I have refrained
from commenting on the pact between the All Progressives Alliance (APC) and the
“new PDP” because, to some extent, I am involved.
While the
merger process of Nigeria’s main opposition parties – which led to the
formation of the APC – lasted, I had reason to engage some of my comrades,
colleagues and friends on whether the APC was necessarily a progressive move in
the quest to reclaim Nigeria.
Even with all
the misgivings and the seemingly lack of direction of the proposed party, some
of us held out hope, partly because of the pedigree of certain individuals in
the party and the fact that it afforded a broad-based platform and an opportunity
for many Nigerians who were looking for a formidable pan-Nigerian opposition
party.
At the risk of
being dismissed as opportunists, some of us took the stand that the APC should
be given the benefit of the doubt; that within the context of bourgeois
democracy, the APC looked like a minimum agenda for change and therefore should
be supported by all, including left and radical elements; that as a minimal
strategy, genuine democrats and progressives could actually work in the APC to
break the stranglehold of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) on power and
begin the urgent task of national reconstruction.
I am not sure
I hold the same view today. This piece is not a repudiation of my former position
but a review that has become necessary in light of the current reality. The
general direction of the APC has not been that of a party that understands the
mood of the people and the anger in the country against a profligate ruling
class that has used party politics as a channel to loot the national treasury
and impoverish Nigerians. That anger manifests each time APC leaders cozy up to
the same people Nigerians hold responsible for the current crisis.
It started
with visits to former military president, Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida (IBB) and former
head of state, Abdulsalami Abubakar, but it didn’t stop there. Of course, we
know IBB and what he stands for. I have been asking myself, since the
pilgrimage began, the purpose and the end result. Regrettably, the leadership
of the APC has failed to explain the rationale for this unholy alliance and the
benefit, if any, to its bewildered rank and file.
For me, the
last straw was the image that made headlines during the week; the image of
former president, Olusegun Obasanjo, a man so violently consumed by self-interest,
standing shoulder to shoulder with the leaders of the APC. Obasanjo needed that photo opportunity to save
face after a scathing public rebuke by his daughter, Senator Iyabo Obasanjo. But
for the APC it was a new low for a party still struggling to make an impression
on Nigerians. I believe every party worth its salt must have basic beliefs and
values that it must uphold at all times.
It was bad
enough that Nigerians expecting a change in the political landscape witnessed
APC leaders pandering to Chief Obasanjo; the reasons adduced for the visit left
a bad taste in people’s mouth. “You have come out of tribulation and held the
highest position in this country. We are here because of your courage. Nobody
can claim that he has information more than you,” Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, the
national leader of the APC said of Chief Obasanjo. “You have surmounted a
number of crises. Nigeria is divided (now), more than before. To realise a
stable Nigeria we want to encourage you to continue to speak the truth. We’re
resolved and determined to rescue Nigeria. We want you as navigator.”
Asiwaju Tinubu
noted that the visit was not necessarily to get Chief Obasanjo to join the APC
but “just to draw from the experience of an elder statesman.” What is Obasanjo’s
experience? What readily come to mind are coups, a legacy of corruption, abuse
of human rights, criminal impunity, undermining the rule of law and, of course,
a dysfunctional family.
The inimitable Nobel Laureate, Prof. Wole
Soyinka, captured the popular sentiment in his terse statement on the APC visit
to Chief Obasanjo when he noted, in reference to Chief Obasanjo’s new role as
the “navigator” of the APC rescue ship. “If General Sani Abacha were alive
today, would he also have been on the ship's complement? As Captain
perhaps?” Soyinka asked, while warning that the country might be headed for a
shipwreck. He
advised
“families to begin the stockpiling of life-belts for the guaranteed crash.”
I think this
is a warning we have to take seriously. Exactly two years ago, Asiwaju Tinubu
had this to say about Obasanjo and his experience: “What integrity has Obasanjo in terms of his legacies for Nigeria
to speak on elections? Apart from his aborted third term ambition, he
brought about and left a legacy of electoral corruption in the country. What is
Obasanjo talking about? He should go away and retire in shame politically. He
should leave the political landscape of this country alone. He brought
a whole salad of corruption, manipulation and failures.”
What a
difference two years make! Nothing captures Chief Obasanjo’s legacy better than
the preceding paragraph. What will Obasanjo bring to the APC? A mass following
needed to defeat the PDP in 2015? While Obasanjo was lambasting President
Jonathan in an 18-page open letter and explaining how he (Jonathan) was destroying
the PDP, he was busy scheming – at least we learned that much from Iyabo
Obasanjo’s letter – how his daughter will run for office on the platform of the
APC.
I know in war,
as in politics, there are no eternal allies or perpetual enemies, but eternal
and perpetual interests, to paraphrase Henry John Temple, (Lord Palmerston), mid-19th
century British prime minister. However, I couldn’t help but squirm when I saw
the picture of Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), a three-time presidential
candidate, beside Chief Obasanjo in the APC train; the same Obasanjo he had alleged
violated the sanctity of the electoral process twice and denied him the presidency.
The APC is
better served spending time strengthening the party in terms of an ideology and
building a mass base rather than consorting with the likes of Chief Obasanjo
and Gen. Babangida (retd.). Without this mass base, the party will implode in no
time. But it appears that is asking too much of a party focused on short-term political
gains.
It is a lot
easier to open the floodgate of defection for those who are disaffected within
the PDP; and the defectors are coming like flies attracted to feaces. At the
current rate, the “original” APC will soon be a minority in the new formation.
Ordinarily, there is nothing wrong with people defecting from one party to
another. But that is if you are talking of parties with “character” so that, in
the case of the APC, the “newcomers” will have to play second fiddle and fall
in line with party principles and positions.
I don’t want
to sound sanctimonious or puritanical. A political party, we know, contains “the
good, the bad and the ugly”. But when you have a party that claims to be
progressive recruiting people who are not in the least interested in a genuine
discussion about the interest of Nigerians and at the same time acting as if
its survival depends on that recruitment then there is reason to be wary.
I know a few
leaders of the APC who are not particularly thrilled by the visits to
“yesterday’s men” and what appears to be an alliance of desperation between the
APC and the “new PDP”. But clearly, they simply can’t resist the only thing
that seems to bind them together – the removal from power of President
Jonathan.
Is APC a
“progressive” party as the name implies, even in the limited sense of the word
or just an association of those opposed to, not necessarily the PDP, but
President Jonathan? The APC and the “new PDP” may well win in 2015. And after
that what next? What will be the dominant tendency in the party? I am offended
to think that I’ll sit down, if that opportunity will ever come, with Obasanjo,
IBB, Kawu Baraje, Bukola Saraki, Ali Modu Sheriff, Ahmed Sani Yerima, etc., to
discuss the welfare of Nigerians. If the prospect of that doesn’t scare APC faithful,
then nothing else can!
Is the APC agenda
about removing President Jonathan or rescuing Nigeria? If it is the former, then
a revolutionary third force or in the minimum a coalition of small but
progressive and mass-oriented parties is the only alternative!
The body language of APC leadership is that
this is our party, our business, and we can damn well do anything we want with
it. If that is the case, then voters have little or no choice as we head
into the election of 2015.
conumah@hotmail.com;
Twitter: @conumah

Good piece Chido!
ReplyDeletegreat piece. we all need to think for ourselves and stop the blind fanatic following of our "leaders" remember,there are no leaders without the led
ReplyDelete