By
Jaye Gaskia
We begin with the paraphrasing of the
verse from Y.B Yates brought to popular consciousness by our own Chinua Achebe;
'We returned to our places, these kingdoms; but it is no longer at ease here
with the old dispensation, with an alien people still clutching at their
godfathers.....'
If there are still any persons left
that are yet to accept the reality of a critical, and fundamental crisis of
governance within the classes - ruling and subordinate alike; and between the
classes; then the events of the recent weeks ought to be clear enough a
manifestation for every conscious person to at the very least begin to discern
the monumental challenges that confront us as a people and nation; as well as
the historic opportunities that open up because of these challenges.
Lenin while analysing and writing, as
well as preparing for the Russian Revolutions, on the crisis of revolutionary
proportions which confronted the world at the turn of the last [20th] century
identified some very basic but key conditions for revolution to take place: The
first being that the crisis is of such a proportion that the ruling classes can
no longer rule in the old ways! The second, being that conversely, the
exploited and subordinate classes are no longer willing to be ruled in the old
ways.
Now all of these elements are present
in the current national and global scenario, and have been present since the
global onset of the current all embracing crisis with the food crisis of 2007,
and the financial crunch of 2007/2008. What has been missing is the third
condition; the availability of a conscious political vanguard of the exploited
and subordinate classes, that can direct and coordinate the disparate responses
and activities of the poor and channel this towards a conscious contestation
for power, and in the first instance, state power!
Let us take a deep, critical,
reflective and dispassionate look at the current situation in our country; a
crisis that has been unfolding and deepening since 2007, and which reached an
apogee during the January Uprising of 2012!
There is at this moment in time, and
the closer we get to the 2015 general elections, no major party that has not,
or is not facing a crisis.
The ruling party got split into three
components - the PDM, the New PDP, and the Old PDP. The new PDP has announced
its intention to merge with the opposition APC; and even in this it risks a
split within the New PDP. The Old PDP, remains still at war with itself! The
most significant indication of this is it's contradictory response to the
electoral sham in Anambra during the Governorship elections.
The APC, a recent merger of major
opposition parties is itself going through its own internal turmoil. In Ekiti
state, there has been a split from the party with the splitters moving into
that unashamed commercial political sex worker of a party called the Labour
Party; the most significant stock exchange party existing in the country, where
rejected dissident politicians from other main parties, can for the
appropriate fee, buy the party's ticket for any office!
In Anambra State on the other hand,
CPC, one of the major constituent parties of the merged APC, was one of the 16
so-called political parties that came out to affirm the fairness and freeness
of an election, that the main umpire itself has admitted suffered major lapses,
up to the point of raising the allegation of sabotage!
The point being made is that this
behemoth of an opposition party, even much more than the ruling PDP it seeks so
desperately to displace; is a marriage of strange, if not antagonistic
bedfellows! This merged party which is still eagerly approaching and trying to
swallow up other dissidents, is still parading an interim national leadership;
and is yet to conduct any national or state conventions for the purposes of
electing party leaders! It is a party united more by the desire of its
disparate members to unseat the PDP and take over power, than by any common
ideological or programmatic vision of transformation of the conditions of
living and existence of our people.
What can we say about the other
parties? Well a majority of them are just waiting for the next big man of small
big man to decamp from one of the parties and then consider their party as a
platform to realise their puny ambitions.
And, oh of course, less I forget, there
is also APGA. Which APGA? Which of the factions/ or Fractions within factions
is being referred to?
The scenarios painted above represent
very distinct and clear front lines of the intra class struggle within the
thieving, light fingered, treasury looting ruling class. What about the
dimensions of the inter-class struggle; between the exploiters [the top 10% of
the population that own and control 41% of national wealth], and the exploited
[the bottom 20% of the population that control and own only 4.1% of national
wealth; or the bottom 50% of the population that own and control only 20% of
national wealth]? What about these ongoing now open, now covert struggle
between the classes? The crisis in Education and the marathon strikes of
academic staff at one point or the other during this year, across tertiary
education [ASUU, ASUP, COESAU], is one of the most dramatic manifestations of
this inter class struggle!
But so was the January Uprising of
2012, in even more significant and poignant ways! The health sector has also
witnessed unprecedented mass general strikes over the last few years; as have
other sectors at national and state levels.
What about the demolition of the homes
of the poor in the name of urban renewal? Or the criminalisation of the
livelihoods of the poor and their harassment by government agencies; again in
the name of security and urban renewal? Are these not very valid expressions of
the intensified nature of the class struggle between the poor and the rich?
If the strikes are examples of class
struggle waged by the poor against unbearable exploitation; the demolitions and
banning of livelihoods of the poor without alternatives are clear indications
of the class struggle waged by the ruling class to increase the exploitation of
the poor!
And an example of the of intra class
struggle among the poor, exploited and subordinate classes? Well look no
further; the crisis in tertiary education is also manifested in the attitude of
the non teaching/non academic staff unions to the struggles and demands of the
academic staff unions? Every struggle, demand and strike by academic staff has
very often been opposed and stridently too by the non academic staff [junior and
senior alike].
Or the situation when every time a
corrupt politician is exposed, crowds of poor and exploited youths and older
persons including toddlers and children are rented to participate in 'paid for
rallies' to support their son or daughter, and insist that their son or
daughter should not neither be exposed nor punished for dipping their dirty
fingers into our collective teal!
So now we see clearly the current
context, and the scale and scope of crisis within and between the classes. If
we quickly note that the context within which these political and social crisis
is taking place, is that occasioned and driven by a economic crisis of historic
proportions; then we can understand, that these holistic and all embracing
crisis when flipped on the other side like a coin, also presents immense
historic opportunity!
First a quick summary of the
socio-economic crises; poverty levels of 70% and 46%; one that rose from
54% in 2001 to 70% in 2012; unprecedented high unemployment figures that rose
from 9% in 2001 to 23.9% in 2012, along with a 45 to 50% unemployment rate for
youths between 18 and 35 years of age; or is it the rate of treasury looting
that now hovers above N220bn per month figure; with kidnapping for ransom and
crude oil theft now some of the most profitable industrial sectors of the
informal economy?
Just check that in spite of annual
security and surveillance contract in excess of N30bn annually to 6 militant
generals and their crews; crude oil theft has shot up from less than 200,000
barrels per day prior to 2010, to more than 400,000 barrels per day in 2013,
amounting to a colossal loss of nearly $18bn annually!
This is the context within which, and
the background within which the political crises is unfolding; so much so that
the ruling class is finding that it can no longer rule in the old ways; while
the exploited classes are also refusing to be ruled in the old ways!
And it is this context that provides
the historic opportunity, that this generation of Nigerian patriots, activists,
and active citizens are called upon to seize, and take advantage of. It is
important for us to build the type of mass, and popular political movement,
autonomous of political Godfathers, and independent of the ruling class
political platforms; to organise our resistance, mobilise our anger; and
undertake our frontal cahllenge of the thieving and historically inept and
corrupt ruling class for power!
It is up to us to take our destiny into
our own hands; It is time we organise and mobilise to Take Back Nigeria; And Now!
Follow me on Twitter: @jayegaskia &
@[DPSR]protesttopower; Interract with me on FaceBook: Jaye Gaskia & Take
Back Nigeria.

No comments:
Post a Comment