With today’s election, Ekiti
State has become the epicenter of Nigerian electoral politics. Here, the major
political fault lines converge into a great foreshadowing.
Fateful questions not only about Ekiti but about the course
of our nation and its uncertain democracy will be asked and may be answered
this day.
If this is how
history will have it, so be it. Elections in Nigeria have rarely been a
transparent exercise. The ruling party has mostly dug into its bag of electoral
tricks to cast about a vast assortment of malpractice over almost every
important contest.
With the advent of the APC, the PDP finally faces a
challenger strong enough to remove its chokehold on the nation’s future.
If the PDP truly had the people’s welfare at heart, the
APC’s onset should have spurred the PDP to improve its ways of governance.
Instead, the PDP
shifted in the opposite direction. Faced with this new political reality, the
PDP pays even less attention to the essentials of democratic governance so that
it may engulf us in deeper and deeper misconduct so long as that misconduct
guarantees their continuation in power.
One of the terrible by-products of this descend into
authoritarian behavior is the decision that the APC shall not win another
governorship election, notwithstanding the candidate the people actually
prefer.
Thus, the commandment of the PDP is not to allow an election
to be an election. Their golden rule of elections is ‘that it is better to
steal than to lose’.
Elections for the PDP
are not seen as exercises in democratic expression whereby the people are
allowed the leaders of their choice.
Elections to them are a perverse ritual where they explore
the terrible lengths to which they will go to suppress the people’s will.
Thus, all eyes are on Ekiti today. Ekiti is not high
political drama because of the scheduled election. It is suspenseful because
everyone knows the despot of Abuja seeks to hijack the people’s will.
Thus, there shall be
a contest within the contest. Can the will of the people withstand the
arbitrary, undemocratic power and pull of the Aso Villa monarch and his court
jesters?
That is the question
on everyone’s mind. So, it might as well be brought into the open. If allowed
to proceed freely and fairly, the election is a foregone conclusion. Governor
Fayemi has distinguished himself as a leader dedicated to the welfare of the
people of his state.
He has done more good in four years than his PDP
challenger can do in a lifetime of lifetimes. Fayose can do little good because
he has little good in him. Any good he has done, has been by accident. During
his tenure as governor, he covered the state in a blanket of suppression,
intimidation, violence and blood. Where Fayemi is a statesman, this man is
sinister.
Where Fayemi builds
and unifies. Fayose destroys and divides. Fayemi represents the dream of an
improving future. Fayose represents the reprise of a departed nightmare. No one
in their right mind chooses a nightmare over a dream or bad over good.
The Ekiti People must choose the path of “Commonsense
Evolution” that can deliver development and societal emancipation.
The peace and
development of Ekiiti should not be replaced by a retrogressive mind; in party
formation, lack of character, lack of content and lack of discipline. Sadly,
Labour Party’s Bamidele has let unbridled ambition get the better of him. Had
he waited to gain the requisite experience and knowledge, perhaps he could have
become a decent candidate in time. But that would have been years from now.
That time has yet to come. At the moment, he is like unripe
fruit picked much too early from the tree. We all know what happens when you
eat such a thing. It is bitter to the mouth and hard on the stomach. The people
of Ekiti do not need this.
Thus, we watch an
election that will not be so much about the candidates as it will be a
revelation about those conducting the election and the puppet masters pulling
the strings of those conducting the election. INEC blotched the election in
Anambra.
It will likely
perform poorly and with manifest bias in Ekiti. If INEC continues in this
troubled way, history will record it as one of the authors of democracy’s death
knell. The security forces are under instruction to obstruct the process and
intimidate those who stand for Fayemi.
PDP has raided the
public treasury and is pouring the people’s money to buy the election for
someone the people don’t want. Adding insult to injury, Minister of State for
Defence has deployed to Ekiti where he is brandishing every tool at his
disposal to thwart the will of the people. With the dire security conditions in
the nation and the status of the Chibok girls still at ominous risk, one would
think this senior defence official has more important work on his desk than to
be the chief campaign hack of a candidate who strikes fear in the hearts of the
people of the state.
If only the PDP and
its errant minister of state devoted as much energy and drive to our security
challenges as they do to stealing elections, this nation would both be safer
and more democratic. Instead, we sink into deeper insecurity and despotism.
The
election in Ekiti is important not only to the fate of that state but of the
entire nation. No doubt the PDP gang will stop at nothing to abridge the right
of the people so that their brutish loser may win. This gives rise to the
questions of the day.
Will INEC bend as always or will it finally stand and do
its duty as is proper? Will the people decide that enough is enough and not
only vote but defend their vote in all proper and right ways? Will we see the
advance of democracy or its retreat in the face of mounting suppression?
These
are the questions of the day and the answers that arise not only will determine
the governorship in Ekiti but also will augur for good or evil regarding the
2015 elections.
As such, the fate of Nigeria lies in the balance and is being
shaped right before us. All eyes must be on Ekiti for what we see there today
will be what we will see for the rest of Nigeria in the months to come. Pray
what we see will be democracy. If not, then it will be something that pushes us
closer to disaster.
Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Former Governor of Lagos State, Nigeria.
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