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The state
of our nation
By
Edwin Madunagu
TWO stories on the front
page of The Guardian, Thursday, March 4, 2004, arrested me for
an unusually long time. The stories, the first a calamity, the
second a lamentation, made an instant and shattering impact on
my emotions.
The reason might be that
they were appearing on the same page or that I was also reading
between the lines. I heard myself asking the desperate question:
What exactly can we do to halt this descent to the unknown
The first story was titled
"Gunmen attack Akume's convoy, kill PDP Chief, Agom", while the
second carried the caption "Enahoro, Soyinka form a group to
check misrule". We start with the March 4 calamity and end with
Wole Soyinka's lamentation.
Governor George Akume of
Benue State, a member of the ruling People's Democratic Parth (PDP),
was travelling from his headquarters in Makurdi to Abuja on
Wednesday, March 3, 2004, when his convoy of cars was attacked
by "suspected bandits" along the Lafia-Akwanga road in the
neighbouring Nasarawa State. In Nigeria, a bandit is an armed
robber. The time of attack was given as 7.15 a.m; that is, broad
daylight.
The road is a major one,
leading to the nation's capital. The governor's mission was "to
attend a meeting at the Presidency" according to The Guardian
report, or "to attend a PDP meeting", according to another. The
attack claimed two lives: Chief Andrew Agom, a former Managing
Director of the Nigeria Airways and a member of PDP's Board of
Trustees; and Sergeant Joseph Ngam, the governor's police guard.
Some other people in the governor's entourage sustained "varying
degrees of wound". The Guardian reported, that "Governor Akume,
who was in the same car with Agom, escaped death by the
whiskers", but elsewhere in the report the paper quoted the
Chief Press Secretary to the governor as saying that "Agom and
the police orderly who were in the escort car were killed in the
shooting spree".
My questions here may be
called trivial or immaterial. Yet they are crucial if we must
understand the types of forms of armed "banditry" now ravaging
the country, their motivations and primary targets, and, beyond
that, their perpetrators. If Agom and the governor's police
orderly were together in the escort car, it follows that either
the governor, Agom and police orderly were in one car, and the
bandits killed Agom and the police orderly, with the governor
escaping death "by the whiskers", or there were two "Agoms", one
with the governor, and the other with the police orderly, in
separate cars. A newsmagazine later confirmed that the former
was the case. But in a situation where everyone, including the
"bereaved", the investigators and the political authorities, is
under suspicion this confirmation does not settle the matter.
My second problem is this:
The attack took place in broad daylight along a major road.
Governors normally travel in convoys with sirens blaring. The
"bandits", were likely to have known that they were attacking
the convoy of a big person. Did the convoy run into the armed
robbers who were operating in the area or was the attack a
planned ambush
If the latter, what was the
motive: robbery or assassination
Again, if the latter, who
was the target, or who were the targets
Since the Agom tragedy,
several other, even more bizarre high-profile killings have
taken place in the land. There have also been allegations of
high-profile threats of assassination. Each raises similar
questions.
At 3.00 a.m. on Sunday,
March 7, 2004, barely four days after the murder of Andrew Agom,
the Chairman of the Kogi State Independent Electoral Commission,
Chief Philip Olorunipa, was shot dead in his bedroom by
"suspected assassins". The report said that the killers, on
entering the premises, went straight to their victim's bedroom
and shot him. They knew where the target was, and his police
guard could not help him. The police immediately announced the
arrest of three suspects, including a leading member of the
PeopleÕs Democratic Party (PDP). A few days earlier, a
prospective candidate in the March 27 local government elections
in the state was similarly killed. About four weeks earlier, on
Friday, February 6, 2004, Chief Amino-Sari Dikibo, the National
Vice-Chairman of PDP for South-South, was killed by gunmen"
later identified by some authorities as "armed robbers", a few
kilometres from Asaba, capital of Delta State. Like Agom, Dikibo
was on his way to a meeting.
The Guardian of Sunday,
March 7, 2004 carried, on its front page, a story: Kalu on Death
Threat: Enough is Enough. It was a report of an interview with
Governor Orji Uzor Kalu of Abia State the previous day. In that
interview the governor informed the nation of a letter he
recently wrote to the President of the Federal Republic of
Nigeria complaining that the Chairman of the Board of Trustees
of the ruling PDP had threatened to eliminate him (the governor)
the same way Chief Bola Ige, a former Federal Minister of
Justice was eliminated over three years ago. The governor cited
his deputy as a witness to the open verbal threat. In the same
interview Governor Kalu said that Dikibo had complained of
threats to his life three days before he (Dikibo) was killed.
The PDP leadership, of which the governor was supposed to be a
member, immediately denied the governor's allegations. The
governor, in turn, denounced the PDP's denial, and raised a
general alarm of the existence, in the country, of a murderous
gang.
The Abia State Deputy
Governor first confirmed his part of the story but later
repudiated it - after holding some meetings with some highly
placed people in Abuja. As the controversy raged, the federal
authorities withdraw the business licenses of Governor Kalu.
About the same time, the Deputy Governor released the content of
the memorandum he sent to the governor on the "death threat".
The document did not mention "threat". We shall hear and see
more.
In a two-part article,
another letter to President Obasanjo The Guardian, February 24
and 25, 2004, Professor Niyi Osundare told the president: "In
the reckoning of most Nigerians, you are the most arrogant, most
insensitive, most callous, and most self-righteous and
hypocritical ruler that this unfortunate country has ever been
saddled with in its hapless saga of misrule".
He then illustrated: "You
met a litre of petrol selling for N21; it now goes for a
whooping N42 in a few places and twice as much in many others.
As if this was not enough you topped it all with a N1.50 levy
misnamed "fuel tax". Three tubers of medium-size yam costing
N80.00 when you assumed office in 1999 now costs N300.00; a bag
of rice which was N3,200.00 then now costs N4,800.00; a bag of
cement was N550.00 in 1999; now it goes for N1,000.00".
Etubom Bassey Ekpo Bassey
complemented the list: "Transparency International has moved us
from the disgraceful position of the 27th most corrupt country
in the world under Abacha to No.2 under Obasanjo; the World
Health Organisation says our healthcare system is the worst but
one in the entire world; as UNDP insists, whereas a whopping
48.5 per cent of Nigerians lived under poverty line in 1998,
Chief Obasanjo quickly achieved the higher figure of 70 per cent
in 2001".
Bassey lamented: "Today,
the picture of pillage and plunder of the vast majority by a
handful of their countrymen and women is complete; so is the
cognate picture of utter destitution, rampaging poverty, violent
crimes, unspeakable insecurity, of blood and death everywhere.
And Osundare continued:
"Dear President, how many more riots, how many more corpses, do
you need to see in the streets before you know that your social
and economic "policies" are killing the people you vowed to
protect
Deregulation. Monetisation.
Privatisation. Why is your emphasis always on price increase
than the efficient running of Nigeria's refineries
Concerning privatisation,
who stands to profit by the sale of our major national holdings
if not the already rich and their friends and associates
How can the so many
Nigerians perishing from today's pain become the inheritors of
tomorrow's gain".
As I said earlier, some
prominent Nigerians, including Chief Anthony Enahoro and
Professor Wole Soyinka, were reported to have formed a group "to
save Nigeria from sliding into civilian dictatorship and
one-party state". At a press conference in Lagos on March 3,
2004, Soyinka, on behalf of the group, Citizen Forum, denounced
the "increased intolerance of dissent, a contempt for
constitutional procedures, abuse of police powers, a flagrant
debasement of the electoral process, cynical manipulation of the
judiciary, leading to a loss of public confidence, an on-going
agenda for the destruction of intellectual institutions, the
usurpation of popular will by Mafioso conspiracies, arrogant
insensitivity to mass economic realities, erosion of checks and
balances entrenched in the separation of powers".
He then made an indirect
call: "Irrespective of ideological leanings or party
allegiances, all mature citizens with a sense of civic worth
must surely feel demeaned or, at the very least, concerned by
the predator mentality that now pervades all tiers of
governance".
These reports, taken
together, present a very grim picture of our country, and
constitute one of the most vehement denunciations of the present
regime I have so far seen. The question is: What exactly can we
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