NIGERIA'S ELECTION 2019 AND THE LOOMING ASSAULT ON TRUTH
NIGERIA'S ELECTION 2019 AND THE LOOMING ASSAULT ON TRUTH
- Dr. Godknows Boladei Igali
Amb. Godknows Igali |
At last 2019 has, with poise, come!
Like a spinning wheel, the orbit of political maelstrom in Africa's largest
democracy, Nigeria, has completed its course after nearly four years since
2015. So, the country joins the league of nations around the world having
general elections at the very dawn of 2019. Nigeria's elections, covering all
levels of governance come with profound duality; of positive expectations and
ominous anxieties. But in all these, an apparent and emerging concern of
stakeholders and observers is the assessment of truth or the absence thereof,
that is, lies and falsehood.
We need to recognize from the outset
that one of man's greatest life pursuits, almost as valued as daily existence
is the search for what is considered as truth. At the intellectual level, no
other subject matter has preoccupied the mental rigour and philosophical
enquiries of countless ages of thinkers, scholars and religious schools as this
one. However, the search for what is considered truthful by human society has
raged with equal concern as its definition and meaning and exact evaluative
criteria for what may pass as truth or not. When it comes to election season as
we have entered in Nigeria, the polemics as to what is truth or not become more
adumbrated.
We recall that it was the Roman
Governor of Judea, Pontius Pilate who while adjudicating on whether the Lord
Jesus be condemned to death as recorded in John 18v23 that retorted
imploringly, "What is truth?" Still today, many in Nigeria and across
the world, especially at times like this, re-echo or rephrase those historic
words: “What is Truth?” and why is it so elusive? The answer is complex and
subjective. Hence some schools of thought have doubted its empiricism.
Supporting this, even the revered ancient source of knowledge - The Emerald
Tablets stated that "All eyes do not see with same vision, for to one an
object appears of one form and colour and to a different eye of another".
It is views such as this accentuated by the vagaries of life that many prefer
to ascribe great relativism to the whole concept of truth. This accounts for
the multiplicity of religious traditions and even political aggregations such
that each sees the deep and the end of reality through the narrow prisms of
their persuasions, dogmas, creed or faith.
So what has happened even here in
Nigeria is that many variants of the concept and content of truth are in the
public space. On the one side we hear terms such as minimalist truth, pragmatic
truth, inferential truth and self-evident truth. On the opposing side, rather
cheekily, some insidious corpus of belief systems have been allowed to creep
into our common discourse on national political platforms. So our political
class have conjured such perversions as acceptable lies, justifiable lies,
minor lies, reasonable lies, etc. At wider global level, the scenario is
similar, with one leading authority on the subject of lying, Sissela Bok, in
the book, "Lying: Moral Choice in Public and Private Life”, details a wide
stream of philosophical reasoning for what they term, “justifiable lying”.
As politicking starts in Nigeria, the
question is really whether truth is as fluid and amorphous as is suggested by
its proponents? The answer certainly is in the negative. There is wide amount
of absolutism and exactitude in many things considered as truthful. Outside the
unbending confines of religious dogma which we happily live with in this
country of supposed prayerful people, our daily human existence oscillates
between clear contrasting swings of diverse sorts.
If we are to inbox daily scenarios in
Nigeria, whether in our villages, states or federal capital, it would be
foolhardy or outrightly mischievous to trivialize the truth of our enormous
opportunities to build a very great nation or attenuate the lurking challenges
before us. As a matter of fact, tilting back to self-serving generalizations,
embellished narratives, woeful blame games and outright denials at different
levels, amongst political parties or opposing candidates, do not diminish our
actuality. A few posers will suffice.
Can anyone contradict the fact that
we have suddenly become a very divided country, where ethnicism, sectionalism
and sectarianism are now referral points? In what can be considered our recent
past, Generals Muhammadu Buhari and Tunde Idiagbon emerged as Head of State and
de facto Vice President respectively although both were Fulani by ethnic
origin, of the Islamic faith and from Northern Nigeria in terms of geographical
origin. Yet most Nigerians welcomed their pro-moralist administration and in like
manner condemned their unacceptable Human rights scoresheet. Even more telling
was the MKO Abiola and Babagana Kingibe duo. Both of them being Muslims won
democratic elections in 1993 as President and Vice President on one ticket.
Nigerians wholeheartedly accepted their candidature. What was important in the
minds of voters in that election was whether they will deliver on their
promises.
Within the corpus of Public Service,
it was the same thing. What mattered was pedigree, qualification and suitability
for service. Predispositions such as cronyism, nepotism, clannishness was
unheard of. Many young officers in the Nigerian Public Service became shinning
stars in their places of service and rose to the highest peaks, effortlessly.
This was based on their record of performance and on the recommendation of
superiors, often from other parts of the country who had mentored or had
oversight over them. Not so today,
From Abuja to the various state
capitals, many leaders at different levels only find sanctuary and security in
the cocoon of those who dress like them, eat what they eat, pray like them and
speak their local dialect!
Again in the not too distant past, in
most Federal Government offices, it was considered disrespectful and
uncivilized conduct to speak vernacular in the presence of colleagues from
other parts of the country. But these days it is practised in a brazen manner,
encouraged and promoted by those who should be guardians and protectors of our
collective harmonious coexistence. Even in states where diversity is
pronounced, the practice is common. In the same vein, young graduates from all
strata of society who looked forward to being thrown far away to the uttermost
parts of Nigeria to participate in the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) are
no longer as enthusiastic. Now they pick and choose where to serve and often in
their states or those in close proximity to their states of origin.
What about security? Still within
very recent memory, incidences of violent crimes were far apart, when they
occurred. Cases of fatality made headlines and were received with awe, shock
and collective condemnation. As recent as the 1990s, Nigerians debated openly
that the spectre of suicide bombing symptomatic of the Middle East, would never
occur on their soil. When Maitasine, the extremist religious sect surfaced, it
was shamed from all the four corners of the country by Muslims, Christians and
others. At the moment, it's all totally different. Gruesome killings,
unspeakable violence have almost become the norm to the extent that Nigeria
presently occupies Number Three position in Global Terrorism Index (GTI). We
are competing with the likes of Afghanistan, Somalia, Syria, as a theatre for
senseless bloodletting. Like the once ill-famed Cambodian "killing
fields", thousands and thousands of our fellow compatriots are slaughtered
every year through violent crimes and by ethno-religious extremists. Dozens of precious
lives are wasted daily in the hands of political desperados, militants,
ritualists, kidnappers and armed robbers. With elections by the corner, a
recent reliable study has again cautioned about the likelihood of politically
motivated violence in about 30 states.
A few of the other socio-economic
indices are even scarier. The UN has lately determined that Nigeria has become
one of the most unsafe places in the world for a new born. We are now the
country with the highest levels and risks of infant mortality. Similarly, just
a few years ago India was at the rear in two other areas: Sanitation and
Extreme Poverty. Suddenly, Nigeria has overtaken that country of over one
billion people. We have become the cynosure of extreme hunger, poverty and
lack. Despite, the boom in Agriculture announced in Abuja and some state
capitals, we are almost at the same level of poverty with Bangladesh,
Democratic Republic of Congo, and Niger Republic. In terms of poor sanitation,
we are sadly the number one country in the world where open defecation is
endemic with attendant consequences in the spread of highly infectious
waterborne diseases such as typhoid, dysentery, diarrhea and cholera.
The gunpowder of Youth Unemployment,
unarguably a major global scourge deserving of a national emergency made a
slight improvement in Nigeria according to ‘Trading Economics’. Moving from 38
percent in 2017 to 36.50 percent in 2018 gives little room for cheer. It is
still terribly high and one of the worst worldwide. The reality of this scourge
stares all Nigerians in the face as many of our young men and women continue to
roam the streets in pain, despair and hopelessness, year-in and year-out. The
implication of this state of affairs is a sharp drop in our Human Development
Index (HDI), comprising standard of living and overall quality of life and
human wellbeing. No wonder, majority of the perpetrators of the notorious Offa
Robbery were educated unemployed young persons. The spectre of despair is what
fueled, in recent times the deluge of young Nigerian persons headed to Europe
through illegal migration routes across the Sahara Desert and the Mediterranean
Sea with many losing their lives. Others, even if it sounded unbelievable,
ended up in modern-day Slave Auctions in North Africa, coming as it were, 200
years after the abolition of Slave Trade in the 1800s!
Another truth which stares us in our
faces is the state of our infrastructure. Roads, Power Supply, Healthcare,
Water and Sanitation, Transportation, Public Schools at all levels, etc. In all
these areas and many more, can we sincerely say that we measure up to the
standard and quality of service delivery as our neighbours? A visit across our
borders to either Ghana, Cameroon or even Togo and Benin Republic will provide
answers to this. In the midst of relatively modest sizes of national economies
and wealth, things work much better in all these countries than Nigeria. No
wonder, our children now troop to these 'poor neighbours' to search for
education. It’s the archetypal oxymoron of the lesser surpassing the greater.
Rather than show remorse, settle down
to tackle the problems with sober commitment and proactive action, we choose
the more self-serving attitude of passing blames. From Abuja to most of the
state capitals, the imaginary ghost of the immediate past government and its
officials continue to haunt current leaders and policy makers. In some cases,
the obsession with denying responsibility is taken to ridiculous extents. Even
the military era and our colonial past are not spared in the blame game.
The totality of all these negative
inclinations has found expression in the unimaginable level of brazen lies,
half-truths, innuendos and falsehood being peddled as political campaigns
begin. No less is the unleashing of very wicked, deceitful and intentional
untruths and false impressions. The campaign period seems to have created a
workspace for purveyors of blackmail and practitioners of extortion to thrive.
Even more repugnant is the ease with which politicians move from one ideological
position to the other without qualms after fouling the air with lies and
untruths. They call it cross carpeting. Ironically, even the Persian Carpets
from where the concept was derived has well founded creative patterns which
remain unchanged for thousands of years!
Our discourse on truth and lies
brings us to a final truth which many in the political class and leadership
fail to realize. It is that Nigerians are smarter, better informed and
knowledgeable than before. They know that in spite of some token efforts at the
centre and the states, most of Nigerian leaders have performed woefully, and
pitiably below pass mark. Therefore, our overall self-assessment as a country
would tend to be average, at best.
Even if the combination of prowling
poverty and the shock of seeming political conquest by their leaders may have
blighted the capacity of Nigerians to speak out, they know the good and
committed leaders from the scaremongers and hyenas. Praise singers and rabble
rousers continue to mislead our leaders by peddling lies, and more lies at
political rostrums and media outings.
Rather than play the ostrich or
continue to evade the truth, our political leaders should face reality and take
stock of the journey so far. As the Presidential, Governorship and Legislative
campaigns daily gather momentum, the season should inspire deep reflection,
introspection and self-assessment. Indeed, one of most hackneyed phrases of the
great Islamic Scholar, Sheik Usman Dan Fodio in justifying the need for moral
and spiritual rebirth of his day is, "Conscience is an open wound, and
only truth can heal it.’’
This is a time to own up to our human
frailties, errors, failures, indiscretions and deliberate shortcomings. Rather
than continue to attempt to put truth itself on trial or celebrate the orgy of
lies, it's a time to face our humanity with courage. Above all, remember that
classical aphorism - "All power belongs to God". Actually, it is
"not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth; but of God that showeth
mercy".
Dr. Godknows Igali,
is a Diplomat and Administrator. He lives in Yenagoa, Nigeria.
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