Nothing reveals the essential President Goodluck Jonathan as when he extemporises. The speeches may turn out not to be inspiring or even informative, nor sometimes offer his audience any philosophical guide or lessons. However, they always reveal his mind, which is often inscrutably disengaged; his ideas, if they can be so described; his scope, using the most conservative measurements; and his limitations and worldview. Last Sunday, at the Aso Villa Chapel, Dr Jonathan once again gave the country stellar performance from his rich repository of innocent, youthful outbursts. The occasion was hardly appropriate, seeing that it was a memorial service in honour of Nelson Mandela, but his conclusion was unmistakeable, even as it was highly controversial and deeply wounding. The speech was largely extempore, but it came from jottings. Had it been a prepared speech, it would probably have been weeded of its many blatant flaws, baits and unreflective provocations.
His
simple thesis was that given the nature of Nigerian politicians, a nature he
gratuitously bestowed upon other African leaders somewhere along his speech,
Nigeria could never produce someone as great as Mandela. It is not clear why he
thought and spoke so negatively, and especially on that sombre occasion when it
was more useful to draw upon the nuanced lessons of Mr Mandela’s life and to
gently prod his wary audience into emulating the life of the departed icon. The
relief, however, though this is not an excuse, must be that at least it was not
a prepared speech that benefited from the introspection and research expected
of the leader of 170 million people.
It
was clear that the Jonathan speech reflected something much more insidious than
the topic of Mandela’s example which it pretended to address. Dr Jonathan’s Aso
Villa speech betrayed the anger and frustrations he has endured in the past few
years. Indeed, there are few occasions since he assumed the presidency when he
has not ventilated his bitter reservations about his critics, most of whom he
believes are unfair and wicked. Not too long ago, he even concluded that he was
probably the most vilified president in the whole world. That of course was an
exaggeration, but this has not deterred him from responding furiously to every
criticism with characteristic lack of presidential dignity.
Nothing
will mollify the rage and disgust Dr Jonathan feels for his critics. And though
he cleverly used pronouns such as ‘we’ and ‘us’ as the subject of his
discourse, it is clear he did not and could not have meant himself. He was
referring strictly to others – his enemies, opponents and critics. If proof is
required, all you need do is read his speech closely, and you will discover
that he referred to himself only in those places where he talked of leaders who
were criticised in the early years of their reign, but canonised as their
reforms began to yield fruits. Dr Jonathan’s literary sleight must, therefore,
be de-emphasised in order to have a proper understanding of the bitterness that
caused his speech to misfire badly last Sunday.
During
the memorial service in honour of Mr Mandela, the president established the
foundation for his drastic conclusion in the following words: “In fact, if you
listen to those of us who are politicians, from all political parties, the way
we talk; some of us speak as if Nigeria is their personal bedrooms that they
have control over. Read the papers, listen to the radio and television and the
social media and see how politicians talk; we intimidate, we threaten, show
force in our communication. This definitely is not the virtue of great men.
They are certainly the vices of tiny men.” Apart from the brutal
inappropriateness of that kind of talk at a memorial service, the president
seems undisguisedly and a little shamelessly flustered. He is bothered that his
critics are relentless and aggressive. His was, therefore, a plaintive,
hopeless cry for relief.
Yet,
his arguments showed more pointedly that the label he sought to slam on his
traducers in fact depicts his style and that of his aides such as the effusive
Doyin Okupe, the cynical and hyperbolic Ahmed Gulak who thinks the ruling party
owned Nigerians, and the scaremongering Nyesom Wike who personifies the
immoderation that assails presidential corridors. Much more than any of his
critics, Dr Jonathan has spoken with much thunder and meanness like someone who
sees Nigeria as his bedroom, and has trampled on the freedoms and liberties of
his countrymen with such ferocity that few would dispute a description of him
as a monarch.
Finally,
to cap a bad speech, the president then deadpans: “Sometimes when I listen to
politicians, the ones older than me, my contemporaries and some even the
younger ones, I come to the painful conclusion that it would be probably easier
for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a politician to be
truly great.” It is hard to explain his pains. Clearly, the president does not
have an understanding of what great leadership is all about, whether as it
relates to its metaphysical properties, or the discipline, sacrifices,
charisma, intuition, and the often unfathomable intellect that constitute its
rubric. Unable to understand these properties, Dr Jonathan simply chose the
wrong moment and wrong place to trivialise the topic and to make sweeping and
pejorative judgement about his country’s fallibilities.
Even
discounting the many howlers in his speech, such as when he used ‘pressurised’
for pressured, and his appalling misunderstanding and misconception of China’s
developmental trajectory, the speech was still a very bad attempt at justifying
his cynicism of fellow politicians and pessimism of Nigeria’s self-belief. All
his Sunday speech showed was not why Nigeria could not produce its own Mandela,
but how unable he is in adequately grasping the concept of leadership. The
closest he came to understanding the idea was when he spoke glowingly about Mr
Mandela’s fine attributes, the icon’s great skill in uniting peoples, forgiven
his enemies and exhibiting humility. He then added the contradistinctive
observation of bad leaders who sought vengeance and practised repression. It
was almost as if the president forgot what he has been doing in Rivers State.
If
Nigeria has not produced its own Mandelas, it is not because Dr Jonathan’s
critics and fellow politicians talk as if Nigeria is their bedroom, an obvious
barb directed at the top politicians of the All Progressives Congress (APC),
but because only South Africa could have produced a Mandela, just as only the
US could have produced a Lincoln, China a Mao Zedong, Soviet Union its Lenin
and Stalin, etc. If Nigeria has a surfeit of what Dr Jonathan describes with
cruel mockery as ‘tiny men’ it is because he himself, not to talk of Chief
Olusegun Obasanjo and others before him, had failed to seize the moment. And
they failed to seize the moment because they lacked the philosophical depth to
judge the moment. It is noteworthy that by his analysis Dr Jonathan writes
himself off. No one will dispute his self-reproof. But Dr Jonathan’s pessimism
must not fool us into thinking Nigeria does not have the objective conditions
for producing great leaders.
Great
leaders can be produced in Nigeria, and will be produced when the
contradictions and circumstances are ripe. Imagine, for instance, if the
departing military rulers had not foisted the misfit Chief Obasanjo on Nigeria
in 1999, and if he in turn had not foisted the lethargic Umaru Yar’Adua on the
country in 2007? It is indeed a deep and disturbing irony that Chief Obasanjo
missed the self-reproof in his televised tribute to Mr Mandela, whom he praised
for turning down his (Obasanjo’s) suggestion to go for a second term, an indication
both of the nobility and self-abnegation of Mr Mandela and the ignobility and
self-aggrandisement of Chief Obasanjo.
By
all means let Dr Jonathan continue to give us his extemporaneous speeches,
perhaps armed only with highlights of his discourse. For then, in spite of his
often disapproving style and content, it would open a window into his ingenuous
mind, assuring us that a few more years of Dr Jonathan would be both a costly
misadventure for the country and a destiny deferred or altogether destroyed.
No comments:
Post a Comment