In his book, 'Emergency Politics:
Paradox, Law, Democracy', Bonnie Honig urges democracies to “resist emergency's pull to focus on life's
necessities (food, security, and bare essentials).” According to him, “these tend to privatize and isolate
citizens rather than bring us together on behalf of hopeful futures."
To start with, it is an undeniable fact that no society develops if and
when the forces inhibiting survival instinct far outweighs the idea, fantasy
and the pursuit of development. It is also a fact that this has been the bane
of Nigeria’s development and her evolution to a nation-state. They are
perpetual pulls which focus on unavoidable necessities of life among the
citizenry.
Development beckons when the basic needs of life are assured and/or
taken for granted. It goes without saying that, for sustainable development to
take place, the people must nurture a rich and distinct identity, which must be
based on stuff like common interests, geospatial proximity and similar
historical and ancestral sociocultural connections. In a word, spewing out
government policies or imposing sanctions aimed at uniting the people without
the sustenance of the basic needs of life is a futile exercise.
In a functional institution, the first
thing to bear in mind is that the institution has assumed abilities and
capabilities. Likewise, a political party is supposed to respond to issues
thrown at it, based on the understanding and capabilities of its essence! With
a particular reference to Africa, what the leadership of most political parties
has done so far is to keep the system perpetually unable to respond to them
negatively. It is also interesting to note that politics in this part of the
world would not have become a one-man show if society had not allowed it. This
further explains the diverse methods and approaches explored by political
gladiators and governments to define and administer public administration in
Nigeria.
While personalization, or myonisation of the political institution
is an error that’s capable of destabilizing the society, the indisputable truth
about life is that it is never static! It shifts! For instance, an uninformed
commentator, especially one with no deep understanding of politics in the
African setting, may argue that Bola Tinubu has myonized the ruling All
Progressives Congress (APC). An unreconstructable wannabe may also hypothesize
that the Adeleke Dynasty has become a leech on the destiny of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) in Osun
State; that nobody gets anything in the party and, now, in the government of
Osun State without embarking on a ‘deigning’ voyage to their Ede, Osun State ‘Country Home.’ But, if we may ask: how
did these suppositions start before we got to where we are? Where did the rain
start beating us before it eventually became a manifest phenomenon?
If the Tinubus and the Adelekes were seen
as strange or external agents who crept into their respective parties just to
satisfy their individual fantasies, why not maim their aims so that what remained
would be political parties, purely? But again, will these political parties
survive without these gladiators? If the true ownership of a political party
belongs to those who fund it, then, where were those who once went on survival
adventures elsewhere when Osun PDP, for instance, was gasping for breath before
the Adelekes saw an opportunity and invested their savings as the oxygen for
its revival? Now that it has responded in their favour, is it any wonder that
the likes of Olagunsoye Oyinlola no longer have control over a vehicle in which
he once rode to become the governor of Osun State?
Let’s get it right: political party
formation departed from the founding fathers’ ways back, albeit for selfish reasons. Unfortunately, what we have now is the
formation of parties behind personalities; and the personalities are not just
personalities, they are personalities with wealth. By nature, it is not in
their objective interest to wait for the people to come together - as members
of the party – to pay their monthly dues and levies, for the purpose of funding
its activities. No! The orientation is that members are to be fed and placated;
which initiates the ‘entitlement psychology’ in the people. Where then is the
commitment to the joint ownership of the party, more so as those who came and
were fed were only organized to appear at a particular place; and they did?
Once upon a time in Nigeria, how
characters like the late Paschal Bafyau rose to become the president of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) was a
function of certain conjectures. Adam Oshiomhole’s case was not any different
in that he also came through the implications and the complications of the said
system. Isn’t it sad therefore that those who were once beneficiaries of the
system’s large-heartedness, so to say, are now the ones destroying its fabric,
even within the unit that produced them? Interestingly too, successive
governments have so perfected the art that it has more or less become the norm:
whenever the government of the day makes a pronouncement that doesn’t go down
well with Labour, an industrial action is declared. After some industrial razzmatazz,
the government lowers the bar, and Labour suspends the strike, of course, with
a warning to the government that a repeat of the act would attract stiffer
reactions from Organized Labour. At the end of the day, the general observation
is that even those who are remotely connected to the deal would be hugely
rewarded, leaving behind helpless and hapless Nigerians who, indeed, can only
gnash their teeth.
Emphasizing the connections between
contemporary food politics and the infrastructure of consumption, among others,
Honig remarked: "we need good
citizens with aspirational ideals to make good politics while we need good
politics to infuse citizens with idealism." This again brings us to
the effects of emergency politics. Though politics provides governance and the
style of public administration, a prominent feature of emergency politics is
its capacity to sink into oblivion at the slightest opportunity. Shallow in
conception and haphazard in implementation, its benefits may come like a thief
in the night but, except by some divine happenstance, they pale into
insignificance before dawn.
Taking our clime as a case study, there’s
no denying that dear fatherland is currently a stratified capitalist society
comprising the "small flies"
whose "socio-economic conditions
reveal little or no intergenerational mobility relative to their parents" and
the "great flies" who "abuse their positions for private
gains." The more reason 'our great leaders' in this fertile ground for
political prostitutes are having nothing straightforwardly great to will; and
nothing startlingly special to offer the(ir) small men. It is also the reason the(ir)
small men are frustratingly searching the dustbin for their daily needs!
Political parties are created for a
purpose; and that purpose is as defined by the political gladiators, and the
entire people in the society will have to acquiesce. It is the structure of the
society that determines governance. It’s only within the precinct of the set
barometer that one operates. One cannot operate outside it. The tragic truth is
that Nigeria’s democracy is presently grumbling in the gulf of dishonesty and
contrived promises, even as cohesion has long left our political platforms.
Insecurity is threatening our coexistence and the monetary system is diffidently
beaming because it is no longer monitoring anything. That the governed appear left
with a feigned or an imaginary understanding of the vision of the government is
a major problem, which is so real.
May the Lamb of God, who takes away the
sin of the world, grant us peace in Nigeria!
*KOMOLAFE wrote in from Ijebu-Jesa, Osun State
([email protected])
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