Monday, 20 May 2013
Reuben Abati And The Intellectual Dishonesty Of Nigeria Intelligentsia By Paul Omoruyi
I was in my late teens when I first read Reuben Abati’s piece in the newspaper. At that time my father was able to afford to have the newspaper delivered to him on weekends. After reading, he would pass the newspaper to me and tell me to read. Shortly after, like an interrogator, he will start interviewing me about what Abati wrote. Unfortunately, in today’s Nigeria, dad cannot afford it anymore. During my summer visit this year, I asked him if he still reads his weekend papers. He grimaced, sighed and said “my son, those days are gone, I cannot afford it anymore; I get my news these days from my small radio,” pointing to a radio resting sturdily on his veranda table. It was one of those old-fashioned radios that relay Voice of America and BBC signals. Remember those?
For those who know Mr. Abati’s history or read his column, you will concur that he can be considered a scholar and a prolific writer. At least someone who got his Ph.D at the tender age of 24 years will today be called a nerd or whiz kid! Some people called him a social critic based on his past writings criticizing the Nigerian elite for their corruption and leadership dereliction. He was respected in the journalistic circle and by social crusaders clamoring for change in Nigeria.
I took some time lately to read Mr. Abati’s articles in the days leading to Goodluck Jonathan’s inauguration and few days after. In his article “Hurry Up, Jonathan” published May 4th, 2010, Mr. Abati wrote “Early signs indicate that Jonathan may find it difficult stepping up to the game. He has fallen so early into the error of doing business as usual. He is the ultimate pacifier. He seems determined to run a government of the Godfathers.” Just last year (May 1, 2011), in his article “The Jonathan To Jonathan Transition”, he wrote “There are very urgent priorities that he [referring to president Jonathan] must address. He must make the transformation of Nigeria his chief priority. It took only two Presidents in Brazil (Fernando Cardoso, 1995-2002 and Lula da Silva, 2003 -2010) for that country to embark on the path of economic progress, and in both Brazil and South Korea, even in Ghana next door, the point has been well proven that good leadership is what helps a country in the long run.
When he takes that oath on May 29, Jonathan will be signing a pact with history. He can either sleep walk through the four years or make significant difference. We recommend the latter. He should start with the power sector. His government has already announced a road map for the power sector. There are plans to privatize the power sector. He must hurry up. He won’t be the first President since 1999 to talk about the same issue. Nigerians are no longer interested in such talks. They want results; they want regular electricity supply and the expulsion of the diesel importation Mafia. With regular power supply, the Nigerian economy will be jump-started, life will be easier for the ordinary man and this will be one way of demonstrating change. Jonathan should be the President to translate all the talks about power into measurable results”
Those are just some few classics from Mr. Abati’s repertoire. It is mind-boggling and heart-wrenching that the erudite Abati who advocated that Nigerians have run out of patience and can no longer wait will now seemingly describe Nigerians clamoring for change as “all the cynics, the pestle-wielding critics, the unrelenting, self-appointed activists, the idle and idling, twittering, collective children of anger, the distracted crowd of Facebook addicts, the BBM-pinging soap opera gossips of Nigeria...”I do not know how else to describe this 360 degrees turn-around than call it intellectual dishonesty.
Mr. Abati is not alone in the perpetration of this intellectual dishonesty. More recently (not to go too far down memory lane), every Nigerian remembers Michael Aondoakaa, former Nigerian Attorney General (AGF) and Minister of Justice from July 2007 to February 2010. He was a Senior Partner for a law firm for 18 years! So he was well educated in legal matters. Before his appointment as Nigeria AGF, some claimed that he supported justice and advocated for truth. In 2009, the then President of Nigeria was secretly flown to Saudi Arabia for medical treatment. For almost three months, Nigerians were in the dark about the where abouts and true condition of the president. The president had not written a formal letter giving the vice president power to carry out the duties of the president while on medical leave.
Obviously, one does not need to be a lawyer or an expert on the Nigerian Constitution to know that there was a power vacuum. The erudite Michael Aondoakaa, as the chief enforcer of the constitution was asked on CNN by Christian Amanpour “why has it taken the system so long to fill the power vacuum in the president’s absence?” He responded by stating, “there was no power vacuum.” He continued the intellectual mischievousness and dishonesty elsewhere indicating that the Nigeria president can serve as the president from anywhere in the world as long as he can.
Really? This is what Nigerians call “for my korokoro eyes” interpretation. I am yet to read about that in the Nigerian Constitution. It was also well documented how Aondoakaa went to great length to use his office to subvert justice by protecting Governors accused of looting from EFCC’s prosecution. While in London in 2009 to block the trial of Ibori in a British court, he was chased out of his hotel room by Nigerian activists who labeled him as “Attorney General of Fraud.”
It is not all doom and gloom for Nigeria intelligentsia. Thank God for intellectuals like Wole Soyinka, Chinua Achebe, Gani Fawehinmi (may his soul rest in peace!) and the others who struggle everyday in Nigeria against all odds to do the right thing. They would rather lose their job and go hungry than speak from the four compass points of their mouth – as rightly put by Prof. Soyinka.
The intelligentsia community in any culture has always been the engine driving social change and challenging the status quo. If Nigeria must move forward, our intelligentsia must be consistent in their social crusade. They should not only vociferate for change when that change will not affect them. They must be ready to stand for principle within or outside the corridors of power. I wish Dr. Reuben Abati all the best as he continues to serve his country. May God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
Blog: www.diasporascope.com
eng.p.omoruyi@gmail.com
The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of SaharaReporters
intellectual DISHONESTY?
Abati is not alone, where are all the critics of Obasanjo and other previous governments today? Many of them in government had kept MUTE. Apparently, busy EATING. Like Manaye, they will start talking after leaving government. At least, Adeniyi is back to This Day and pontificating. You wrote about Soyinka being still there as a beacon, I will agree with you if Soyinka has even seen ANYTHING WRONG with his own Political party, ACN. Federal government is not the only one to be blamed for our problems, after all the states shared in the windfall collected from Nigerians when the SUBSIDY was removed on January 1.
We should not be deceived by anyone, especially those that are claiming to be critics of the government, they are all looking for opportunity and building their dossier waiting to be called to come and CHOP.
Moving to the dark side (continued)
Perhaps Mr Abati is right and all his critics are too blind and impatient to see the marvelous work he and the President's team are doing: Transformation agenda! Well that's all we can see yet: an agenda with no positive practical impact.
I think those not in any post yet should think about what they'll do if fortunate (or unfortunate!) to be the president or adviser. Will they compromise their values and join the crooks or resign when at a crossroad?
Moving to the dark side
Found your aticle very interesting Paul. Mr Abati must have one of the most difficult jobs ever: defending the indefensible. He certainly knows what needs to be done to develop and change Nigeria going by his previous writings. Perhaps armchair critics underestimate Nigeria's problems, so when its time to act they take the easy way out when presented with difficult options: move to the dark side and resign to status quo (no change/failure). For instance, the statement credited to Gen Obasanjo was that he spent a lot on NEPA but the witches there sabotaged his plans!?! (to be continued)
THIS IS THE 3RD OUTING OF
THIS IS THE 3RD OUTING OF THIS ARTICLE ON SR
It is the result of come and chop
Dear Paul, like you, I too have had to go through some of Abati's writings pre and post Jonathan's elections. I placed them side by side with his current writings and prnouncements. What did I notice? A man who has compromised his values. I think he is to be pitied in this phase of his life. How can a man like Abati wrap himself round absurdities like his oga's wife being made permanent secretary. Only God knows what he would have written when he was still one of us. I think he was called to the villa so as to remove him frm the line of critics where he occupied the frontline. There is an English word called hush money. What we are seeing is what happens when one has been called to come and chop. Pity!
Reuben Abati was a pretender
Reuben Abati was a pretender to intellectualism. A hungry man, his true colours have emerged when he finds himself in the corridors of power. Instead of telling truth to power as he was wont to, he has become a lap dog and a disgrace.
One of the most dishonest
One of the most dishonest articles to appear on SR within the last few month! Is the writer angry that Abati is serving Ijaw man Jonathan? What about late Bola Ige? Did Buhari not work under the most evil minded dictator who went about hanging civil right advocates like Kensarowiwa? Where was Buhari when Abacha hanged Ken? What about Jakande and late Tai Solarin? Again where was the writer when late chief Gani offered to salvage 9ja from the mess that the fulani north threw us into for over 39yrs!-may be he was not old enough to cast his regional vote for Gani who even lost his state in Ondo to Obj-here we are with turn coats yet to overcome the victory of jonathan at the polls-we hear Adams of ondo state like tinubu also forged his certificates-go look into that-until fulanis ibos, yorubas rules 9ja, we shall know no peace-but dey hardly ever see the tribal marks on the oil revenue they have been stealing 4 60yrs!
@Paul Omoruyi, Sorry about your papa O!
@Paul Omoruyi, Sorry about your papa O!
I do not think your papa is missing a lot by not reading Nigerian Newspapers; given the complete control the government has been able to exert by subverting truth in journalistic reporting - using 'under the table' pecuniary inducements.
GEJ publicly admitted the role SR (a foreign based Internent media) has played in alerting him as to what is going on in his family. THAT SAYS A LOT ABOUT HOME-BASED PAPERS.
In life, we use various approaches to climb up the social ladder. The point is that some(Politicians)use the people, other's rung in the ladder of progress is intelectual dishonesty. I am not sure if Abati was a recent convert to the 'righteosness' of achieving your goal by any means or he just needed some food on the table. He is no longer an advocate for the people. That is life. You reap what you sow.

