To understand more fully, the current wave of political realignments in the country and be able to make objective projections, it is important that we first cap ourselves within words of a Romanian-born American Jewish professor, political activist, Nobel Laureate, human rights activist and Nobel peace prize-winning author of more than 50 books, Elie Wiesel, who among other remarks, noted that as a people, “we must take sides as neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.’’
Taken objectively, the above opinion is considered important to Nigerians who are in this period of change and uncertainty, particularly as the nation prepares for the forthcoming general elections, faced with freedom to make choices but traditionally manipulated – a development that may at the end of the day push many to stand-by and helplessly accept the future that may be forced on him.
On the other hand, Wiesel’s wisdom, in the estimation of the majority of Nigerian political leaders, is nothing but a false proposition that should be discarded.
And it hardly needs to be said that the above state of affairs adopted by our ‘leaders’ has visibly weakened the masses ability to determine how their political officeholders emerge, led to a gross failure to achieve effective leadership in the country and promote general disinterest in the masses participation in the nation’s political life.
As we focus on the enormous crisis above, it is important to renew emphasis that political alignment/realignment in Nigeria, as we know is not a creature from outer space as the country has in the last 58 years of independence undergone ‘‘life-changing’’ political metamorphosis where Jeers have without end deafened the cheers.
What has however caused concern is that after watching the recent manipulation of power and ambition, demonstration of the art of compromise, and the rise and fall of political desire to conquer during the party primaries, the masses still appear not to allow the wisdom from that experience to be their teacher.
Looking at the nation’s electoral arrangement, the onus to setting the political agenda for public office seekers lies on the masses. But what we have seen instead is that the majority of Nigerians have abandoned this crucial responsibility and become fixated by the emergence presidential candidates such as Asiwaju Bola Tinubu of the All Progressives Congress, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party and Mr Peter Obi of the Labour Party among others without asking about who truly love Nigerians or who among them truly love the country.
In the same breadth, Nigerians have not also shown enough concern about the quality of those going into the various chambers of the legislature even when it is obvious that the country may not have a good president without good lawmakers.
This fundamental failure of the masses to proactively probe the obligation of power, and possibly seek reasons as to why the democracy we practise has neither guaranteed social justice nor promoted social mobility is responsible for the agonising national crises Nigeria is currently facing.
Without a shadow of a doubt, ours is a nation burdened by poor leadership. The country is imbued with captivating visions, policies and plans. But quality leadership dearth and corruption-induced failure of implementation of development projects on the part of the political leaders is responsible for the underdevelopment of the country; this appalling situation should be enough reason to set our imaginative prowess to task towards the coming general elections.
The inability of an average Nigerian to act in this direction is a barefaced proof that the greatest problem confronting us as a nation is that the majority of us have lost, or had never equipped ourselves with the philosophy to challenge the nation’s economic logic and capacity to pursue the theory of development or governance.
It is instructive that Nigerians are not reaping the electoral/democratic dividends and may continue with this burden of the familiar tactics because they have allowed the means they currently live to outdistance the civility they should seek.
This situation is even worsened in the writer’s opinion by the over-reliance/bootstrapping of our obligations/rights to the ‘leaders’ who unfortunately are in the habit of being ‘compassionate by proxy.’
Sadly, this challenge when closely examined has its foundation rooted in the successive administration’s criminal neglect and reduction of the nation’s educational quality baseline as bequeathed to us by the colonial masters. And which, like an unchained torrent of water, has submerged our pragmatic intelligence and democratised poverty while leaving Nigerians incapacitated to arrange an order of priorities that promises solutions which are decent for the present political situation.
And, it will amount to a higher level of self-deceit on the part of Nigerians to believe that the present combination leading the nation will bring the needed structural and socioeconomic changes in the country as they did not come for such programme and will not reassemble for it.
Coming out of this sorry circle as a nation particularly as we approach the general elections will apart from developing imaginative reintegration to ask solution-oriented questions, demand from Nigerians ‘electing intelligent citizens that will unite Nigeria, those that know the history of Nigeria well and have the charisma, skills, and networks to attract and bring educated and knowledgeable people together without ethnic or religious learning and avoid nepotism. Those who are honest, transparent, and are not greedy.
Apart from the above demand, it may also be politically advantageous if Nigerians increasingly either by choice or by accident stand with greater determination to support candidates with virtues that the world can respect, those with the moral and ethical principle that all can applaud – such support must be confident and trust-based and instant gratification propelled as currently practised.
But in the interim, there is no time for sitting on the fence. This is the little beginning that will ensure the emergence of a new Nigeria that we shall all be proud of.