Freedom and Responsibility
by Dr. Obed O. Mailafia
The
last couple of years have been years of exceptional turmoil
and upheaval in our country. During the darkest days of our
benighted republic, many courageous voices in this country
and abroad were raised in defence of human liberty. Some of
our patriots paid for their exceptional courage with their
own lives while others suffered imprisonment, torture and
exile, among other forms of persecution. And it is fitting
that we honour those patriots who have given so much by way
of sacrifice so that the light of liberty may never be
extinguished in this long-suffering land of blood and tears.
Throughout those days we have heard so much about freedom
and about the Rights of Man. What I am about to say may
cause some unease in a number of quarters: At the risk of
sounding re-actionary, I should like to contend that perhaps
it is time we heard less about rights and more about duties.
One does not have to be a cynic to see that human rights are
virtually becoming an industry, an industry whose primary
stakeholders are not the Nigerian people but the
international development set and their aid recipients. It
is of course easy in human affairs for good causes to be
hijacked by opportunists and other free riders.
Let's look at it this way. Human rights are a worldwide
problem. True, indeed. They are not just an African problem,
although African abuses tend to be more pronounced and
exacerbated due to poverty, instability and civil strife. In
recent years minorities in Ger-many, France, Belgium and the
United States, have been the victims of all sorts of serious
human rights abuses. Racism and fascism are highly endemic
in the post-Cold War Europe. But these are hardly ever
featured in the human rights rhetoric of the international
development set. It is perhaps for this reason that the
Singaporeans and the Chinese have always vehemently rejected
the Western agenda of human rights. They have always
insisted that there is a unique 'Asian Standard'. They have
been wary of foreign human rights concepts that, if imported
lock, stock, and barrel, are likely to do more harm than
good to Asian stability and cohesion. According to this
argument whilst Western liberalism puts emphasis on what the
philosopher C. B. MacPherson calls "possessive
individualism", the non-western approach tends to stress the
precedence of the community over the individual. This is in
fact the fundamental grundnorm - if I may use the Germanic
juridical term - which underlies the African Charter of
Human and Peoples' Rights. Not too long ago in England the
human rights agenda was carried to a rather ridiculous
extreme: Gays were demanding the right to proselytise in
schools, and to do so using local council funds. I think we
would all agree that this campaign for the rights of
homosexuals and transsexuals would be simply baffling to
most Africans, to say the least. I suspect that a time will
come when our own 'activists' will begin to harangue us with
similar demands. Our own human rights industry seems more
than eager to impose on us agendas whose long-term purposes
may have nothing at all to do with civil liberties or the
well-being and stability of our republic or indeed our own
understanding of the moral universe.
It is obvious that human rights cannot be divorced from the
cultural and political context. A relatively young and in
many ways experimental, country such ours has to tread with
great care in this area. Where would China be today if it
had succumbed to the demands of the students at Tiananmen
Square? It would have spelt, in my view, the beginning of
the end for the delicate balance that has held China
together as a corporate entity since Mao and his fellow
revolutionaries captured power in 1949. One fact that was
hardly ever mentioned by the international media was that
the students at Tiananmen were extremely racist in some of
their demands. They had earlier attacked African students as
Aids-carriers and had called for their immediate
repatriation. Tragic as the bloody suppression was, I
believe it was quite healthy for Chinese sovereignty that
Beijing did what they had to do while ignoring foreign
ranting about human rights. External support for so-called
'human rights' in China has more to do with fostering
fissiparous tendencies in order to weaken a rising Asian
colossus than about the humanitarian desire to protect
individual liberties of the Chinese people. In our own
country some of the so-called 'pro-democracy' - whatever
that means - activists and organizations have been largely
funded from outside. This, as far as I am concerned, greatly
compromises their political and moral legitimacy. Oppressive
and dehumanizing as it was, our situation was not the moral
equivalent of Apartheid in South Africa, which the UN and
the entire world community had condemned as a crime against
humanity and a violation of the most sacred precepts of the
law of nations. It was right and proper that the ANC and
other anti-Apartheid groups sought and did receive support
from external sympathizers. In this country we were faced
with a military junta comprising of our own countrymen who
had taken it upon themselves to lord it over us. They were a
tiny band of criminals. As such, it was a domestic affair
requiring a domestic solution. One is hard put to defend the
view that some of these 'human rights' and environmentalist
organizations are not merely part of the instrumental
paraphernalia of the international development set in their
eagerness to meddle in the domestic affairs of poor
countries. A lot of gold, diamonds and emeralds and other
precious stones are to be found in Southern Kaduna, the
region where I was born. It would not be that difficult to
get myself bankrolled here in London and re-packaged as a
so-called environmental or human rights activist claiming to
be fighting for my oppressed people, the Ninzam people, who
inhabit the area. Loaded with pounds, Euros, dollars and
Lord knows what else, one could then return home to pursue a
rabble-rousing project, leading to chaos, anarchy and civil
disturbance.
International forces know only too well that African
political systems are weak and highly vulnerable to ethnic
and sectarian manipulation. They also know that overloading
the central machinery of state with all sorts of impossible
demands would be the surest way of overturning the apple
cart. It is a more economical and more effective means of
undermining those societies than declaring outright war
against the state. In our sister-country of Sierra Leone,
much of the civil war there was financed by Lebanese and
Syrian diamond smugglers, among other mercenaries. It was
quite incredible that even Ukrainian soldiers of fortune,
who had painted themselves with black ink, were to be found
among the rebels. The same story goes for mineral-rich
countries such as Zaire and Angola. Some multinationals are
creating private armies to wreck havoc to African security
in the name of defending private investment interests. A
German recently had the effrontery to remark to my hearing
that the state in Africa has no future. Slavery is a state
of mind, just as freedom and independence are largely
matters of political habit and social praxis. If we have the
habit of constantly allowing others to denigrate everything
African and to level the entire region as consisting of
nothing but 'failed states'? to use a pernicious expression?
then sooner or later someone somewhere would be called upon
to legitimize the recolonisation of Africa. Unless we show
clearly and rigorously that the state, the good state,
should be protected and defended, we are simply playing the
game of losers.
My point is that human rights must go hand in hand with
commitment to civic responsibility and patriotism. Our own
human rights activists have studiously avoided the
all-important question of civic responsibility. From them we
have heard next to nothing about the imperatives duty -
about the duties we owe our communities, our families, our
neighbourhoods and our country. Lest my critique is taken
amiss, I would hasten to say that some of those who have
been at the forefront of the human rights struggle deserve
the highest honours that this country can bestow. A man such
as Chief Gani Fawehinmi ? whom I would rank as our own
Soc-rates and national gadfly - deserves more honours than
an entire gaggle of brigadiers put together. Dr Beko Ransome
Kuti is a genuine patriot and one of the great Nigerians of
our generation. The work of the Civil Liberties
Organisation, lead by gifted young leaders of the likes of
Olisa Agbakoba (Senior Advocate of Nigeria) are deserving of
praise and commendation. Our country is the richer that we
can count such men among its citizens.
As it turns out, and to all intents and purposes, we are all
human rights champions now. We all agree that all sorts of
sordid and bestial things were done by Abacha and agents
like Gwarzo, Hamza, Omenka and their cohorts. Killings,
disappearances, hired assassins and mindless graft were the
order of the day, thanks to the unhappy reign of these evil
men. Human rights were indeed abused in Nigeria. And it is
right and fitting that we condemn the vampire regime that
started with the self-styled 'Maradona' (General Ibrahim
Babangida) and reached its nadir in the illiterate
Lilliputian called Sani Abacha. They were birds of the same
feather, the one a logical extension of the other. Contrary
to what some may think, Abacha was nobody's fool, demented
though he was. The gargoyle spotting the ominous dark
glasses simply carried to its logical and absurd conclusion
the antediluvian system of rule based on shameless
kleptomania which Maradona and his fellow travelers had
earlier perfected. Why smile at people when you know your
rule is killing them slowly? Why bribe them when you can
simply corner the whole treasury to yourself? Why even
pretend there is a military council? Why not simply rule as
a military Sultan and arrogate to yourself the right over
the life and death of all those who have the misfortune to
call themselves your countrymen? Our self-styled "evil
genius" was possessed of the same ruling spirit, although he
camouflaged it with the false veneer of cosmopolitan
refinement. In reality, his primary instincts were and
remain those of the highway. Our military Sultan had the
sense to do without those pretensions. I always warned my
Yoruba compatriots that Abacha's real wish was to foment a
war in the West, and that a war started in Yorubaland would
have given him the best excuse to remain in power. He
incarnated and personified the paradigm of irresponsibility
in our country. He really did not give a damn if Nigeria
survived or dissolved into the ether. What mattered, as far
as he was concerned, was that he had arms to protect himself
and that he had un-trammelled access to the national
treasury. Even the outgoing Abdulsalam and his
treas-ury-emptying cabaret cannot escape their share of the
blame. It was unsoldierly and cowardly of them not to have
owned up to the fact that that they and Abacha had all along
been in the same game. Mariam Abacha said as much. Instead
of owning up and seriously repenting for their sins at their
moment of ungraceful departure, they proceeded to behave
like bandits who had landed on a pot of gold. President
Obasanjo would be well advised to avoid any future contact
with "Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves".
In our country far too many skeletons remain to be
uncovered. I suspect that there are not a few robber barons
that ought to be put behind bars. If you see them on the
road driving by in a Rolls Royce and enjoying their
ill-gotten wealth, never be tempted to envy them. Always
remind yourself that this is blood money - money made from
the blood and sweat of our people. Never give them any
honours and always remember that these people are nothing
but common criminals. It is a shame that we in Nigeria have
lost our sense of values and have tended to defer to people
who have lost the right to sit at table with elders and with
all men of honour. As a basic minimum those of them who are
known to have committed blatant acts of treasury looting
should have been made to forfeit their statutory pensions. A
criminal should have no rights that should only properly
belong to law-abiding citizens. It is now a law in Tony's
Blair's Britain that a policeman caught in corrupt practices
would have to forfeit his pension or at least a large chunk
of it. It is regrettable that the remit of the panel
recently set up by the Obasanjo administration does not
extend to the question of financial restitution going as far
back as 1984. I suspect that some people are celebrating
their having been left off the hook. Somebody somewhere is
literally getting away with murder. Having said this, it is
not my intention to paint every senior officer in the
Nigerian military with a black paint. That would be grossly
unfair to those of them who are patriotic and God-fearing
professionals. In the course of my career some of the best
Nigerians I have ever met have surprisingly been men and
women in uniform. Outstanding officers such as Yakubu
Danjuma, Yohanna Madaki and Ishola Williams can command any
armies in any part of the world, including America, Britain and Russia. The Nigerian Army still reserves a modicum of
dignity only because such officers and gentlemen such as
these have served in it.
The main contention of this essay is that, having spent all
these years asking what our country owes us, it is time our
country demanded from us what we can and must do for her. We
need to address ourselves to the following pressing
questions: What is our responsibility as citizens in a free
democracy? What are our duties as parents, as teachers, as
community leaders, as civil servants and as politicians? Are
there indeed responsibility-ties that inescapably go with
freedom in a democracy? Isn't it obvious that freedom
with-out responsibility would simply lead to anarchy? And
where there is anarchy, society be-comes what the
international lawyers call a terra nullius - a no-man's land
devoid of constitutional order, law, morality and all the
other requirements of civilised existence.
The real tragedy of our time is not merely that of human
rights. It is also about the absence of responsibility. When
the British departed in 1960 there were a few secondary
school dropouts who found a military career as the best
escape from a life destined for pedestrian obscurity. They
suddenly and unexpectedly found themselves catapulted to the
summits of power and leadership in our country, thanks to
the vicious circle of military praetorian interventionism in
the civil polity. They were now in a position to give it
back to those who had been their intellectual betters at
school. It was like a pig finding itself miraculously
enthroned in the most royal and exalted of palaces. They
knew in their hearts of hearts that they were usurpers who
did not merit to be there, and they proceeded to behave
exactly like people who did not merit those high offices of
state. For most of them, responsibility was not a word that
featured in the lexicon of public duty. Having tasted what
Winston Churchill called "the ambrosia of power", they
proceeded to behave with increasing recklessness and
irresponsibility. A senior military officer once narrated to
me how he shot and killed two suspected armed robbers in the
vicinity of Yaba Bridge in Lagos. They had stopped him to
ask for a lift as he was driving by. But he believed they
were armed robbers. I asked him what happened next. He said
of course he drove off, what else? Did he feel accountable
to anyone? No. Was it his duty to report the incident to the
police? Hell, yes. He had no sense of responsibility or
accountability to anyone. And if I may give yet another
anecdote, a tragic episode involving someone I personally
knew very well. He was a major at the time and a university
graduate to boot. He had accompanied his commander on a
shopping spree abroad. This was in the late 1980s, before we
had acquired our international pariah status. The civilian
driver who picked up his luggage at the airport is accused
of making off with one of the suitcases. The poor chap is
taken to the army barracks for some 'disciplining'. The
following day he is re-turned to his pregnant wife in a body
bag. Did anyone take responsibility? No. Should anyone have
been made to answer a few questions? By Jove, yes. A
civilised society cannot be built on the foundations of
self-help. That can only be the law of the jungle, a law fit
only for barbarians. A civil order is built on the basis of
the rule of law and of respect for the established machinery
of justice in society.
It would of course be foolhardy to see the evil in military
regimes while ignoring the culpability of their civilian
accomplices. The professional military coup plotters have
always insisted that in nearly every single coup civilians
have always been directly or indirectly involved, either as
instigators or financiers or both. Civilians must therefore
take their full share of the blame for the evil perpetrated
by military tyrants. Some of the soi-disant intellectuals
among us have virtually made careers out of totting their
CVs at the sound of every solemn proclamation of, "Our
fellow countrymen?" From regime to regime, these miserable
gold-diggers were always to be seen peddling their
half-baked political theories for a mesh of naira pottage.
They are our latter-day Sophists - those mercenary teachers
whom the great Greek philosophers condemned. Many of our
careerist politicians ? some of them with no known means of
gainful employment - have been the political pimps of their
military paymasters. Our politicians and intellectuals
cannot run away from their roles as accomplices in the
systematic destruction of our country. Some of our eminently
distinguished citizens, figures such as Olikoye Ransome-Kuti
and Eme Awa, have been the rare exceptions in an otherwise
sordid record of intellectual collusion in military tyranny.
It is salutary that some of our intellectuals heroically
kept themselves from being polluted by Babylonian military
harlot who fornicated so shamelessly with virtually all the
members of our political class. At an international
conference in the late 1980s, I once teased the late
Professor Claude Ake with the suggestion that perhaps he was
about to be "settled" by way of an Ambassadorship somewhere
in Europe or North America. I still recollect his exact
words: "God forbid!" It seemed the mere suggestion had made
him literally sick. Professor Wole Soyinka, in spite of his
occasional infantile outpourings, must be seen and treated
as a national treasure. Almost single-handedly, he was the
voice and conscience of our oppressed and long-suffering
people in exile. Some of the pronouncements made by his
enemies and critics make them look even smaller before the
shadow of this patriot of world stature. At home, our most
distinguished scholars - men such as Ade Ajayi, Bala Usman,
Chinua Achebe, Tekena Tamuno - have maintained a Pharaonic
dignity throughout the long night of the barbarians. They
are the true moral sentinels of our country.
Do intellectuals have any responsibility in the making of
great nations? Yes, of course, they do. The founders of the
American republic ? George Washington, John Quincy Adams and
Thomas Jefferson ? were as much intellectuals as they were
practical men of the world. Thomas Gariggue Masaryk, the
revered founder-president of the former Czechoslovakian
republic was a distinguished philosopher. Our own
nationalist leaders in Africa, among them Nnamdi Azikiwe,
Obafemi Awolowo, Amilcar Cabral and Julius Kambarage
Nyerere, were serious and disciplined thinkers. The task of
national guidance, moral as well as intellectual, has been
the province of the men and women of ideas since Aristotle,
Kautilya and Ibn Khaldun. The guidance of nations is the
most sacred role of the intellectual. Never called to be a
millionaire, the scholar nevertheless accumulates billions
in terms of the wealth of memories stored in the hearts and
minds of posterity. Who will remember the Sultan of Brunei
or Bill Gates after a thousand years? Probably nobody. But I
can assure you that the names of Newton, Plato, and Einstein
will remain imperishable as long as Reason remains the
defining quality of the human species. The thinker's role is
exalted because he lives not for the material comforts of
the present but for the timeless ideals of eternity. The
role of the intellectual is to be the guardian of Rea-son,
justice, morality, and the common good. His or her vocation
is to teach and to warn and to inspire to higher human
purposes. The intellectual keeps ever before him the vision
of Truth, Goodness and Beauty. He is the exemplar of all
that is noble and refined in all human excellencies. When he
loses such a vision he betrays his calling. When a lecturer
forces a female student into a corner where she has to
compromise her womanhood in order to pass an exam, he
clearly falls below the minimum standard in his profession;
he ought to be dismissed at once. When a professor grovels
shamelessly before little men in uniform he does a profound
disservice to the intellectual world community. And we must
of necessity look askance at this deference to inferior men.
When, like the immortal Okigbo, the intellectual sides with
his own little 'tribe', pitting "Umuleri against Ugwul-eri",
or "Ijaw against Itsekiri", "Kuteb against whoever", what
are we to make of it? I think we have to conclude, as
Professor Ali Mazrui does conclude in the Trial of
Christopher Okigbo, that the intellectual has tragically
failed in his vocation as guardian of the Universal.
What about the responsibility of the politician and the
civil servant? What is the responsibility of all those
charged with the task of managing our public administration?
We cannot escape from the simple fact that the political
class has been the paradigm of civic irresponsibility in our
country. Under the present dispensation, some of the Old
Guard are returning in full force, some of them sadly with
their old chicaneries in tow. They still predominate over
the so-called 'new breed' politicians. In the second
republic parliamentarians required bribes before they could
even read a draft legislation, let alone approve it. The
Speaker himself moonlighted as a car importer; parliamentary
votes had to be paid for by way of cars or coloured
television and videos by the hapless Shehu Aliyu Usman
Shagari. And who would forget the gun-totting rogue who once
taunted his op-posing interlocutor with a gun during a full
session of parliament? If a British MP had the nerve to show
a gun in parliament, his actions would be considered an act
of high treason against the British nation and against the
mother of parliaments. How sad that in Nigeria's second
republic it was laughed away as a rather baroque display of
eccentricity. And more recently, a former
mercenary-arms-dealer-turned-senator had the chic to stop
the senate from sitting through the technicality of a court
action. Somebody somewhere is unaware that parliaments the
world over are protected by constitutional law from judicial
action. In the United Kingdom parliament is supreme, and not
even the Queen in all her royal majesty can stop the House
from sitting. This again illustrates the lightness with
which individuals in our country can hijack institutions of
state and paralyse the machinery of government for the sake
of frivolous gains. Recently reports alleged a massive bribery scandal in the House of Representatives in my home
state of Kaduna. Where is political responsibility in all
this?
In the matter of civic responsibility, our lawmakers must
set the example by unfailingly and consistently upholding
the law of the land. In England parliamentarians have legal
immunity for whatever they do or say in their official
capacity. But they lose such immunity when they violate the
laws of the land. A recent case is that of Jonathan Aitken,
a former senior minister in the government of Prime Minister
John Major. Two weeks ago he was sentenced to prison for
eighteen months for lying about who paid his Ł1000 bill
during a private stay at the Ritz hotel in Paris. He had
taken a national daily, the Guardian and its editor Alan
Rusbridger, to court for libel. He lost. In the course of
the proceedings it transpired that he had perjured himself
and lied consistently. He was charged for perjury and
sentenced. Scion of the great newspaper baron Lord
Beaverbrook; an old Etonian and graduate of Oxford
university; a successful businessman and founder of a
multi-billion pound merchant bank; a Privy Councillor and
adviser to the Queen; a debonair and handsome womaniser who
jilted Caroline, daughter of Mrs Thatcher. The world was
quite literally Jonathan Aitken's oyster. Those whom the
gods wish to destroy they first intoxicate with the fateful
wine of hubris. Haughty and arrogant, he became entangled in
the chains of his own deceits. Once a powerful minister and
seen by many as a future prime minister, he is today an
inmate of Belmarsh prison, a jail for common criminals.
While one is almost tempted to feel sorry for him for going
to jail for what many would consider a mere indiscretion, it
is nevertheless a landmark case for British justice and
democracy. It means that no matter how politically exalted
or well connected anybody may be, he or she cannot be placed
above the laws of the land. It reminds one of a remark by
Alexis de Tocqueville, to the effect that in its essence
democracy is about equality before the law rather than about
the equality of conditions.
How many parliamentarians in Nigeria's second republic did
openly take bribes and per-form other illegalities under
cover of presumed parliamentary immunity? While our MPs are
the watchdogs of the other arms of government, the
judiciary, the police and the Fourth Estate should also be
watchdogs of the dignity of the legislature and its members.
And what about the civil servants? It is a known fact that
the large-scale corruption for which our country has become
notorious throughout the world has been done with the
connivance and sometimes direct participation, of our civil
servants. It is an axiom of management science that bad
leaders prefer to work with incompetents and inferior minds.
With the sort of intellectual and moral bankrupts who have
been ruling Nigeria in the last fifteen years, it is not
surprising that those who have risen to the highest
positions in the public service have tended to be not men
and women of ability. There was indeed a time when our civil
service was as good as any in the world. Sadly, this is no
longer the case. The evils that civil servants can do are
particularly pernicious because they can operate from the
shadowy background of bureaucratic anonymity. It would be
interesting to study civil service files over the last
fifteen years to find out what advice civil servants gave to
the military oligarchy. But there are also stories of hope.
A diplomat of my own generation, known for his high ability
and integrity, was invited to work in the Presidency. Given
that these regimes are by nature terribly uneasy with those
rare individuals who combine intelligence and virtue, a few
millions had been secretly deposited in his bank account
without his knowledge. When he discovered it he raised
questions about its provenance. He was told that "the powers
that be" felt he ought to have some compensation for all his
pains. To their astonishment, he did the most 'un-Nigerian'
of things: he turned it down. He politely but firmly asked
that the money be withdrawn at once otherwise he would have
no choice but to leave the government. They complied. And it
was not as if he was from a rich family. He was just a
humble young man who happened to have a conscience and who
believed in his country. Similarly, a top advisor during the
Shagari regime, a professor, was once offered vast sums of
money from the public treasury. He vehemently turned it
down. He refused to be corrupted. Now, these are stories of
genuine heroism that have gone virtually unsung and
unremarked. This however cannot absolve our higher civil
service of collusion in some of the systematic pillage of
our country. In our fledgling democracy civil servants must
awaken to their constitutional responsibilities.
Anti-corruption slogans alone will not do the trick. We
would probably need a system of judicial review as currently
obtains in English constitutional law. It is a system that
exposes governmental actions to judicial scrutiny while
protecting citizens from ultra vires actions and
governmental highhandedness.
What about the youth, on whose breast, all the hopes of the
future rest? Joseph Mazzini, that great prophet who
championed the national rebirth of Italy, remarked that it
is the youth that bear in their hearts the sign of the
future. Sadly, the behaviour of our youth gives us little or
no hope. Students in our universities have constituted
themselves into all sorts of atavistic cults, terrorising
campuses and even killing fellow students and their
lecturers. To the best of my knowledge, there is almost no
other country on earth where such a phenomenon occurs. Some
of our youth clearly haven't understood the meaning of
responsibility. Young men and women who see the bringing
down of buildings and the burning down of every movable
object as the only means of expressing political grievances
clearly have a long way to go in understanding the
imperatives of civic culture. Our democracy will survive
only if we embark on a complete re-education of our country,
focusing in particular on the youth that will inherit the
mantle of leadership in the next generation.
In the building of the new Nigeria of our dreams, the
practice of freedom must go hand in hand with the practice
of responsibility. It is one thing to have a good
constitution; it is quite another to run the affairs of the
land in accordance with its letter and its spirit. A
constitution in itself does not a republic make. The
building of a democracy has to be a slow and sometimes
painful process, involving surgical operations here and
there, weeding out bad eggs, locking out a few scoundrels,
mobilising men and women and creating a moral and
intellectual climate which facilitates the flourishing of
the rule of law, commerce, industry and the arts. We can
succeed in this effort if we begin not on the basis of
rights that we can demand as just deserts against the state.
We have to begin with the claims of duty. I believe that
Rousseau erred in claiming that "Man is born free". I
believe the opposite: Man was born not free but in chains ?
the chains of duty. It is in everyone fulfilling his or her
duties that society and indeed civilisation as we know it is
built. Without social order the claims of liberty will have
little or no meaning. Every citizen and indeed anyone in a
position of power - be he a judge or politician or civil
servant or policeman or customs official - must always ask
first and foremost: what are my duties? To whom am I
accountable and for what? What do I owe Nigeria? What are my
inescapable duties to my parents, to my family, to my
relations, to my community, to my church, to my mosque, to
my profession, to my patients, to my pupils, to my clients,
to my managers, to my workers, to my country and to my
people?
The peace and harmony that we long for, the prosperity that
we seek will only come about if each and every one of us
feels truly responsible and accountable for their actions.
Our country, once the pride of Africa, now lies in tatters.
Our people are clothed, like the Biblical Lazarus in rags
and ashes - with multiple afflictions of hunger, disease and
penury. Nigeria, once the proud jewel of Africa, is now its
monumental shame. I have been privileged to travel to many
parts of the world, and I can say without any fear of
contra-diction that my beloved country, more than any other,
evokes strong feelings of repulsion in almost every corner
of God's earth. How did we come to such a sorry state? Is it
global conspiracy? Is it the shadowy machinations of world
imperialism? I am inclined to think it is none of the above.
I believe the cause lies in our failure - individually and
collectively - to take responsibility for our actions.
Pampered by the illusory wealth of petrodollars, wealth we
did not create with our own sweat or our own wit - we have
developed a mindset that believes that the world owes us a
living for doing nothing. With our twisted values and
convoluted beliefs, cheating and hustling are considered
best business practice in our national ideology. We seem to
believe that we do not need to exert ourselves and we do not
need hard work and disciplined application in order to
become rich. Our national sickness is the failure of
responsibility; responsibility of those in power and the
responsibility of citizens.
With the election of President Olusegun Obasanjo there is a
palpable sense that a new culture of responsible leadership
is beginning to emerge. He himself has apparently undergone
a spiritual rebirth, having undergone a baptism of fire in
the dungeons of Abacha's Gulag Archipelago. I am inclined to
think he really means what he says about rooting out
corruption and helping Nigeria 'rise again'. One can't help
but be moved by the wonderful memories of the hand-over of
Saturday the 29th of May. Some of us, not usually of a
lachrymose nature, simply couldn't hold back a few tears.
One got this strange Hegelian feeling that, perhaps, after
all, there is such a thing as a Universal Mind guiding the
destinies of men and nations. Clearly, a new spirit is
abroad in our land. Per-haps the African Renaissance that
Thabo Mbeki has spoken about may not be such an illusory
chimera after all. Mbeki, a disciplined intellectual
thinker, is now the new President of South Africa after the
departure of the legendary Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela. A
relatively young statesman, he embodies my concept of
responsible leadership. Our own Olusegun Obasanjo has
extended to him the hand of fraternal friendship and
solidarity, so that together they can help our continent
move forward. Noble sentiments no doubt. But I dare say that
no leader can succeed alone, however well meaning, however
capable. He has to work with parliament and cabinet and the
civil service. He will have to deal with the members of his
party. Pressures and demands will mount. He will need good
advice from virtuous intellectuals and worthy citizens. But
the president cannot stop the student who wants to cheat in
his examinations. He cannot personally oversee every traffic
war-den or policeman. He cannot check every accountant who
is hell-bent on cooking the books. He cannot stop every single drunken lorry driver on the highway. He cannot stop
the hand of every civil servant that is determined to take a
bribe. What he can do is set the tone and create the right
moral atmosphere. Democracy requires creative leadership;
but above all it demands that everyone take responsibility
for his or her own actions.
I am inclined to believe that the train of our national
progress has only temporally gone off the rails. The next
few years will see whether we are able to get the wagons
back on track ? in resuscitating the economy, in reforming
the financial and banking system, in crime prevention, in
restoring civil harmony and in building sound and effective
institutions. But the engine of progress will never start
without the oxygen of a vibrant civic culture. This is the
ingredient that is vital in ensuring that things will work ?
that the taps have water and that electricity does not fail.
If the taps don't run and the lights fail some-one must be
held to account. If there is no fuel and the refinery fails
someone must be made to take responsibility. These things
are basic requirements of modern civilisation, not luxuries.
It does not take magicians, Mallams, Marabouts or Babalawos
to run a country. It takes ordinary people with moderate
brains and some basic grasp of organization and management.
And such people must have the courage of their own
convictions and the guts to "kick a few asses" if necessary.
Nigerians of all walks have remarked ad nauseum that ours is
the most difficult country in the world to govern. I
strongly disagree. I have always contested such a
proposition, based as it is on an undemonstrable axiom.
India is probably even more complex than we are in terms of
its diversity. And yet India is moving fast up the ladder of
industrialised societies. As far as I know, Nigeria is not
such a difficult country to rule. The present anarchy in the
Delta and other regions, for example, is largely due to
poverty, neglect and political emasculation. Give the people
freedom and a capacity for political self-expression; allow
them to take responsibility for their own lives and their
own development. Provide clean drinking water, clinics, jobs
and education for their children. Who on earth would want to
go on rampage and for what? Sadly, Nigeria for the last
thirty-nine years has been ruled on the basis of oligarchies
of one shade or the other. People have a right, as John
Locke would tell us, to take up arms against unjust
governments. It is their historic, moral and legitimate duty
to do so. There are also those who have claimed that their
own part of the country has a "natural talent" for rulership
while the vast majority of us must of necessity content
ourselves with being 'followers'. A prominent politician
from the Old Guard once made this arrogant and bogus claim;
he was and is a vacuous and loquacious drone whose only
claim to fame is the ability to eloquently recite prepared
speeches. There are mercifully few Nigerians who any longer
believe in this satanic apostasy. The logic of events has
overtaken by quantum leaps and bounds those oligarchs who
have held back the progress of this country for nearly forty
years. Now they must only watch and see, but they will not
be allowed to spoil the show. Of course, they will try to
use religion, ethnicity, regionalism and other familiar
types of manipulative and diversionary tricks. But they will
ultimately fail. They will fail because Nigeria and Africa
are far bigger than any one section, group, cabal or Masonic
Lodge.
What has become crystal clear over the decades since
independence is the fact that our people - the Nigerian
people - are a highly energetic and resourceful lot. When
talent and energy are not given full expression, they lead,
as the Freudians tell us, to all sorts of mental sicknesses
and destructive regressions. Create a sound government and a
stable, enabling environment. Weed out the bad eggs in the
civil service and put honest and hardworking people in the
administration. Make the public service a merit-based system
for both recruitment and promotion, as is the case in India,
Britain, France, Korea and other civilised countries;
promote excellence and punish indolence and corruption. Make
the social and economic environment right and see the
wonders that will become of Nigeria. It could quite easily
become a technological-industrial state of the first rank in
a matter of two decades. It is not magic or voodoo; it is
science and in fact common sense. Sadly, it has been our
singular misfortune that nobody who understands concepts has
ever ruled Nigeria. The only exception is probably Olusegun
Obasanjo. The greatest tragedy in life is for a great people
to be ruled by monkeys. If you let your country be ruled by
monkeys you will sooner or later end up as a land of
monkeys. Even the best among you will soon begin to behave
like monkeys ? even if only as a survival mechanism. Such a
country, I dare say, will be fit only for monkeys to live
in. Having been ruled by "goonies" who understand only guns,
dollars, booze and girls our country has gradually turned
into a paradigm of the banana republic. Someone called it
"the Zairinisation" of Nigeria. The first task required for
the moral and social regeneration of our country is to raise
the standards of public life and of public accountability in
general. And we must do so sooner rather than later; and by
action rather than mere platitudes. Our people have suffered
in-describable pain and hardship for too long. One cannot
blame them for being impatient for change. As the minutes of
this century's clock tick hurriedly to the end of our
millennium ? a millennium of oppression, murder and war ?
where do we as a people want to be as we gaze at the dawn of
a new era? Two paths diverge in the woods, to paraphrase
American poet Robert Frost. There is the road of barbarism
folly, and of Reason and civilisation. What historic choices
are we going to make? Quo vadis?
I believe we have no choice but to pursue the path of
progress and civilisation. We have no choice but to raise
our standards in every sphere of our national life ? in
education, in the provision of social services, in banking
and finance, in high culture, in scientific re-search, in
industrial capability, in the quality of leadership and in
the public administration. In the coming decades our people
would have to survive in a highly competitive and in many
ways more brutal, global economic system. The post-Cold War
order is gradually taking the form of a Darwinian jungle in
economic, political and military relations. I call it the
Triumph of Capital. In the emerging global hierarchy of
states Nigeria and indeed Africa is being consigned to the
ghetto of international capital. The resurrection of the
Holy Roman Empire as embodied in the European Union - a
political grouping with no instinctive affinity with
democracy or global ethics ? may allow the fascists of
yesterday to re-package their world ambitions in ways more
difficult to isolate and deal with. They will want all the
resources which God has blessed Africa with. But I doubt if
they will be keen to see Africa come out of the woods.
Nothing in their international economic policy gives us any
reason for optimism. The Chinese and the Asians in general
have read the writing on the wall and they are re-assessing
their world economic and financial relations. It would
amount to an act of historic suicide for Africans to persist
in their post-colonial illusions, looking constantly to
others to come and help them out of their miseries.
According to Richard Joseph, noted African-American scholar
and friend of our country, "the natural and human resources
in Nigeria are just so profound that if it can be free from
those things that have crippled it, there is no limit to
what this country can do". I was in South Africa last year,
visiting Cape Town, Johannesburg and Pretoria. I was
astonished at the level of infrastructure and industrial
development in that country. They have excellent highways,
world class universities, fantastic cultural centres,
schools, hospitals and other facilities. The only thing that
reminds you that it is Africa is the glorious sunshine, the
soft breeze, and the faces of our African brothers and
sisters. It struck me that what does actually make a
difference is not the land but the people. We are blessed
with everything else except that rare stuff of which great
leaders are made. With the possible exception of South
Africa, Nigeria is the only country in Africa that has the
potential in terms of human capital and resources to become
an inwardly directed and inwardly generated global player.
But we would be jokers if we imagined that those who have
arrogated to themselves the roles of masters of the universe
will sit idly by and see us move forward industrially and
technologically. Through corporate exclusion, financial
manipulation and media propaganda, Nigerians the world over
are being vilified as the "most corrupt nation on earth". It
has been alleged, for example, that Bechir Ben Yahmed, the
Tunisian publisher of Jeaune Afrique (a magazine with close
links to French intelligence), has gone so far as to suggest
that Nigeria should not be connected to the global
information highway because of its corrupt reputation. And
he had the bile to say this soon after meeting in Paris with
the outgoing Nigerian head of state. Every Nigerian abroad
is adjudged to be a potential criminal, be he or she a
neurosurgeon or a doctor of divinity. Of course, there is no
denying that some of our countrymen are involved in all
sorts of shameful financial chicaneries. But such people are
not the majority. The majority of Nigerians abroad are
highly educated professionals and they are contributing
quietly and humbly to the progress and prosperity of their
host communities. The world media evidently prefers to focus
on the really bad few among us and then projects these as
the blanket label for all Nigerians. This wholesale
slandering of an entire nation and people may be seen as
evidence of an international conspiracy to undermine Nigeria
as a potential world player and leader of Africa. We must
resist it at all costs.
I predict that the coming century will be an even more
dangerous one for Nigeria and for the African people in
general. If we realised the dangers ahead we would shake off
at once the stupor which makes us behave with the
licentiousness of drunken sailors. We would get to work
straight away. We ought to remember that no civilisation was
ever built by moneychangers, mere contractors and "area
boys". Great nations are built not by hoodlums but by men of
integrity and character; men and women of knowledge and
ideas; men of quality and industry. Simple, ordinary,
hardworking men and women toiling quietly in the villages
and in the cities, men and women who are respectful of the
law and who possess civic virtue. I am quite convinced that
not all is lost, and that we can even make for ourselves a
nation as great as the ancient Egyptians have made in times
past. We must reject the international propaganda that makes
us feel nothing but shame about ourselves, our country and
our people. Liberty, coupled with justice and responsibility
? pressed down with courage and optimism - should be the
bedrock on which we build the Temple of Humanity in our New
Africa. It really does not matter where we stand at the
moment. What really matters and matters so desperately, is
where we are going, where we have set our sights. China at
the turn of the century was nothing more than a creaking
behemoth of unruly warlords, gangsters, opium addicts and
other disreputable potentates. Today the country is at the
threshold of an economic and technological take-off that has
astonished her friends and foes alike. Some observers
believe it would not be too long before the mantle of world
leadership passes from the Americans to the Chinese. Given
that no major seismic change in the world balance of power
has ever taken place without major tensions, vigilance for
us must be the eternal price of liberty. Nothing in this
amazing universe of ours is fixed like the stars forever.
The laws of nature and of nature's God show that that
Scientific Man, Economic Man and Political Man does operate
according to discernible and predictable principles. Once
these are understood, mastered and harnessed we can create,
through social engineering, an environment that will allow
our people to unleash their creative energy.
But of course, we could equally choose to do
business-as-usual, playing our little games of tribe and
religion and sectionalism while others are hurrying to
colonise outer space. If we persist in our follies our
people would continue to get poorer and poorer. Poverty is a
hungry and bottomless pit. The late Chief Moshood Abiola
once told us at a dinner that, as a young man, he knew what
poverty was and he hated it. Poverty is a rapacious beast, a
leviathan that devours all talents and saps the creativity
energy of nations and peoples. Its rapacity has no end. If
we do not change our ways we would simply continue to go
down and down the drain - until we are out. We would remain
miserable beggars at the tables of the rich, constantly
seeking escape from our misfortunes through cultism,
religious fundamentalism, tribal wars, and even cannibalism.
Those with any talents to sell abroad will swiftly vote with
their feet. The Russian writer Fyodor Dostoevski once
ob-served that there is no depth to which men may not sink.
In the great famine of the 1980s, for example, the starving
Ethiopian refugees were so famished that at night, in the
parched, dark open spaces, hungry hyenas used to come and
take them one at a time. First a child, then a mother, and
so on. They didn't even have the strength to cry. There was
only the silent wailing of those who dwelt in the valley of
the shadow of death. Nigeria wallows under such a curse and
yet we do not realise it. Recently a commentator wrote in
the Guardian: "The other day, a man drove over a burnt human
body in Mushin, Lagos. He was later to say that when he felt
the thud under his tyres, he thought he had actually ran
over a dead dog." The sorrow that passes all sorrow is that
the majority of our people live lives that are no better
than the lives of dogs. The average dog in Europe and
America gets more nutrition and enjoys a better quality of
life than the average human being in Africa. We should not
deceive ourselves. What we have is no longer a country
worthy of the name. It is a sprawling monstrosity of
lawlessness and anarchy and all sorts of social evils, a
place akin to what the philosopher Thomas Hobbes termed 'the
state of nature'. Our situation is quite reminiscent of the
ancient Melians, of whom the Greek historian Thucydides
said: "the strong took what they could and the weak granted
what they must".
The task before the new administration is a stupendous and
onerous one. It would be foolhardy for anyone to
under-estimate the challenges ahead. We must affirm that
this government and this president deserve the trust and
support of all people of goodwill. Tough and often painful
choices will have to be made in the coming years. It might
even be necessary to wield the stick rather than the carrot
from time to time. Nigeria's gradual descent into nihilism
does call for extraordinary measures. I agree that human
rights are sacred, but I also believe that we cannot afford
the luxury of hair-splitting legal-constitutional niceties
while Rome is being reduced to ashes. Statecraft is not the
province of mere lawyers or those who make a living from
legalistic hair-splitting. To echo Achebe, the yam of rights
would not go down smoothly without the palm oil of civic
virtue. It requires no less than the re-education of an
entire generation of Nigerians. A rather mischievous pupil
once asked the philosopher Aristotle to tell him the best
way to go to Rome. The Master replied that he should ensure
that every single step he takes leads to Rome. We should not
and must not be overwhelmed by the task ahead. We must
simply ensure that every step we take from now on is in the
direction of greatness and national honour. The Martiniquan
poet and statesman Aime Cesaire has reminded us that
humanity's work is not yet ended, and that we did not come
into this world to be merely spectators or parasites. We
must therefore work and work, as if the whole of humanity's
destiny depended on us. To labour for one's country is the
ultimate labour of love. Africa and posterity demand no less
from us. And in this journey of a thousand miles, God's work
must also be ours.