ANAMBRA'S 'VERDICT 2010' AS LESSON AND REVENGE
Okey Ndibe
Last Saturday, voters in Anambra State came out in impressive numbers to
elect a governor. The stakes were extremely high, and the obstacles
formidable, but the people of Anambra did themselves great credit. After it
was all over, incumbent Governor Peter Obi made history as the first
two-term occupant of the Government House. And Anambra put itself forward,
in my view, as a pivot for the democratic renewal that Nigeria so sorely
needs.
It was a fitting and welcome transformation – a kind of revenge, in fact.
Anambra has been a victim of some of the most tragic and traumatizing
schemes in Nigeria’s political history. It’s been a turf for the depraved
antics of so-called political godfathers who exploited their connections to
the seat of power in Abuja to make the state virtually ungovernable. It’s
been run, and ruined, by the human disaster called Chinwoke Mbadinuju. This
man, a genius at quoting scripture but less than adept at living it, holds
the unflattering distinction of presiding over a year in which the state’s
children didn’t go to school – because their striking teachers were not
paid.
There was more: the brazen kidnap of former Governor Chris Ngige, a man
smuggled into office by the ruling party and then hounded when he refused to
surrender the treasury to his sponsors; the three-day spree of arson against
public property carried out by thugs who may have been empowered by the
highest authority; and the short-lived imposition of Andy Uba as governor.
With this history as background, and Nigeria’s current climate of uncertain,
so much rode on the Anambra election. Local and international pundits,
deeply troubled by Nigeria’s penchant for fraudulent elections, tagged
Anambra’s Verdict 2010 a veritable window into the shape of general
elections to come in 2011. At a December 11, 2009 colloquium convened at
Brown University by Professor Chinua Achebe, speaker after speaker was at
pains to underscore the point that, as Anambra went last Saturday, so would
Nigeria go next year. These speakers, Nigerians and foreigners alike, also
warned that the country could ill afford the manipulation of the Anambra
election, and may not survive another of the kind of electoral farce we got
in 2007.
With the burden this onerous, Nigerians won a measure of victory in last
week’s governorship polls in Anambra.
Last week’s election was, I stress, a truly Nigerian affair. By the same
token, it was a triumph for all Nigerians, not just the residents of Anambra.
I had never seen a state election that generated as much interest across the
spectrum of Nigerians as that of Anambra. It was clear that Nigerians, and
in some ways the world, paid attention to the election. It called up the
best – the deeply patriotic – in many.
Let me illustrate. I signed up to participate in a project called Anambra
Election iReporters. Initiated by Okwy Okeke, an energetic and passionate
patriot, the project entailed monitoring the progress of last week’s
election by phoning observers right there in the field – and then posting
our findings on numerous websites. Mr. Okeke, who holds an MBA and works for
a large American corporation, saw the project as one way that we could
invest in the cause of credible elections.
Several of us, including Okeke, are from Anambra, but volunteers came from
other parts of Nigeria. I rose at the crack of dawn on Saturday and
immediately began to make calls to our contacts in Anambra – some of them
lawyers sent by the Nigerian Bar Association to observe. What struck me was
the number of participants in the exercise, in Anambra as well as abroad,
who are not from Anambra. If you ever wondered whether pan-Nigerian
collaboration was still viable, perish your doubt. From my small corner, I
beheld the cooperative spirit that’s alive among Nigerians when the
challenge is to reclaim their badly battered lives and commence the task of
mending.
Given Nigeria’s long habituation to scams dressed in the garb of elections,
it’s understandable if some are in a hurry to declare the days of rigged
elections over. Nothing is farther from the reality. At any rate, to mistake
what happened in Anambra as spelling the demise of electoral hanky panky is
to both underestimate how impermeable our politicians can be and to risk
slipping into complacency.
Complacency is a virus that Nigerians can’t afford now. Vigilance and a
state of heightened alert, not a slackening off, are called for. This is a
time to consolidate the gains from the Anambra election – and to think about
how to vastly improve on them in 2011 and beyond.
We’d do well to remember that as many things went well in the Anambra
election as went wrong. Two or three persons called or wrote to me waxing
ecstatic about the electoral commission’s conduction. One trumpeted Maurice
Iwu, the commission’s chairman, as a born-again champion of credible polls.
Not so fast, I retorted. What transpired in Anambra should not really be
regarded as epitomizing superior performance by INEC. Nor should Nigerians
hasten to canonize Iwu for overseeing an election in which the voice of the
voters was permitted to prevail. Transparently free and fair elections are
the right of Nigerians, not a privilege that Iwu may – according to his mood
or whims – dole out to us or withhold.
There were indeed heroes in last week’s elections, but Iwu doesn’t make my
list of them. In the 21st century, his electoral body failed to produce
serialized ballots. Then its voter registers were, for the most part, an
anthology of missing names.
The foremost heroes were the voters who, undeterred by past experiences of
stolen mandates, came out in droves to vote. The images of determined
voters, many of them waiting for hours in the sweltering heat before voting
materials were produced, reflected a widening quest by Nigerians to reclaim
their country from the calloused hands of its destroyers.
Then there were the troop of monitors, their eyes set on the proceedings,
determined to keep everybody – police officers, polling officials, party
partisans – honest. And then there were the officials who must have decided
not to lend themselves as instruments for would-be riggers.
Some of the governorship candidates ran vibrant campaigns that managed to
touch on such urgent matters as security, educational collapse, and
festering joblessness. Those of them who agreed to take part and spar in a
televised debate also deserve commendation for taking Nigerian politics in a
salutary direction.
As we celebrate, we must also take stock of the areas where we failed. I’m a
Catholic, but I was thoroughly ashamed to hear about priests who abused
their vocation by campaigning for Governor Obi from their pulpit. Of course,
clergy reserve the right to vote for their favorite candidates. But it’s
scandalous and potentially dangerous to mount political campaigns from
inside the sanctuary. If Mr. Obi went out to seek endorsement as the
Catholic candidate, then he has done grave disservice to the voters – who
are from across an array of faiths. Sectarian adventurism has no place in a
civilized political contest. It must be discountenanced both by candidates
and clergy.
(E-mail: okndibe@yahoo.com ) |