By Theophilus
Ilevbare
Very often we say it
is unimportant where the next president comes from, what should be paramount is
his ability and capacity to deliver democracy dividends. But we are compelled
to tag along with the whims and caprices of self-appointed godfathers, men of
means and ways, who have turned power houses by virture of straying into
corridors of power.
Take it or leave it, issues like rotational presidency or
zoning in the interest of equity and fairness, will continue to be a big part
of Nigeria’s politics and (s)election process for a long time to come.
The famous Ndigbo
axiom of urinating together so that the much needed foam will form has become
implausible as distinguished persons of Igbo extraction have so far, failed to
work together. Make no mistake about it, the Igbos are respected for their entrepreneurial
skills but all too often derided for perceived lack of unity and inability to
articulate their position in matters of collective interest. This perception is
now aimed at subtly disparaging and marginalising them.
In the light of this,
news making the round that a presidential largesse have torn the Ohaneze apart,
tearing the zone's ambition to shred becomes credible. It is a cinch that the
Igbo presidency has been auctioned. The cacophony of voices mouthing the
ambition of the geo-political zone from the rooftop every four years is now
hackneyed.
It usually starts with the pronouncement that it is the turn of the
Ndigbo's by some eminent Igbo politicians, then resonated by Ohaneze and
amplified with subtle threats by MASSOB - bluffing to unleash fire and
brimstone if it does not come to fruition. They harp their agitation for the
presidency from the rooftop but when it matters most they fail to do the
needful - coalesce.
The best chance the
Igbos had to occupy the highest seat of democratic power was first in 1999 and
four years later in 2003, when a founding member of PDP, Dr. Alex Ekwueme,
contested the party’s primaries with Olusegun Obasanjo. South-East governors
and their delegates voted instead for the Ota farmer. It was a shame that governors
from the zone could not rally behind their own.
Only Mbadinuju (governor of
Anambra State at the time) and his delegates, polled for Dr Ekwueme in 2003.
Orji Uzor Kalu, protem coordinator of Njiko Igbo (a group working for the actualisation
of an Igbo presidency) did not support an Igbo when he had the opportunity.
Isn’t this the height of hypocrisy? On two occasions, Kalu saw Ekwueme’s name
on the ballot but voted Obasanjo. Many Ndigbos still believe the Igbo
presidency project died with the defeat of Dr. Alex Ekwueme at the PDP national
convention because if he had won any of the primaries, he would have gone on to
win the general elections and become President!
The Igbos can learn a
lesson in unity from other zones who have ruled the country. In 2011, within
the PDP, we witnessed how five northern presidential candidates surrendered
their personal ambition to scrutiny by the panel set up by the Arewa
Consultative Forum to decide who represents the North. Who would have thought a
political heavy weight like Ibrahim Babangida would bow out for the consensus candidate
of the ACF? It is wishful thinking to imagine this scenario among Igbo
aspirants. However, it is not asking for the impossible for same from them.
The perceived lack of
ambition of governors of the South-East has not helped the cause of the region.
The fear of the EFCC or the Rivers-Amaechi treatment, for them, is the
beginning of wisdom. They have chosen to file behind the self acclaimed
“chairman” of the NGF, Gov. Jonah Jang in absolute loyalty to President
Jonathan.
Compare them with their colleagues from the North – all of them
thinking they have a realistic chance at the presidency. For the Igbos, what we
hear is the discordant tune of the PDP governors singing President Jonathan’s
ambition, forming all sort of alliance with South-South governors. Leaders of
the zone, for selfish and pecuniary reasons, are preoccupied with canvassing
and building support base for Jonathan. It is indeed, sad, that they have
auctioned the collective ambition of the Ndigbos.
The death of Odimegwu
Ojukwu, the former Biafra warlord, to a large extent has hushed the voice of
the Ohaneze, the foremost Ndigbo socio-political forum and direct opposite of
the boisterous ACF of the north. In recent time, the agitations of the Igbos have
been distant and unconvincing. The Ohaneze seem to have given up on their
dreams, choosing to grope and gloat in the back and forth of the northern
groups with Ijaw leaders.
But then, some argue
that there is a dearth of Igbo leaders who can are sellable on a national
platform. A visit to some of states in the east will convince you why none of
the state governors is being muted as a potential presidential aspirant. Underperformance
and mediocrity has been taken to a whole new level. Physical infrastructure is
decrepit and social amenities are frebile. Only Enugu and Imo bear a semblance
of states with governors.
Juxtapose them with their colleagues in the
South-West where you have the likes of Governor Fashola who has transformed
Lagos. Even the South-South can boast of an Oshiomhole who is making giant
strides after 10 years of comatose PDP leadership in the state. Some governors in
the north have turned the economy of their states around in spite of the meagre
allocation from the federal government.
Furthermore, South-East
governors do not share the same vision on the 2015 Igbo presidency project like
the northerners do. Gov Peter Obi, is more interested in who controls the APGA
machinery. He is at loggerheads with Rochas Okorocha. The latter leads a
faction into the opposition coalition, APC, believing the Igbos can mount a
serious bid for the presidency, or at least a VP ticket. Sullivan Chime has
never shown any kind of support for the Igbo presidency project. Same with Abia
state governor, Theodore Orji, apart from his occasional rhetorics about an
Igbo president, has shown little commitment.
For a region that has
not benefited from the largesse the government doles out to quell violence from
youths in other parts of the country, they truly deserve the highest office in
the land. Anytime MASSOB speak in hash tone, they are quickly hushed with threats
of treason by security agents. Terrorists in the north have crippled the
economy of some states, yet government is begging them and other dreaded sect
in the north to accept amnesty.
Militants in the
Niger Delta plundered the economy of the nation with sustained attacks on oil
installation until they were granted amnesty. Till date, same region is safe
haven for oil bunkering, like never before in the country’s history. If for nothing at all, the Ndigbo must be
commended for the manner their youths have conducted themselves over the years.
MASSOB and other groups have remained law abiding even in the face of
provocation that would have triggered reprisals like the recent killing of Igbo
traders in the north by suspected members of Boko Haram.
All of the
restiveness in the Niger-Delta and northern Nigeria have not resonated in the
East. That the region have not produced the president of the country is enough
reason to resort to violence, afterall, the orgy of blood shed that morphed
into terrorism sprang up after the 2011 elections, when some politicians of
northern extraction threatened to unleash mayhem if the results of the
elections did not go their way. Same northerners who have produced the leaders
of this country for over 30 years since independence!
The usual reframe
that has left the Ndigbo where they are today has been, the South-East should
support other zones, this time the South-South for Jonathan, and in another
four years time, it will be their turn.
Regardless of whether
Ndigbo present a consensus candidate for the general elections barely two years
away, Nigerians hold the ace, as they are to decide, through the ballot, who
becomes the next president.
theophilus@ilevbare.com

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