Osuoka
|
As Nigerians from all walks of life gear up for the beginning of the “mother of all protests” on Monday, January 9, 2012, over increase in fuel price, journalist and author of Time to Reclaim Nigeria, Chido Onumah, interviewed Isaac Osuoka, director of Social Action and one of the leaders of civil society in Nigeria. Osuoka has been active in the country’s pro-democracy and Niger Delta peoples movements. He was one of the founders of the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC) and acted as its first spokesperson in the late 1990s. Osuoka who is currently a Vanier Scholar at York University, Toronto, Canada, speaks on the situation in Nigeria and why Nigerians must look beyond President Jonathan.
Excerpts:
CO: Whether we like it or not, you
can’t deny the fact Goodluck Jonathan enjoyed a measure of support before
the 2011 presidential election. What was responsible for this?
IO: Many Nigerians believed that
Goodluck Jonathan was a different breed from the backward cabal that have held
Nigeria hostage for the better part of the last 51 years. They thought that
because he is a native of the Niger Delta with very minimal historical ties to
what was referred to as the Hausa-Fulani oligarchy, that he represents a
refreshing change from the past. They saw a meek looking and educated man and
felt that maybe he is the change that Nigeria needs. Well, Goodluck Jonathan
has proven to Nigeria that he is not the change the country needs. In fact,
Jonathan is the worst President that the ruling class has ever foisted on
Nigeria.
CO: Was it a case of misplaced
optimism?
IO: Exactly! The man has shown that
he is clueless. He has shown that he lacks the capacity to address the very
serious challenges confronting the country. And what is even worse is that he
does not care. He does not care for the people of Nigeria. He does not care for
the progress of Nigeria. He has the mentality of a Local Government caretaker
committee chairman. He has surrounded himself with similarly clueless
characters who are only interested in how much they can loot while the booty
lasts. This is a president that hates Nigerians whom he thinks forced him to be
president and he seems determined to punish them.
CO: Let’s talk about the recent
increase in fuel price which has precipitated massive demonstrations across Nigeria.
IO: The removal of fuel subsidy
demonstrates again that the Jonathan presidency does not care a bit about the
welfare of Nigerians. Can you imagine the puerile argument that fuel subsidy
does not benefit the majority of the Nigerian people? Only those that see
benefit in terms of how much you loot can make such a stupid argument. You see,
since they know that the figures of how much the government is expending on
subsidies is over bloated because of the corruption in the system, and they
know the few individuals that have benefited from all the fraud, they have come
to associate benefit with whose hands are in the lucre. That is all they see.
The loot. That is all they are interested in. From their exalted position, they
don’t see the mass of the Nigerian people who are mostly unemployed or have the
lowest incomes anywhere in the world. That is why World Bank sponsored
economists like Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala will ask during one of her meetings with
the NLC why people were so worried over subsidy removal when about 70 per cent
of Nigerians don’t own cars! That is why the governor of the Central Bank of
Nigeria, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, who behaves more like a politician will talk
down to us and insist we must accept the fuel increase while he is comfortable
spending almost N20 billion ($133million) of tax payers’ money on a piece of
land to build a “world class international conference centre”. This has always
been their modus operandi. Was it not David Mark, then a soldier-minister under
General Ibrahim Babaginda (now senate president and a champion of democracy)
who berated Nigerian students for protesting increase in fuel because not many
students owned cars, as if many of us who went to universities outside our
state of origin had to trek to school. Can a ruling elite be more insensitive!
CO: Many Nigerians are saying that
rather than remove subsidy of petrol, the president should consider removing
subsidy on government inefficacy.
IO: What can I say? We are all aware
of the billions earmarked for feeding the president and the vice president in
2012. The vice president will spend N1.7 billion ($11.3 million) on trips in
2012 and N1.3 billion ($8.6 million) on office stationeries. This amount
includes N12 million ($80,000) on books, N45 million ($300,000) on newspapers,
and N9 million ($60,000) on magazines and periodicals. Does this show a
government that is serious? Go back at the end of the year and see how many
books were bought. We are in an emergency, but our rulers are busy frolicking.
Our rulers don’t see that there is no effective mass transit system anywhere in
the country and the people depend on petrol fuelled vans, motocycles,
tricycles, and kabukabus to move from home to work. They don’t see that the
public electricity system has all but collapsed and businesses and homes depend
mostly on petrol generators to do business. They don’t see that the people of
Nigeria are important. But why should they? They are used to rigging elections
and subverting the will of the people. For someone like Goodluck Jonathan who
has been the biggest beneficiary of the PDP rigging machine right from when he
was summoned to go and become deputy governor in Bayelsa, the people don’t
matter. Have you not seen how irritated he looks anytime he is on national
television and he is asked about lack of positive result with his policies? The
man does not understand why Nigerians should continue to complain. Over and
over again he has given the story that Obama or some foreign head of state has
praised him for what he is doing and he feels that is what Nigerians should
also do. But Obama does not live in Benin City and has not experienced power
failure in his life. So how should Obama be the one to decide whether Jonathan
is performing or not.
CO: Are you saying Jonathan is a
stooge of Western powers?
IO: It is worse than that. Jonathan is a stooge of backward Nigerian political
elite who are generally stooges of Western powers. Though as a stooge of
stooges, Jonathan has shown that he is particularly spineless and is most
amenable to even the slightest of pressure from those he considers powerful.
The man is so scared of those he considers powerful. Like the governors. Now
let us look at how this backward ruling elite always attempts to select its
weakest elements to act as pawns in the name of president. As far back as the
eve of Nigeria’s independence, the Sarduana, who was a powerful leader of the
North, selected a weak Tafawa Balewa to be Prime Minister. So we then had a
situation where the head of government of Nigeria, the largest state in black
Africa, was a mere stooge of powerful northern politicians and contractors who
expected the head of government to just represent their interests. We later had
Gowon who was maybe the weakest among northern soldiers that took power at that
time. Again, Gowon was a stooge for the main powers who remained behind the
scenes to share their loot while Gowon was speaking English in public. The same
thing with General Obasanjo who as military head of state was not the main
power. The same with Shagari, Nigeria’s first really clueless head of
government. Like Balewa the northern political establishment selected a weak
Shagari who will not stop them from looting. Babangida, Abacha. Those had their
different styles, but were really all continuations of a reprobate regime of
waste.
CO: You agree then with Chinua Achebe
that “the trouble with Nigeria is simply and squarely a failure of leadership”.
IO: I agree completely. Anytime
someone strong and a bit independent minded emerges, they kill him. But sometimes
the scheme of the dominant power blocs in the country backfires. For example,
when they sponsored Obasanjo to return as civilian head of government in 1999
against the wish of even people in Obasanjo’s village. Obasanjo came and
decided to play the game on his own terms. He had learnt how to play the game
from the soldier-politicians. He made sure he handed over power to a weak
politician. He carefully selected Yar’adua, a man he knew to be terminally ill.
Someone who will be too sick to rule. Obasanjo also forced Jonathan - against
Jonathan’s will, to become Vice President. Today Jonathan is Nigeria’s most
unwilling president. Political jobbers around him, including those of them from
the Niger Delta, asked him not to throw away the chance of the Niger Delta.
CO: If that is the case, is he
representing the interest of the Niger Delta?
IO: President Jonathan is the worst
thing to happen to the Niger Delta. Go and see the East-West road. The road
from Warri to Port Harcourt and beyond. The condition of that federal road is
worse than ever. This is an outrage! Every year there is a budget allocation
for everything. At the end of the year nothing to show for all the billions.
Why? This is because Jonathan is superintending over the biggest looting spree
in this history of Nigeria. Governors see state funds as their private estate.
Ministers see their office as reward for loyalty to governors and opportunity
to chop. Local government chairmen. Those are the biggest rogues! The National
Assembly is more or less a college of self-serving opportunists – most of whom
cannot even get close to winning in free and fair elections. They say most of
the big houses in Abuja have been built or bought by civil servants. Where did
they get the money? These people, all these people that have continued to loot,
are part of the political elite. They are happy that a clueless and spineless
person like Jonathan is President. They are the people insisting that Jonathan
remove fuel subsidy so that they will have more loot to share. Simple. But
Jonathan can’t see it. He doesn’t have that kind of vision. He and those eating
with him can’t see the groundswell of opposition to fuel increase. They can’t
see that opposition to fuel increase will ultimately result in resistance to
everything the ruling class represents in Nigeria. This is just the beginning.
In that case, the increase in fuel price is good. For the first time in a long
time Nigerians from different ethnic, religious and even class backgrounds are
massing together to build a new movement for change. That is what excites me.
Supporting the new movement should be the duty of every person who is keen to
see Nigeria progress. Neither Jonathan nor his PDP can do anything good for
Nigeria. What we need is not just a change of government, we need a system
overhaul. This needs struggle and perseverance on the part of the people.
CO: What do you make of the economic policy direction of the Jonathan
administration?
IO: He has none? We don’t see any
direction. We have heard them talk about a transformation agenda, but what is
that agenda? There is none! Corruption is on the increase. Have you asked
yourself why the president has not made public his asset declaration? What is
he hiding? The biggest challenge facing the Nigerian economy is electricity.
The government has done nothing to show that it even appreciates the urgency.
Statements, statements everyday, but nothing to show. What they want is to
continue to drill and sell crude oil and share proceeds to the three tiers of
government for onward looting. It is sad that the same thugs that have
benefited from the looting of Nigeria are the same people that Jonathan has
assembled to be part of his so called economic management team. These are
people that Jonathan feels indebted to because they provided cash for his
campaign. But is there no other way to reward political donors? Must you hand
over the management of the national economy to them? The governors are well
represented in that economic team. But what have they done in their states to
demonstrate that they can manage any economy? The heads of private banks are
also prominent. These people know how to make profit for themselves – mostly by
conniving with politicians and civil servants to launder stolen money. Does
that qualify them to manage Nigerian economy? Then you have Okonjo-Iweala - an
agent of international finance capital.
CO: Talking about Okonjo-Iweala,
civil society groups are asking President Jonathan to sack her. Do you share
that view? She is serving at the instance of the president, shouldn’t the focus
be on the president?
IO: I agree that the focus should be
on President Jonathan, but Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala is dangerous. Her case is
special. This is a person sent by the World Bank to continue economic policies
that have failed everywhere in the world. Okonjo-Iweala wants to deregulate
because deregulation is an essential ingredient of the neoliberal economic
doctrine of the World Bank and IMF. She is too far away from the realities of
Nigeria to understand that deregulating fuel price in Nigeria will have
negative impacts on all aspects of productive life. But does she care? No. All
her bosses in Washington DC expect is for Nigerian government to have as much
cash as possible to service the debt profile that is sure to increase under
Jonathan. Okonjo-Iweala’s greatest achievement in government has been the
biggest single transfer of wealth from Nigeria to other parts of the world. The
so called debt forgiveness meant that Nigeria gave money to Europe and North
America - representing the biggest wealth transfer in human history. They
said the savings from debt deal will be used to improve infrastructure. Where
is the infrastructure? Okonjo-Iweala is now saying that the gain from oil
subsidy will be used to improve infrastructure. Does this woman think that
Nigerians are fools all the time? It is just sad the way these people protect
their private interests and claim that they are trying to improve Nigerian
economy. Recently, I read that the Federal Executive Council awarded contract
in the billions for the importation of plastic trash cans from Europe. This is
for use in Abuja. Can you imagine that? Is Jonathan and his cabinet saying that
there are no plastic manufacturers in Nigeria who can do the job? There are
plastic manufacturers all over the country. All the government needed to do was
give specification to local producers and monitor and enforce compliance.
Keeping the job at home would have meant creating or protecting jobs at home
and all the benefits that come from local production. But this government does
not care for any local production apart from the production of crude oil. That
is why they can even think of increasing fuel price, the same action that could
completely destroy the local artisanal sectors where the bulk of production in
Nigeria takes place.
CO: The people in the Niger Delta must really be disappointed with
President Jonathan.
IO: I can
tell you that there was real excitement with the idea of a son of the Niger
Delta becoming president of Nigeria. Our people had been treated like
second-class citizens since Nigeria was created. So people were happy to see
Jonathan as president and went out to vote – even though we know that state
governors schemed to inflate the votes for their own purposes. But what has
been the benefit of a Jonathan presidency? Symbolic. Only symbolic. Today, the
traditional dress of the Niger Delta male, in particular, the Ijaw male, has
become something of a national attire. People from the Delta now dress as such
and can move in Abuja with a swagger. You did not have this before. Apart from
the symbolism and cosmetic impact, there is nothing substantial for the people
from the Jonathan presidency. Environmental pollution and destruction of
livelihoods by the petroleum industry is worse now than ever before. Today, we
have a major offshore oil spill by Shell and the Jonathan presidency is looking
the other way. There is no serious attempt to call Shell to order. Compare that
with the response of the Brazilian government to recent offshore spill by
Chevron. But with Jonathan in Nigeria, there has not been any serious attempt
to address the issue of lost livelihoods for the coastal communities as a
result of the recent Shell spill. It is a shame because there are people in
Jonathan’s system that had campaigned all their lives for environmental
justice. Now that they have the rare opportunity to do something, they are
looking the other way. The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) produced
a report on pollution in Ogoniland. The recommendations from UNEP should have
provided the Jonathan presidency with an opening to address the historical
environmental abuse of the Niger Delta. But all he did was set up a committee
like he does on everything. Anytime Jonathan sets up a committee, you know the
man is not serious. Or he just doesn’t care.
CO: It is a shame because President Jonathan is a major beneficiary of the
struggle of the people in the Niger Delta.
IO: President Jonathan is a beneficiary of the struggles of the
Niger Delta which he was never part of. Today, he is enjoying the goodwill of
even ex-militants who have continued to support the amnesty programme because
they feel their son is president. But Odi has not been rebuilt? Even Okerenkoko
has not been rebuilt. I agree that the amnesty programme has been very
successful in keeping militants off the creeks. The result has been restoration
of oil production to optimal levels. The government people are the biggest
beneficiaries. But the relative calm or peace as some people chose to call it
has not been utilized by the government as an opportunity to improve social
infrastructure in the Niger Delta or anywhere in Nigeria for that matter.
Things are getting worse every day. A few months ago, people in a village next
to Jonathan’s were protesting against Shell for abuses. People in the Niger
Delta now recognize that Jonathan is a waste of time. Let me tell you that
petrol is very expensive in the creeks of the Niger Delta.
Combined with the fact that the
engines of boats consume a lot of petrol, it means that removal of subsidy will
affect the Niger Delta the most.
No comments:
Post a Comment