On Peter Obi: A letter to my friends who lost their cool
The
day Nigeria marked her 56th Independence Anniversary; Pastor Poju
Oyemade of Covenant Christian Centre gave us a real treat on The
Platform. It was a good moment to reflect on the ordeals and
trajectories of our nation. Pastor Oyemade assembled a coterie of highly
cerebral speakers who seasoned the event. Ever since that day, an
eccentric kind of feeling has filled the air, and the social media is
awash with certain impetuous hash tags.
My
people, for days now, I have searched for the appropriate (not
necessarily convenient) way to express my misgivings over your
insensitivity and misguided reactions to issues that matter.
This
is not how to go when you find your missing gem. No, not when the enemy
is everywhere around you. It is okay to feel a surge of emotions
running through your head. But, you do not have to lose your cool. This
time you did not just lose your cool, you went wild, mad.
At
The Platform, ex-governor Peter Obi, served you with a rather dramatic,
strikingly astonishing revelation of your time. It was something
unusual. Yes, you did not expect a Nigerian politician to be that open,
true, plain and concerned. But
you knew he was. You saw it. He was passionate. Many did not know or
hear much about him while he served as the governor of the south-eastern
state of Anambra. At The Platform, you began to believe he is the
missing puzzle that Nigeria needs to cross over to the other side. And
in an unbridled frenzy, you lost your cool, went delirious and stormed
the social media with the hash tag #PeterObi2019.
And that is your undoing.
In
that singular act, you are like the highly pretentious man who finds a
woman he treasures for marriage, and the minute after the first date
floods Facebook and Twitter and other social media with pictures of
their adventure. If she is cool, keep her. Don’t lose your cool. There
is nothing wrong with expressing your frantic desire to have Mr. Obi as
your president. But everything is wrong with the way you lose your cool
about the man you want to be your leader, the man you want to wield the
staff to strike the red sea for your passage, leaving your “enemies”
consumed behind you.
The
excitement, inspiration, and revelations that came with the experience
at The Platform were – and will continue to be – a reason for hope in
Nigeria. But in your unguarded euphoria I also found a reason to
despair.
I
am sorry, but I feel obligated to tell you, that there is something
fundamentally wrong with you if you do not understand the meaning of the
word “caution”; if you cannot apply it in making decisions about
people, and more importantly, someone you want to lead.
You
must apply a great deal of restraint. If you love what you now know
about Mr. Peter Obi or anyone for that matter, be calm. And while you
wait for the right time, there are few things you can do: Look. Look
again. Think. Think again. Ask questions. Seek answers for your
questions. Make insightful decisions. This is important because many
believe you are where you are because you failed to think well and ask
pertinent questions when the ruling APC, then in opposition consistently
beclouded your thought with the “change” mantra. You got too emotional.
They told you how the PDP government plundered our common till and
their “willingness” to fight corruption and rescue you from their
rickety umbrella that no longer covers you. They told you they have come
to change things and that is why they deserve your vote. You went
haywire when you heard “change” and wielded brooms, and in your fawning
character – inspired by the exigency for “stomach infrastructure” – you
joined them. And this is where you are. Reality. “Change begins with
you” they tell you. And now you ask if you were hypnotised. No,
you were not. You simply lost your cool when it mattered most. You
believed in President Buhari’s “indubitable” integrity (okay, some of
you), and saddened by the then president Jonathan’s supposed weakness
and PDP’s galloping pace of corruption and impunity you jumped at a
“change” bait. You did not think or ask questions. And you landed in
recession. You have forgotten all these. Now you are confused. Amnesia.
Ex-governor
Peter Obi spoke well at The Platform. It was something you wanted to
hear more on the nation’s day of anniversary than your president’s
unimpressive attempt at convincing you that all will be well. But even
if Mr. Obi is the messiah to come, he needs more of your prayers and
cooperation than your penchant for hash tag that kills a dream before it
births.
Let
me remind you that the greatest power of any nation lies in the
critical thinking ability of the citizens. More so, in a democratic
regime, as elementary Government teaches, power belongs to the people.
But what happens when a people trade their prerogative, and play
sheepishly into the hands of the enemy and so relinquishes their power?
What happens when a people lose their ability to keep elected leaders
under check by failing to ask pertinent questions when it matters? It is
a tragedy.
Successive
Nigerian governments and leaders have failed to be accountable. That is
not even the sad story, it is that the people whom the government ought
to be responsible to have disappointingly failed in their own
responsibility of stirring them to action. The developed countries, the
ones you call “first world” are where they are today because the
citizens, through active participation in government and electoral
processes overthrew the elites who controlled power to their own
advantage, and created a society where political right became broadly
distributed, and were able to make government responsive to their
needs.
Nigeria’s
situation on the other hand, sadly, is a sham, a charade. My friends,
you need to change, not just the government. Maybe they are right when
they say “change begins with you”. There is a popular narrative among
Nigerians, that our most terrifying dilemma is leadership failure. That
may be true. But we must examine the other side of the coin too.
Nigeria’s problem is equally, or probably more of a botch in the way we
follow. Follower-ship
in itself is a function of leadership. Unfortunately, successive
government and leaders have left the country with a repressive system
that only emasculates the people’s creative and critical thinking
ability.
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