Oct 24, 2013

Page 63

TODAY IN THE NATION

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2013 TRUTH IN DEFENCE OF FREEDOM

VOL.8 NO.2,645

‘I think Maduka is a saint, compared to many PDP businessmen and their children currently in court, allegedly for forging documents to defraud government of N1.7 trillion.’ JIDE OLUWAJUYITAN

COMMENT & DEB ATE EBA

G

OODLUCK JONATHAN, Nigeria’s president, was visibly stunned when a former vice-president, Atiku Abubakar, and seven state governors recently walked out of a convention of the ruling People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in open rebellion against his leadership. The party has won every election since it took power after the end of military rule in 1998. But it is bitterly divided over whether Mr Jonathan (pictured above) should run for a second full term in 2015. As a result, there is a chance—most analysts are wary of putting it more firmly—that, whether or not Mr Jonathan stays at its head, the PDP’s mighty cash-laden machine may lose power. And that could turn Nigerian politics upside down. Mr Abubakar and the rebel governors have broken away to declare a “new PDP”. “We have taken it upon ourselves to rescue the party from its dictatorial leadership,” says Kawu Baraje, the new outfit’s chairman, who has accused Mr Jonathan and the rump party’s chairman, Bamanga Tukur, of allowing “political repression, restrictions of freedom of association and arbitrary suspension of members”. The breakaway faction has a distinctly northern flavour. Six of the seven rebel governors are from the north or the middle belt, exposing faultlines that have widened under Mr Jonathan, a southerner from the oil-rich Niger Delta. Only one rebel governor, Rotimi Amaechi, from Rivers state, is a southerner. Mr Amaechi, who is said to hanker after the vice-presidency in 2015, has been embroiled in an acrimonious row with Mr Jonathan and his wife. In May Mr Amaechi was voted in as chairman of the powerful Nigeria Governors’ Forum, beating the president’s favoured candidate, Jonah Jang of Plateau state—an embarrassing defeat for Mr Jonathan. The forum is divided, with 19 governors backing the rebel governor and the other 16 sticking with Mr Jang. “I am concerned for my safety,” says Mr Amaechi, who has apparently taken to driving alone, with non-government number plates. On September 1st 57 PDP members of the 360-seat House of Representatives, the federal National Assembly’s lower chamber, pledged their loyalty to the rebel PDP; 22 of the 50 sitting PDP members in the 109strong Senate then followed suit. Several others are said to waver. The rebel caucus, known as the G7, may be able to swing the votes of delegates from their states at the PDP primary election next year, when the

OPEN FORUM Things fall apart ‘One result of the in-fighting in the ruling party is that the momentum for economic reform, already flagging, has slowed even more. Few people now expect the longstalled Petroleum Industry bill, which is meant to bring clarity to Nigeria’s oil industry, to pass. Nor will the PDP’s rows help the president to end violence and sabotage in the oil-rich south, where billions of dollars of oil money still fall into the hands of criminals and corrupt politicians, or to win the campaign against terrorists in the north’ •Dr Jonathan

party is due to choose its presidential and vice-presidential candidates. The G7 includes the governors of Kano and Rivers states, two of the most populous. Unless Mr Jonathan squelches the party rebellion, he could lose the primary. In an effort to regain the initiative, the president has sacked nine of his ministers. It is no coincidence that four are from states whose governors have defected, while another two were originally nominated by Olusegun Obasanjo, a still powerful former president (1999-2007), who helped Mr Jonathan into the top job but has more recently been making trouble for him. A PDP insider says there is a grow-

RIPPLES

BOKO HARAM WILL SOON BE HISTORY-Army Chief IHEJIRIKA

...and let HISTORY not forget how long BOKO HARAM ruled.

ing mood of paranoia in the party as leading figures seek to dodge Mr Jonathan’s axe. Mr Jonathan may now put close allies in ministerial posts to limit the influence of governors, especially in states such as Kano and Rivers. On September 16th the rump PDP announced that Mohammed Abacha, son of the late General Sani Abacha, Nigeria’s notoriously greedy military dictator (1993-98), had been brought back into the party from the opposition. It is speculated that Mr Abacha, who is himself vastly rich, may run for governor of Kano under the auspices of the old PDP in 2015.

HARDBALL

A

BOUT a decade ago, a certain gentleman and business mogul, a Sudanese to be precise who goes by the name Mohammed (Mo) Ibrahim was so exasperated by the abysmal level of governance and leadership in Africa, he decided to do something pragmatic to change the situation. He set up the Mo Ibrahim Foundation which in turn created the Ibrahim Index for African Governance (IIAG). He then instituted the biggest of all prize money awards in the world for the African leader, president or head of state that behaved well and led his people right when in office. In deed, the Mo Ibrahim cash prize is a whopping $5 million (about N800m) to be disbursed to the winner over a period of 10 years; there is an added prize of $200,000 (about N32m) to be earned annually for life by such goodly leader. It is Mr. Mo’s pragmatic effort to impact leadership by seeking to eliminate pecuniary worries and providing an assured future for leaders who choose the straight and narrow route. Having reckoned that corruption occasioned by the fear of what the future holds leads many African leaders to covet public treasury thereby derailing their modest efforts at governance; the huge cash reward was meant to be an incentive for quality

The Mo metaphor leadership. But after seven years of this noble experiment, Mo must be disappointed if not mortified that the Mo index may have become a metaphor, an indicator for gauging poor, irredeemable governance in Africa. The IIAG may have succeeded only in showcasing to the world that good leaders are hard if not impossible to find in Africa. Since 2007 when the Joachim Chissano won the inaugural edition, only two other leaders have won it – Festus Mogae of Botswana (2008) and Pedro Verona Pires of Cape Verde (2011). Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu were given honorary and special awards respectively in 2007 and 2012. Without any disrespect to Mozambique, Botswana and Cape Verde, it could be said that since its inception, the prize had not been won by any leader of note. The leader of such a country that would make a big bang and the reverberations would engender a push and pull effect across the continent. Where are the regional giants like Nigeria, Ghana,

It is also possible that Mr Jonathan will get the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), an agency that is supposed to snuff out corruption, to probe the PDP’s defectors, some of whom have already been targeted by it. A weighty northern senator, Bukola Saraki, had already been questioned by the EFCC before holding meetings for the rebel faction in his grand house in Abuja, the capital. “Jonathan will do anything to win,” says a senior PDP man. “But he will struggle in the north where the mood is very antiJonathan and anti-PDP.” One result of the in-fighting in the ruling party is that the momentum for economic reform, already flagging, has slowed even more. Few people now expect the long-stalled Petroleum Industry bill, which is meant to bring clarity to Nigeria’s oil industry, to pass. Nor will the PDP’s rows help the president to end violence and sabotage in the oil-rich south, where billions of dollars of oil money still fall into the hands of criminals and corrupt politicians, or to win the campaign against terrorists in the north. On September 28th militants from Boko Haram, a jihadist group, killed around 50 students at an agricultural college in the northern state of Yobe. The PDP’s feuding factions are to meet for talks on October 7th. Mr Jonathan and his PDP rump may have enough oil money to buy their way out of trouble. But for the moment the pendulum has swung in the PDP rebels’ favour. Moreover, the opposition in the shape of the All Progressive Congress, a recently formed coalition of three main parties, has also been getting its act together—and will surely try to lure some of the PDP rebels onto their side. The president, who often seems a hapless (but rarely hatless) figure on the national stage, has a real fight on his hands to keep his job. On October 1st he handed licence certificates to 14 private companies that have been allowed to buy chunks of Nigeria’s dismally incompetent state-owned electricity behemoth. If a lot more people had reliable electricity by 2015, that might win him some crucial votes •This article was published on October 5 by The Economist of UK •Ambassador Dapo Fafowora returns in a fortnight •For comments, send SMS to 08111813080

•Hardball is not the opinion of the columnist featured above Cote D’Ivoire, South Africa, Angola, Kenya, Zambia, Egypt, Morocco and Tunisia, to name a few? Mo must get increasingly frustrated that an idea that was hailed as brilliant at inception is fast becoming a dead dock. In four out of its effective seven years, the foundation could not find a worthy recipient for the Mo Ibrahim Prize for Achievement in African Leadership across the entire continent. Thus for 2009 and 2010 no awards; it is the same story last year and currently. But if only this was half of the story, perhaps Mr. Mo would not be so frustrated but in its latest survey of African countries by the Foundation from 2000 to date, Nigeria, the giant of Africa has been slipping down the ladder, representing a bad example for the rest of the continent. For instance, she fell eight places in the ranking down to 41st out of 52 countries of Africa. And in the subregion of West Africa, Nigeria ranks 13th out of 16 countries. What this sad story means for Nigerians is that such small west coast regional countries like Benin, Togo, Liberia, Burkina-Faso and Guinea are better governed than Nigeria. The Mo index has actually become a metaphor for the very poor quality of governance and leadership in Nigeria more than anywhere else in the continent.

Published and printed by Vintage Press Limited. Corporate Office: 27B Fatai Atere Way, Matori, Lagos. P.M.B. 1025,Oshodi, Lagos. Telephone: Switch Board: 01-8168361. Editor Daily:01-8962807, Marketing: 01-8155547 . Abuja Office: Plot 5, Nanka Close AMAC Commercial Complex, Wuse Zone 3, Abuja. Tel: 07028105302. WEBSITE: www.thenationonlineng.net E-mail: info@thenationonlineng.net ISSN: 115-5302 Editor: GBENGA OMOTOSO


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.