How pleasant it is to read first person accounts - I was there , I saw, I heard, I said, he said, she said, we said, they said , did, and of course depending on the integrity and in this case no reason whatsoever to doubt the veracity , not to mention the sagacity of Anthony A. Akinola or Caesar ( veni vidi vici) we are redeemed from the uncertainties of spurious fake & false news from the street vendor partisan press, well-oiled (the oil wells of Naija, where oil dae flow underground like river and from those rivers, like the ink in their pens, financially lubricated, sometimes writing at the behest of some well- paying politician or politicians. In the world of Najia journalese it could be the “Daily Trust” which even if not his campaign mouthpiece7praise singer, at least said to be owned by one Alhaji Atiku Abubaka whose top ambition is to be the next President of Nigeria, the paper in which Professor Peperoni regularly features some anti- Buhari jibes, and when he is not “correcting” or disrupting the integrity of Mr. President's grammar, he is busy questioning or assaulting the faithfulness or morality in Mr. President's vision , action or inaction,. For contrast, it could also be my numero uno, the always circumspect, upright, insightful and incisive Ayo Olukotun, verily a guardian and protector of the mind...( Chimes of Freedom)
The scope of this article about the vagaries of political vagrancy (with politicians of no fixed party abode, like sniffer dogs on the prowl migrating from party to party , usually from the green to the greener colour of money the equivalent of more honey , power and influence ) could be extended to embrace other parts of Africa, including Sierra Leone where the phenomenon of “cross -carpeting” is still rampant and where voters wonder what to do with a candidate that they voted for as an APC candidate but who , turns coat and colour by “ joining” the SLPP who are in “power” presently, of course with the express aim not of helping to develop the country ( that's the devil) in disguise but with the covert intention of helping to loot the country. This is partly because the party in power is always in a better bribe or “ buying” position, usually with the national treasury as part of the party's personal assets.
Re- “Sadly, these defections are encouraged and will continue to attract the attention they do not deserve until we have a community of voters that are adequately educated and imbued with confidence and independent-mindedness in the political choices they make.”
Of course, this phenomenon would be considerably diminished if the elected parliamentarians, senators, etc. were directly responsible to their constituencies , those who have elected them, hence it's a common practice to write a letter to one's MP, complaining about this or that or the other, and on the floor in the UK House of Commons we hear barely known backbenchers pleading specifically for their constituencies . Sadly too, this is not the case in Sweden for example where it's a matter of proportional representation ,whereby you get into parliament depending on how high up your name is on the party's national voting list.
Imam ALI (a.s.)
Brother 'Tony:
Thank you very much for your brilliant and very informative piece, which has helped several of us outside Ekiti to understand and appreciate this aspect of Nigerian politics emanating from the local (Ekiti) area. Seriously, why did "Pan-Ghanaian" Fayemi still win in what my late mentor (Baba Ijebu) would have described in Yoruba as the"gyau-gyau" ("you-chop-and-I-chop") politics? I thought that the defections would hurt his chances, given the scenario that the local chief and the lady visitor described to you about the APC candidate?
I am always grateful that, during my postdoctoral fellowship year at Oxford in the mid-1980s, you as well as Brother Olufemi ('Femi) made sure that I met and had some meaningful contacts with Professor Kirk-Greene of blessed memory, a very witty and equally
brilliant Africanist. Didn't he speak and write Hausa with some eloquence? Of course, I echo your brief but meaningful prayer for him, which he deserved: May his great soul rest in peace!
A.B. Assensoh.