..
The little Biafran mosquito perched delicately on
Nigeria’s scrotum
I just want to
say something briefly about this supposed Biafran wave sweeping the South-East,
some other parts of the nation and certain places in the diaspora. I hear
people saying all sorts with regard to freedom of speech, self-determination,
including some calling for referendum, etc.
It’s sad that it’s
come to this, but here is the problem: It’s President Muhammadu Buhari’s
political instinct. His political instinct is provincial, retrogressive, assumptive
and dictatorial. Buhari is a Nigerian with a provincial outlook of the nation. He
is by default always filtering the nation through his Fulani and sectionalist
eyes. This is not a crime and is not necessarily bad; but it is a problem when
it filters out experience, accommodation, social intelligence and equality.
His political instinct
is retrogressive, because he refuses to appreciate that a nation is an
organically developing entity that must always work towards a more perfect
union. Buhari is still locked in the national leadership worldview of the ’70s
and ’80s where certain distorted martial values were considered the national
standard. I mean, does anyone remember what Buhari said in India when he was
asked what he would like to be remembered for? He said: “I want to be remembered by Nigerians as a genuine patriot
who not only fought the civil war but fought corruption to a standstill”. Now, as a Nigerian living today, step
back and just think about that for a moment…. Just think about the worldview
that shaped that comment….
We are talking a
war that was totally unnecessary, a war that he and his overambitious and
inexperienced military colleagues railroaded us into, making us lose millions
of men, women and children and billions of dollars in resources; a war that has
put a wedge in our nation till this day! Fine, he was a soldier during the war,
but where was he when General Yakubu Gowon declared “No Victor, No Vanquished”?
Where was he when Chukwuemeka Ojukwu was recalled from exile and pardoned by
Nigeria? Was he not there when Ojukwu joined a political party and immediately extended
his hand for that symbolic handshake across the Niger? Hasn’t he been there all
this while that everyone in the nation, including Ndigbo, have been trying to
bring the Igbo into the mainstream of Nigerian politics and national life?
More crucially,
Buhari had been a post-war military leader of the whole country, including the
area where the civil war was fought and most crucially, he sits today in Aso
Rock as the democratically elected President of the whole of the Federal Republic
of Nigeria. How can such a man tell us he wants to be remembered for fighting a
war against his own brothers and sisters, except of course if he does not
recognise them as such?
Again, the
problem here is that Buhari will not appreciate the interpretation I have put
to his view here, because he’s very assumptive. He, like a lot of his colleagues
who fought the war on the federal side, thinks the greatest barge of honour any
Nigerian can get is to say they fought in the civil war on the side of the
federal forces. To them, it is the height of patriotism, the singular most
important evidence of their love for the nation. They cannot understand that a
nation that you have to fight to hold together does not deserve such
uncompromising worship, even if you love the idea of its togetherness.
What do I mean?
Countries or nation-states are what they are – a jumble of peoples and nations
coming together to form a sovereign political entity they call nation. Their collective
motive and ambition as a people must therefore be to continue to do things to
enhance the unity and national character of that entity. Their leaderships must
continue to drive the nation towards a national purpose, a national vision and
a life that is more meaningful in the sum of its parts, rather than in separate
parts, be it politically, economically or socially. A nation cannot afford the “we”
and “them” mentality in the minds of its leaders. Yet, what happened when Buhari
was questioned in faraway United States about how he intends to deal with the
Niger-Delta and issues of amnesty, bunkering and inclusive development? The man
unabashedly said he would be concentrating on looking after those that
supported him electorally! Yes, we have a president that is actually telling us
and the whole world that the whole of Nigeria is not his constituency, because
some Nigerians from certain parts dared to vote for a political opponent in an
election he won!
Honestly, I have
been the first and would always be the first to berate Buhari’s handlers for
not preparing him well before he makes some of these public comments, home or
abroad; but it does not change the fact that he’s said enough already for us to
paint a good and honest picture of his
mental cognition of Nigeria. This is how Buhari sees Nigeria and there’s
nothing spin-doctors can do to change that. It’s our reality.
Now, it is this
unflattering reality that is birthing the Biafra ferment of today and this
Biafra ferment is only representative of other sectionalist ferments, because evidently
it is not only Ndigbo elements that are angry over the National Question. Buhari
and some big elements of his party campaigned against the National Conference organised
by President Goodluck Jonathan. They did, not because they had any alternative,
but because as members of majoritarian ethnic groups they simply were not and
still are not interested in addressing the National Question. Yet, we know that
since our flag Independence in 1960, the National Question has been the hottest
issue on the national agenda, even as our predatory elite consistently ignore
it! We’ve fought a war over it, we’ve had people executed and imprisoned over
it, we’ve had a free and fair election annulled over it and we’ve had Sani Abacha
and Olusegun Obasanjo swindle us with promises of it until Jonathan managed to
deliver it to us, warts and all, in the form of the National Conference he
organised. Every discerning person who has had the opportunity to read the Conference
report agrees that if we can translate what is agreed there into reality,
Nigeria would be a fairer and more perfect union. Yet, what do we have now, but
dead silence on the matter as though it does not matter?
It’s instructive
that during the election campaign, Buhari thought that he could just go on
hammering on about corruption, unemployment and insecurity without saying how
he intends to address the National Question. He thought that was enough to get
him into Aso Rock and truly, it was enough. But what he failed to realise is
that people’s concern for existentialist issues at that time isn’t a case of
them forgetting the fundamental problem of our national relationships. Nigerians
are good at packing things in a corner with a view to dealing with them later
just because they’re dealing with something else at that moment. True, nations
suffer from national amnesia sometimes, but a national memory cannot be lost.
Buhari’s total
refusal to propose anything in terms of addressing the National Question during
the election campaigns and questions over his sectionalist and ethnically-lopsided
appointments (while letting the Conference report gather dust) have left
several people feeling that he is not committed to a fair, equal and truly
united country. They are recalling his past divisive comments and reading his
body language now and concluding that what he wants is to directly or surreptitiously
subjugate others and force them to accept his own idea of Nigeria by using the
instruments and power of state to effect this by hook or by crook. I talk to a
lot of people and can say categorically that there are many who believe that because
of his investment in ethnic jingoism and his irrational fear that true
federalism could lead to the North losing power and access to resources from
other regions, Buhari will not and will never discuss the National Question or propose
anything that will address it as far as he’s President of Nigeria. This is the
equivalence of taking us back 30 years, because if we look back to the moment
of the beginning of active activism over the Sovereign National Conference
(SNC), which was after he was overthrown as military Head of State in 1985,
that’s exactly what it comes to.
President Buhari
and those who have his ears must understand that the ferment in Igboland today
is based on the perceived and actual alienation they suffer presently from his
administration. True, majority part of Igboland supported President Jonathan
and the PDP in the election, but that is neither here nor there. It should not
be a reason to punish them this blatantly in national affairs. Buhari has made
it clear through his actions that they are going to have a much reduced role in
his administration and most of the roles they are having are clearly
tokenistic. What this does is that it gives ethnic demagogues and rabble-rousers
like Nnamdi Kanu a platform and his unlawful arrest and continued detention
against all principles of democracy, due process and decency simply becomes the
best recruitment message for already disenchanted young people in the South-East,
especially when they are being beaten or shot by the police or soldiers when
they demonstrate peacefully. The reason for this of course is because Buhari’s instinct
is still militaristic and dictatorial. He does not understand that locking
Nnamdi Kanu up is the best thing that can happen to Nnamdi Kanu and his cause.
He does not understand how this action undermines his claim to being a democrat
and how it’s making him lose face nationally and internationally. Buhari failed
to cash in his national goodwill in Igboland by showing he’s a uniter. He might
want to argue that he does not hate anybody or group, but in politics
perception is reality.
Make no mistake
about it, Nnamdi Kano is no patriot. He’s spoken enough publicly for us to know
this as a fact. I have no problem with him calling himself a Biafran, but as we
speak today, there is no sovereign entity called Biafra, so I do not recognise
him as such. This is not because I have anything against the cause of Biafra,
but only because it is not a real state I can identify at the moment. But I
recognise him and identify him as an Igbo man and a Nigerian, even if he
rejects the latter. It is my right to identify him as I choose and that is how
I have chosen to identify him. I identify him as such, because those identities
are factual, socially and historically sustainable and sustaining realities. Kanu
did not commit any offence by setting up Radio Biafra, because he’s entitled under
Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights to do that. But what he
is not entitled to do is to go around inciting people and soliciting for arms
to fight for a sovereign state to be carved out of a sovereign Nigeria. When
any Nigerian or purported Biafran does that, it is attempting to wage war
against Nigeria and that is treasonable.
The point I’m
making is that no matter the emotional hoopla attending this matter, the fact
remains that Nnamdi Kanu has no authority from a critical and identifiable
collective of the majority of Igbo people to speak for them on the cause he
claims to champion. He is not a known political leader elected by the people of
Igboland, he is not a natural ruler and he is not in a position to pursue the
cause of self-determination for millions of peace-loving Igbo people who do not
want another civil war, who want to remain and be part of Nigeria as Nigerian citizens
and who, even if they want to leave, want to do so through peaceful means. A
referendum cannot just be manufactured from thin air. It is the product of painstaking
negotiation that will determine the terms and conditions of the acceptance of
its result as binding on all parties. Its starting point must always be that
there is enough peaceful ferment on the ground to demand for it. This is how
all nations that have seceded peacefully did it. That is how those legitimately
seeking independence today are doing it. So, really, the Nnamdi Kanu road is a
road to hell, but Buhari is making it look like the right road to a lot of misguided
people. And we better not believe that everyone out there agitating or supporting
the agitation is a miscreant. There are genuine, well-to-do, law-abiding
citizens amongst the hordes we see marching around. We can politely and
respectfully disagree with their view, but we must accept that our social
experience meets us at different places and leaves us with different perceptions
of an issue, especially one as emotional as self-determination.
So, what do I
suggest? Simple. Buhari should order the immediate release of Nnamdi Kanu into the
hands of certain well known Igbo national leaders that he, Kanu must present as
referees - people he is comfortable with. Buhari must not victimise these
people because they are guarantors of Nnamdi Kanu, rather he must always liaise
with them over this issue, including empowering them to deal with the aftermath
of the ferment today on the ground amongst disaffected young people. Nnamdi
Kanu must give an undertaking that he will not again solicit arms to fight the
Nigerian state in the name of self-defence and Buhari, on behalf of the Nigerian
state, must guarantee that Nnamdi Kanu’s rights to free speech, freedom of association
and freedom to share and impart ideas are protected. Of course, if he says or
does anything against our laws, he can be arrested, charged promptly and
prosecuted, like any other Nigerian the state feels has broken the law. Buhari should
do this and douse this whole unnecessary tension created by this Biafra
ferment.
But while the
above is the short-term or immediate solution to the problem as openly
expressed now, Buhari has to understand that it is a suggestion based primarily
on the idea that the nation can do without this Biafra-instigated distraction
in the light of the huge existential challenges facing Nigeria at the moment
and to which all material and intellectual resources of the nation must be
deployed. However, in the medium and long-term, I will urge Buhari to begin to
implement the report and recommendations of the National Conference once he and
his advisers have considered how this should proceed. He should start with the
view that before the end of his first term, we would have substantially
implemented these recommendations towards a better union. If he wants to put
the report before an official committee or the National Assembly before proceeding
or acting on it, he may do so. But what he cannot do is keep silent and hope
the national impetus to create a better, fairer, just and more equal Nigeria
for all will just go away. With Boko Haram still the menace it is, he has to
act now on this issue before things totally get out of hand.
Kennedy Emetulu
…