By Chinedu Ekeke
Nigeria’s Senate president, David
Bonaventure Mark, is deeply troubled. And his present state of mind is
justifiable. The criminal empire which he is a prince of is on the verge of
crumbling, or so he thinks. He’s eyeing the kingship of the empire in a
few years from now. He wants to rule and reign in the kingdom. He has amassed
enough wealth and bought enough souls to make this possible. He dreams of
joining the league of candidates for prison who became presidents of Nigeria in
the last three or so decades.
But the turn of events, especially
since January this year, has jolted him. It doesn’t seem as though he would
have any smooth ride to the kingship he so much covets, neither would he have
the rest of mind to consume the millions he has so far amassed. He recently
heaped the blame on new media or social media. The credibility he has sought to
build in the last thirteen years hasn’t even taken off the ground, to his utter
dismay. Millions of Nigerians don’t see any reason to take him seriously. He
knows – or thinks – social media is responsible for this.
Last Thursday, while declaring open a
two-day retreat for Senate Press corps in Umuahia, Abia State, he said there
was a need to check the use of social media as Nigerians were using them to
demean their leaders. Hear him: “We need to change our attitude on how we
report things about our country and we should emulate the foreign reporters who
never report negative things about their countries.” So Mr. Mark wants to
sponsor – and pass - a legislation that would impose restrictions on the use of
social media in Nigeria. Once that is done, his confidence in the empire will
rebound, and his hopes of assuming the kingship will come back to live.
Again, Mr. Mark is justified, because,
you see, there’s so much money can buy; and there’s even much more plenty of
money can buy. The more money you make without working, the more you want to
spend without sweat. He pays himself N600 million from Nigeria’s treasury in
one year. That isn’t heavenly or biblical year. It is earthly year as we know
it; twelve calendar months, the one within which Barack Obama, the United
States president, earns N60 million.
What Mr. Mark pays himself in one year
is the salary of a US president for ten (yes, ten!) good years. What Nigeria’s
number three citizen takes home, legally, in one year, is what the number one
citizen of the world’s biggest economy, and only remaining super-power, earns
in ten years. Because no president stays beyond eight years in America, it
means what David Mark gives himself as earnings in one year is what will pay at
least two American presidents – one for eight years and another one for extra
two years. That means before Mark concludes his four year term, he would
have amassed enough money from our treasury that will pay United States
presidents for forty years! You see why he has to checkmate social media? You
can’t have access to such amounts of free money without being sensitive to any
avenue through which opposition rears its envious head.
Interestingly, what Mark is supposed to
be doing to be taking such a humongous amount home every year is the same job
the United States Vice President combines with his official job as the Vice,
and for which he earns less than one-tenth of the money Mr. Mark allocates to
himself. Actually, it is the President of the US, not his Vice, who earns up to
one-tenth of Mark’s annual bazaar. So for taking home N600 million for doing
nothing, why will David Mark not feel threatened by social media?
It is even more annoying because years
before now, nobody knew how much of injury his avarice –and those of his ilk -
inflicted on the nation’s treasury. It was easy for him to buy up the entire
mainstream media peopled by brown-envelope-seeking journalists and editors in a
hurry to join the resource-grabbing frenzy of those who rule Nigeria. His
Ghana-must-go bags were handy for willing media people who had no regards for
the sacred role the society, and their jobs, had thrust upon them. Today, Mark
can’t control what gets into the new media. He can’t control the number of
people who read just a tweet, or Facebook post or blog post, detailing how much
David Mark grabs monthly from the purse of a nation in pathetic poverty. He
can’t control who reads this piece or who doesn’t. He can’t pull down this
website or the other ones linked to it through which this piece will be read by
thousands or millions of Nigerians. And this is why he is troubled.
There is also the conscience – or even
emotional - side to his discomfort. He hates the poor, and gets angry at the
sight of any poor person enjoying whatever he (Mark) considers a luxury. Most
of the people who attack him and his tribe of nation-killers on social media do
so with telephone which, years ago, he had declared wasn’t for the poor.
The society-made super rich which Mark loves dearly can’t say anything
wrong about him on social media. They are all colleagues in the nation-wrecking
industry. Clearly, it is those “poor” ones, or those who should be poor but
have somehow risen above it, that criticise Mark.
As Babangida’s minister of
communication, he told whoever cared to listen to perish the thoughts of making
telephone available to Nigerians. He stated, clearly, that telephone wasn’t for
the poor. It was for the rich, eaters of hundreds of millions of naira from
Nigeria’s commonwealth. Today, the senator watches even roadside mechanics
clutching their phones, reading the internet and seeing how much of a curse to
them this government has become. If you were Mark, you’d be troubled too.
He saw the shape of things to come from
social media last January. The OccupyNigeria protests jolted him and his
co-travellers. Forget the lies they took to the market of how opposition
hijacked the protests, he knew that the power of social media was at work. But
for lack of patriotism of the labour leaders who sold the protests to Mark and
his government, the government would have been brought down. And since then, he
has watched the social media project himself and the government in their true
picture: enemies of the Nigerian people. He saw the Arab Spring and how social
media swept away his mentors in Egypt, Libya, Tunisia and others. The senate
president has stomached enough. He isn’t going to take it anymore.
It is a paradox that the same society
which David Mark has so much undermined sent him to the Senate to represent
them. It is even more shocking that the same Mark was made the President of the
Senate, the nation’s symbol of democracy. Yet it is more paradoxical that the
head of the institution which should bear the torchlight of democracy is the
first person who has openly demonstrated his desire to outlaw the right of the
people to freely express themselves.
Mr. Mark’s ingratitude deserves a
special mention. Here’s a man who was part of Babangida’s gang that collapsed
Nigeria’s economy while their private economies, represented by their numerous
bank accounts, blossomed. This is the same Mark who failed as a communications
minister. Isn’t he supposed to be serving a lifetime in jail? Instead, he
bulldozed his way through our polity and just happened in the senate. And for
not taking a punitive action against him for his failure, he has got emboldened
to punish us.
David Mark has always represented
darkness in Nigeria. The senate he leads, which is an effective retirement
house for former state treasury looters, has represented everything a nation’s
senate should not be. While the lower house rose to the defence of Nigerians
during the fuel subsidy protests, Mr. Mark and his senate looked the other way
round just to preserve the darkness which so much benefits him. While the lower
house set up committees upon committees to perform their constitutional
oversight functions on federal government ministries, departments and agencies,
Mark’s senate chose silence which darkness brings.
He is preaching how reporters should
follow their foreign counterparts. Unfortunately, the Senate president, like
the other “leaders” in Nigeria, does not read. That raises another question:
what does he do with the newspaper allowance he pays himself? If he reads
American or British newspapers, then he would understand that a vibrant media
will always question their leaders.
But let’s even assume Mark is right
about foreign reporters not reporting the negatives about their countries; and
we choose to emulate them, has Mark emulated the same foreign countries in
insisting that politicians only earn realistic and sustainable salaries? Part
of what he wants us to report is that he doesn’t pay himself ten times the
salary of the US president, or that he hasn’t made efforts to frustrate,
through his senate, the demand of Nigerians that subsidy thieves be prosecuted.
Mr. Mark hasn’t seen anything yet.
I understand he is a Christian. I would
refer him to an interesting portion of the Bible. It is John 1:5: “The
light shineth in darkness, and the darkness comprehendeth it not.”
New media is the light of the 21st Century;
it is shining forth and forcing darkness to give way.
In the coming days and weeks and
months, we would know who gives way between David Mark and social media. But I
am convinced it won’t be the latter.
Source:
Saharareporters.com
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