gratuity of a professor, engineer, lawyer, surveyor,
> teacher or civil servant is less than the furniture allowance of a
> senator or minister? What is needed is a united front by the marginalized
> masses of Nigeria against adventurers in power and career opportunists who
> have turned public service into looting service.
>
> Fallacy Number Five:
> Nigeria is a rich and great country
>
> It is true that God has bequeathed Nigeria with abundant natural resources
> that can make us a rich and great nation. However, the truth is that
nations
> do not become rich or great simply because they have natural
> resources. The Soviet Union, a nation with a surfeit of natural resources,
> languished in economic stagnation and eventually imploded under the
crushing
> weight of its own internal contradictions.
>
> Their experience and ours epitomize the great gulf between greatness and
> potential greatness. Those who enjoy the thrill of watching a buffoon
making
> a fool of himself may deceptively call us the "Giant of
> Africa" but we must not be hoodwinked by such frivolity.
>
> Of course, the antics of a buffoon in the market square is a comic relief
> but those who enjoy and laugh at such antics never wish to have a buffoon
> for a child. The whole world has become a global village in
> which being "the giant of Africa" while remaining a "dwarf of the world"
is
> nothing to sing about.
>
> The pandemics of grinding poverty, preventable diseases, ridiculous
> superstitions cloaked as religion, environmental degradation and
> technological backwardness, all sprawling across Nigeria are not
indicators
> of
> greatness. Do we talk of greatness about a country where educational
> institutions have broken down, transportation services are backward,
> physical infrastructures are decrepit, and agricultural technology is
> primitive?
>
> Can we describe as great a nation where medical services are extremely
poor,
> water supply is episodic, and power supply is epileptic? These variegated
> but all-too-familiar woes inflict economic asphyxiation and
> physical debilitation on our people. Yet, we talk about greatness!
>
> Likewise, how can we say that Nigeria is rich when there is more wealth in
> this city, Dallas Texas, than the entire country of Nigeria? Sure, Nigeria
> has the potential to be rich. As we speak, there are many
> individuals in this room today who have the potential to be rich. But
unless
> they develop that potential, they will never be rich. Likewise, the wealth
> of nations is not created by wishful thinking or bloated ego.
> Rather, it is created and sustained by the concerted application of human
> ingenuity and discipline in the exploitation of natural resources.
>
> Whither the Nigerian Bus?
>
> It is clear by now that I have not come here to paint for you a rosy
picture
> about Nigeria's future. I have long disqualified myself from the
membership
> of OFN (Operation Fool the Nation). Problems are not solved
> when we shy away from them.
>
> The perennial recurrence of our woes is sufficient proof that problems do
> not disappear just by being neglected. The Nigerian bus is badly damaged.
> Together, we can repair it. Every bus needs headlights. Nigeria
> will not prosper until we embrace a collective vision of justice for all.
>
> If unity is our goal, justice must be our guiding light. When a nation
sows
> the seed of injustice, it inevitably reaps disunity. Together, we must
fight
> injustice in every part of our land. Every bus needs a roof,
> windscreens and a protective frame.
>
> For the Nigerian bus, the Rule of Law together with an unflagging
adherence
> to universal human rights must be our roof and windscreen. Nigeria will
not
> prosper until the winds of tyranny and the disregard for
> due process are structurally disabled from ever assaulting our human
rights
> and civic liberties. These liberties are our God-given unalienable rights.
>
> Any government attempting to infringe upon these liberties must be
resisted
> by any means necessary.
>
> Every bus needs a steering wheel. For the Nigerian bus, the steering wheel
> must be discipline. And by discipline, I speak not of the regimentation of
> our lives by military or civilian autocrats. Rather, national
> discipline is the singular focus on noble goals and the rational process
for
> achieving them. It is not about morbid centralism; it is about the
resolute
> choices of a free people in moral pursuit of progress.
>
> Every bus needs brakes, and seatbelts. For the Nigerian bus, our brakes
and
> seatbelts must be constitutional checks and balances that safeguard our
> nation against governmental excesses. Of course, every bus
> needs an engine, a battery, tires, wheels accelerators etc. I have no
doubt
> that together, we can provide the Nigerian bus needs. However, Ladies and
> Gentlemen, the issue is not what we can do together; it is
> what we shall do together.
>
> The options before us are limited- only three.
>
> First, we may leave the bus unattended and continue our journey of
harrowing
> woes. Needless to say, it is suicidal for anyone to knowingly travel in a
> bus that is in a state of disrepair. Sooner or later, such a bus
> will crash. Ask the Soviet Union, India, Pakistan, Yugoslavia, and
> Czechoslovakia all of whom imploded under the weight of internal stress.
We
> must reject this option.
>
> Second, we may repair the bus and take a ride to peace and prosperity.
> Examples abound in history about nations that rebuilt from disrepair.
>
> Third, we may disembark the bus and let the passengers get unto new ones
> according to their sovereign and free wishes. That was what happened when
> Denmark peacefully broke into Sweden and Denmark;
> Sweden later peacefully broke into Norway and Sweden. That was what
happened
> when Czechoslovakia peacefully broke into Czech and Slovakia.
>
> Quite frankly, I am completely comfortable either with joining to repair
the
> Nigerian bus or helping to peacefully dismantle it so that we all can be
> spared the agonizing but inescapable destiny of riding a damaged
> bus to our collective perdition.
>
> And so, to that infinite Source of vision, wisdom, courage and grace, the
> Supreme One we call Allah, Chineke, Obong, Oghene, Olodumare, Ooundu,
> Osalobua etc., I say: So Help us God to either repair soon or
> peacefully and quickly dismantle our hapless bus!
> Adeyeye is Secretary-General of the United Democratic Front of Nigeria
> (UDFN).
> .Also, read his incisive insight, Nigeria's destiny, democracy and its
> corrupt
> Forbacky dances
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
Enjoy it.
Tim
Is Obasanjo ordained by God to rule
Nigeria?
And, other
fallacies
By Prof.
Sola Adeyeye
Special to USAfrica The
Newspaper ⢠USAfricaonline.com and NigeriaCentral.com
Whither the Nigerian Bus?
ā¢Also, read his incisive insight, Nigeria's destiny, democracy and its
corrupt
Forbacky dances