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Yar'adua's regime of policy inconsistencies-by Is'haq Modibbo Kawu

November 6, 2008
Our weekly Editorial Planning meeting last week, chose as cartoon of the week, a piece that was drawn by Abdulkareem Baba Aminu. The cartoon had a snoozing Umaru Yar’adua on his table while an aide pointed at the ailing man and said that was the “rule of lull”! It was a brilliant pun on the mantra of the regime which every passing day exposes as a fraud, just like practically everything about the regime itself: the way it was imposed after a fraudulent election; its general disposition; the inability to consistently fight corruption; being hostage to a group of former and serving, governors; the very narrow, provincial core of the regime; an obtrusive and ambitious presidential spouse, just to mention a few! In the Yar’adua presidency, we are witnessing what might potentially be the worst regime in Nigeria’s history. It is clear that we have in power today, an incompetent president who is equally spineless! If my assessment sounds so harsh and pessimistic, it has come precisely from the mixed signals that the regime issues on practically every decision. Yar’adua is so annoyingly inconsistent and indecisive, that I personally think that after a year in power, we may conclude that the man just does not fit the frame of the president of Nigeria! A hallmark of the spineless regime is the wont to taking decisions and after coming under the pressure of its corrupt sponsors, it ends up retreating. The examples of this are legion, but the most recent one was the decision taken to reject the hosting of the Under-17 World Cup. The Yar’adua regime had announced to the world that Nigeria was not going to host the competition, given the outrageous sum requested by those saddled with the organization of the tournament. A whopping thirty five billion naira had been padded up by the same forces that had been milking Nigerian sports: they milked Nigeria during the 1999 World Youth Championship; they stole us blind during COJA in 2003 and they became just as brazen with the 2009 championship. The nation was taken aback by the amount of money that Amos Adamu’s sidekicks in the LOC requested especially because a lot of those things they were asking for had been the basis of the corrupt and inflated contracts of COJA. So when the regime announced that Nigeria was not going to host the event, there was a lot of understanding and support for the decision. The truth was that Nigeria was getting an opportunity to solve a few problems in one fell swoop: reject a championship of fraudulent budgeting and then moving a step further to sack Amos Adamu, the mandarin that is at the heart of all the controversies which dog Nigerian sports. It was Amos Adamu who packed the so-called LOC with his cronies and sidekicks; the same Adamu has run our sports more to feather his own nest than really do our national bidding. Today, Amos Adamu is everywhere: Director General, WAFU, CAF and FIFA; he is one of the richest civil servants in Nigeria’s history, just as our sports have become increasingly disorganised! Well, if Nigerians felt the Yar’adua regime was going to do something good for once in sports, we were proved wrong within 48hours! Umaru Yar’adua ate his words and bowed to the pressure mounted by Amos Adamu using the cabal of governors! The game was on again and in one of the most cruel expressions of regime irresponsibility, Abdurrahman Gimba, the Sports Minister that spent the better part of the past year fighting against the monumental corruption, cronyism and fraud in the sporting system was sacked by Yar’adua; not a word of reprimand for Amos Adamu and his sidekicks and cronies in the LOC! Corruption pays; long live corruption! No wonder, those who ordinarily should have been thrown out of the LOC at least, if not thrown into jail, suddenly found their voices again having received the imprimatur of the regime to carry on. They returned to the National Assembly with a budget which still demands for over thirty five billion naira and their allies in the Senate have also been talking tough. Heineken Lokpobiri, the Senate Sports Committee chair, told us that we were making too much noise about the chicken change of just thirty five billion naira that was being requested for the event; after all, South Africa is spending far more for the 2010 World Cup. It is that type of unguarded insensitivity that becomes the consequence of the policy inconsistencies of the Yar’adua regime. Those who set great store by the regime in power today are living in cloud cuckoo land of delusion. Umaru Yar’adua resembles one on heavy sedation and is therefore sleepwalking through governance. The man is hostage to a set of vicious power mongers and is not a free agent. But he enjoys the trappings of power, even when it does not translate into benefit for the Nigerian people. In the meantime, his coteries of hangers-on are milking the opportunities, while despair spreads in the land. Sometimes, the whole country resembles a big hamlet where every inhabitant has been drugged. We can all be snoozing along with the man who pretends to be ruling our country, but is a spineless hostage without much competence as a leader. At the end of a four year term, under the watch of Umaru Yar’adua, not much would have changed for the better for the Nigerian people. Policy inconsistencies are merely a reflection of the serious crisis which Nigeria was saddled with when Umaru Yar’adua was rigged into power; it couldn’t have been any other way. Nigeria lost eight years under Obasanjo and it is now poised to waste four or even eight years, under the spineless regime of Umaru Yar’adua! The Obama moment of history Like a lot of people around the world, I kept awake to watch the returns of the American election today (Tuesday/Wednesday). It was indeed a remarkable moment in history and as I saw the tears flow freely from the face of Rev. Jesse Jackson, I could not hold my own tears either. In my mind, I saw the stream of African history in American life: the capture of Africans; the middle passage; the arrival in the new world and slavery; the Underground Railroad; abolition; racial discrimination; the civil rights movement and the emergence of Martin Luther King and Malcolm X and finally, the election of Barack Obama! In electing Obama, the American people have made a major contribution to the struggle to defeat bigotry and they should be admired and honoured. They have also rejected the criminal decisions taken by the Bush administration in their economy and the deepening of the unpopularity of American imperialism. Around the world, Barack Obama has excited the imaginations of people and there is so much hope set for the new president and the possible changes he might bring. Obama has a very cosmopolitan and brilliant mind; he is educated and knows about the contradictions of the world far more than the outgoing fanatic, George Bush. But Barack Obama scares me about his views in respect of the Middle East. He has repeatedly underlined his support for the Zionist state of Israel, and just before the elections, he addressed the Israeli lobby during which he made a most right wing endorsement of the Zionist state without condemning its apartheid policies against the Palestinians. That might be his Achilles’ heel. The USA is an imperialist power and one individual cannot change its nature; not even Obama! Igp Okiro, Maurice Iwu and Nnamdi ‘andy’ Uba: Bizzare tales of Nigeria Two weeks ago, the Inspector General of Police, Mister Okiro, told the nation that he does not know the number of policemen in the force that he leads. It is a very scary, but typically Nigerian story: a country of ‘ghost workers’; ‘ghost government’ and other manners of ghosts. We now know that we also have ghost policemen! Well, we should organise an audit; and I have a suggestion for IGP Okiro. Send Chief Samu’ila Danko Makama’s NPC men to all illegal check points; all burukutu and ogogoro joints; beer parlours; pepper soup joints, whether selling isi-ewu, nkwobi, ngwo-ngwo or dog meat! How to recognise the policeman? Very simple; he will spend crumpled ten naira notes (proceeds from illegal check points!); is rather unkempt and likely to be spotting a distended belly (that cemetery of pepper soup and burukutu!). That way, IGP Okiro can get an approximate number of men under his command. As if that was not absurd enough, Maurice Iwu and Nnamdi ‘Andy’ Uba were also back in the news. Recall that at the height of his power, Nnamdi ‘Andy’ Uba actually got Maurice Iwu appointed at INEC in the first place. The pact was to ensure that Nnamdi ‘Andy’ Uba was delivered as governor of Anambra state. Maurice Iwu kept his side of the bargain, ensuring that everybody who could win an election was banned and INEC conspired in the massive rigging that earned Nnamdi ‘Andy’ Uba, a few days as ‘governor’ before the impostor was kicked out by Nigeria’s judiciary. Maurice Iwu has earned the opprobrium of superintending the worst elections in Nigeria’s history, in April 2007. Nigerians loathe the controversial “professor” but he has reminded the country, that he will never quit the lucrative job at INEC. In the meantime, Nnamdi ‘Andy’ Uba has not been cured of his delusion that he can be ‘governor’ of Anambra state, as we say in Hausa, karfi da yaji! He has returned to the Supreme Court, with the hope that he can somehow still ride the courts, roughshod, to power! Nnamdi ‘Andy’ Uba still needs the immunity which governorship confers; after all, if Liyel Imoke can earn immunity, why not Nnamdi ‘Andy’ Uba? The lowest common denominator characterizes leadership in our country: the mix of ghost policemen; a reclusive president; the Maurice Iwus and Nnamdi ‘Andy’ Ubas! We play our league matches with our third eleven, so we never win. The words of our greatest writer, Chinua Achebe!

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