Political
party stakeholders and supporters must have gone into spending
overkill, bank loans must have been accessed and properties sold off
with proceeds expended on supporting candidates running for office. A
thick stratum of emotion and piles of mental strain must have been
infused into the electioneering, and the cost of preparation for the
adjourned democratic process earlier scheduled for Saturday, February
14, must have been more than an arm-and-a-leg.
For those who
are pulling for either President Goodluck Jonathan or Maj. Gen.
Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), what they had anticipated would be a
celebratory, champagne-popping romantic love day-out on Valentine’s Day
hooraying their candidate’s victory, will be nothing but a saggy
Saturday in Nigeria. The announcement by the Independent National
Electoral Commission Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, last week that this
month’s elections had to be postponed for six weeks because of the fear
of Boko Haram’s butcher-knives, bayonets and tanks in some parts of the
North, carves an ominous picture.
I hope I am
wrong; I hope I am misreading the verbal and nonverbal languages of some
people seated in high places; the postponement is an awkward genesis of
a strange development in our polity, and the attending noises for and
against are only the first leg in the roll-out process of a national
horror-movie we all may be forced to watch. The apprehension and
suspense among Nigerians about the future of the country thus linger on
with no foreseeable end in sight. The truth, my friends, is that the
likelihood that elections will be conducted in Nigeria this year is not
only gasping for breath, it is sliding into a near-death situation.
On
Wednesday, February 4, 10 clear days before the original election date,
I had written through the social media platform these words about the
elections and they are still on record: “… There may be no elections
held in Nigeria this month… I hope I am wrong; I pray I am just jiving,
but I can’t stop thinking what I am thinking. There is something eerie
about February 14, and it’s not LOVE!”
On February 7, three days
after my prediction, Jega announced a six-week postponement of the
process under what many now believe may have been a situation of duress
and coercion. The Professor who had aforetime bragged and almost sworn
that nothing would change the date now came out defending what he had
viciously attacked. The new rhythm and rhyme sung by Jega was not the
INEC Chairman’s script.
We all know that elections are conducted
in convivial cohort with other agencies over which INEC has no
overriding charge; but if in the hotbed of widespread terrorist wars and
battles like Pakistan, Syria, and Afghanistan elections are conducted
without a botch or bungle; if in places where bombs are dropped hourly
and guns are fired by-the-minute communities still chose leaders through
the ballot box, February’s elections in Nigeria should have been held
without qualms.
Many of us now think that there is more to the
prevalent narrative of fear-mongering; and there may be something deeper
in a realm unknown and unseen where the Machiavellian move for
postponement was hatched by men who assume that their varying interests
(whatever they are), are threatened. The security issue raised may be
nothing but a crafty gloss over the real reason for a change in date.
With
recent developments of contradictory statements by those in power, with
mean-looking armed men cordoning off our once-peaceful streets and
armoured tanks rolled at the gates of opposition henchmen’s homes, it is
certain that the thought of relinquishing power by President Jonathan
and the ruling party will remain a wish, fantasia and chimera. The lofty
words of assurance and beating-of-the-chest by Sambo Dasuki regarding
the sacrosanctity of the new dates notwithstanding, some people
somewhere are only trying to buy time to bite and spite Nigerians.
Every
nation of the world has men who are not in power but possess immense
authority over who is. These men are found in all aspects of a nation’s
economy and they have the power to build up and pull down. These men are
the ones Pastor Tunde Bakare calls power-brokers, and some of us call
some of them elder statesmen. Some religious people call them
powers-and- principalities, occult folk call them rulers-of-the-darkness
of this world. Some angry, perturbed and beleaguered people in power
may call them “motor park touts”; but I call them powerful and sometimes
surreal voices hiding behind the mask of the Ides of March. These men
may have decided who will not be sworn in as president come May 29. Are
they God? No! They are men who think they are God and get away with many
acts. If you mess with them, they’ll mess you up; if you are too
stubborn, they’ll turn you into stubble.
These people, in
cunning compeer with those who love to perpetuate themselves in power,
are flying a kite that has no wind behind it in an attempt to continue
with a government train whose engine is about to pack up in ignominy.
Is
the President amongst the men? He has no reason to be. God loves
GOODLUCK JONATHAN, and he knows it. A man who walked from absolutely
nothing to the pinnacle of prominence and power? No! Goodluck cannot be
amongst those men because good luck has fulfilled destiny and he does
not have to rule for 10 years to prove anything. The future of Nigeria
is important to Goodluck and he knows that he will be pushing his good
luck too far if he is numbered among those men. Oh No! The President
cannot be one of them. If he is, whoever is telling him that he can pull
a perpetuation through is lying to him. Mr. President knows that the
consequences will be untold. He knows the roof will cave in on Nigeria,
the walls will tumble in, the land will be scorched, the territory will
be unbearably thermal, and the foundations will be shaken. That is not a
legacy Mr. President wants. Goodluck should know that power is
transient and God-given. No! Mr. President cannot be numbered amongst
those men who want a sit-tight situation. Jonathan will not want to push
his good luck; our President loves Nigeria first before himself! But
who is scared of a possible Buhari presidency? A lot of people! They are
those scheming behind iron doors that we don’t have an election. But
much more than the schemers, numbers are rooting for the General.
I
have bad news for those men, whoever they are. The voices of the people
have the ability to demobilise any horrendous conspiracy, the voices of
the people are resolute, and the voices of the people are rooting for a
change. It was the vociferousness of the people’s voices that kicked a
certain Ibrahim Babangida to the side after the June 12 chaos; it was
the unison in the people’s voices that sank Sani Abacha’s ship of
hardship and terror in 1998; it was the concurrence in the people’s
voices that compelled Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar to hand over power to a
democratically elected Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo, and the same voices in
tandem screamed against a Third Term sleek move by the latter.
These
same voices rose up undauntedly for Jonathan to become the substantive
president after his predecessor’s sudden demise, and the same voices
became the wind-beneath his wings strolling to the Presidency against
this same Buhari in 2011. These are the same voices that some garroting
Godzillas now want to muffle and mute. Somebody must remind them to
remember history. All we are asking for is that the people’s voices be
heard at the polls. Are the elections going to hold on March 28 and
April 11? Yes! Goodluck will let them hold; because Goodluck knows that
doing otherwise is heavily pushing his good luck.
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