The
one picture you would hate to see in your dreams is that of the very
opponent of the team you are supporting, clutching a massive trophy and
jubilating all over the place! Not just once had one experienced a
‘nightmarish’ dream of this nature and not just once had ‘Joseph the
Octopus’ proved to be revealing exactly what was about to happen.
Of
course, it should not be interpreted as if one does not want Maj. Gen.
Muhammadu Buhari to be the next president of the Federal Republic of
Nigeria but what the hell was he doing in my dream smiling so broadly as
he acknowledged shouts of ‘congratulations’ from a horde of adoring
supporters? The man can hardly manage a smile in real life and neither
is he the candidate one would ordinarily be rooting for. However, a
warning would seem to have come from the unknown: ‘Do not bet your house
against Buhari becoming (the next) president unless you are equally
prepared to be homeless!”
The above extracts
are from an article I wrote (title retained) in the run-up to the 2011
presidential election, having dreamt that Maj. Gen Muhammadu Buhari won
the election. Of course, he did not but, who knows, it could have been a
distant event that one had foreseen!
In trying to rationalise
the circumstances that could have made it a dream-come-true for Buhari, I
examined the controversy that surrounded the candidacy of President
Goodluck Jonathan over the zoning philosophy of his party, the Peoples
Democratic Party. That controversy, more or less, pitted the northern
leadership against him. I also examined the possibility that the then
so-called progressive parties might actually co-operate among themselves
in order to counterbalance the influence and power of the PDP. An
attempt made in that direction did not succeed.
Quite a lot has
changed since 2011 and the aforementioned factors, more than ever
before, will have implications for the direction of the Presidency come
February 14.
Firstly, the once splinter progressive parties have
coalesced into the All Progressives Congress, thanks to the
centralising influence of the institution of the Presidency. The
February presidential election will be fought in what is a two-party
competition between the PDP and the APC. Buhari could be the beneficiary
of this new development, as he now competes for the Presidency under
the platform of a political party which, unlike his defunct Congress for
Political Change, enjoys nationwide support.
Secondly, the
February elections will reveal the extent to which the intra-party
crisis in the PDP – a crisis which led to the defection of five of its
governors to the rival APC – has resulted into the loss or gain of
popular support in the various constituencies. I have attempted to
explain the causes of the crisis in the PDP by three factors: “One, a
frosty relationship between President Goodluck Jonathan and Governor
Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State; two, an allegation of arbitrariness on
the part of the immediate past PDP national chairman, Alhaji Bamanga
Tukur; and three, the perceived ambition of President Jonathan to seek
re-election in 2015 in contradiction of a supposed agreement that he
would not be doing so.” (see my book, Party Coalitions in Nigeria
(2014), pp. 129-130).
Cleavage, be it of ethnicity or religion,
is the worst of political problems. You hardly can resolve the problem
of cleavage by preaching to people to forget about those things they
hold very dear to their hearts. There are not a few in the North who
feel the South had dominated the Presidency for the greater part of the
current Republic; they will grab the opportunity provided by the
candidacy of Muhammadu Buhari in ensuring that the pendulum of political
power swings back to their region.
Finally, Buhari faces an
incumbent President, Goodluck Jonathan, who may be having problems with
economic and security issues. Allegations of escalating official
corruption and Boko Haram insurgency in the North-East may have
overshadowed the modest achievements of Jonathan. Of course, diverse
sentiments will compete and contend in the 2015 election, but there are
not a few who would want to reward or punish him on their perception of
his stewardship during the past four years. Buhari, himself a former
leader, has his own “baggages” but he enjoys the perception of being one
disciplined individual who passionately resents corruption. Corruption
has been that most deadly virus afflicting the Nigerian state.
There
is hardly any doubt that the days ahead will be quite interesting. What
we must continue to do is to educate our people about the ramifications
of democracy as a game where the minority must have its say while the
majority has its way. Why, for instance, would you want to throw the
nation into chaos just because someone has lost an election, even when
another member of your ethnic or religious constituency could be a
beneficiary in the near future? Why would you want the stigma of
“intolerant democrats” stamped permanently on you and your people? Our
nation must unite behind whoever wins the February presidential
election.
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