All Hail IBB

By Sam Omatseye

I have wondered why the recent fuss over IBB giving a speech at a literary event. In a conversation with a few friends, I pitched my tent with the likes of playwright, Femi Osofisan. We should have ripped open the Lagos skies and let the expired general to zoom in with his private jet. The NLNG should have unfurled the red carpet. And they did.
After he must have graced us with the oratory of the century, then we could plot his ambush. Maybe if we ignored him before the speech, we could also collectively pooh-pooh him after the theatrics. Aren’t we now pooh-poohing him?

But as it happened by default, we invested the man with more mileage, a big dose of bravura and charm. He even basked in the highfalutin spotlight and turned into a flurry of pedagogy. He became a teacher, our teacher. He had the temerity to define for us what a critic meant. A critic, according to the dear genius, is the person who knows the way but cannot drive. Never mind that he meant it as an innuendo at Soyinka. He even lacked the boldness to say in plain prose that our own W.S is a critic who cannot govern. He settled for the cunning and subterfuge of words. But our IBB is not a coward. General Theophilus Danjuma must regret tarring him with that description over the Dimka coup. According to the story, IBB ducked and would not show up where death was stalking. After all, discretion is the better part of valour. Wise man, IBB. And while his critics raged, he knew where to drive the nation as president. He careened us to poverty, desperation and tyranny.
Fela was not around to say “teacher don’t teach me nonsense.” Of course, IBB, who has spent a better part of his life as a soldier and general, understands that going direct is an act of suicide. Not being a coward, he decided to shoot indirectly.
But that’s not my beef with the Soyinkas and all those who railed against our own IBB delivering a speech to a group of literary icons.
Indeed, I just want to demonstrate that IBB is a surefire literary genius, a god of words and a begetter of great quotes. He was not only a wordsmith, he also was a dramatist, serving up himself as playwright, producer, director and actor in some of the loftier scripts in our nation’s history.
Take for instance, the phrase “a little to the left and a little to the right.” Was that not a clear case of poetry in politics? He marshaled that phrase to describe his locally brewed two-party system, with the National Republican Convention (NRC) and Social Democratic Party (SDP). He turned himself into a revolutionary of the party system in Nigeria. So great was that invention that politicians with varying ideological colours had to flock together.
Don’t say the man introduced prostitution to party politics. That will be defaming the great revolutionary. Is that not why we have the PDP today, the great African party with politicians from different hues whoring together under the same roof?
The “new breed” politicians also came into being in his era. In his great revolutionary spirit for the party system, he knew what we all suspected: that the old and musty politicians triggered tragedy and suffering among our dear people. They unleashed the civil war, engendered the turbulent 1960’s, careered the society down the path of poverty and corruption in our society.
So, we needed a new crop of politicians, a vigorous new tonic. He must be regretting that he had to reverse himself. He plotted a coup against the same new breed by making them rely on the old and cranky fuddy-duddies. A wise man, he knew the young could not inherit a different gene from the breast they suckled on. He ensured that the young and vibrant politicians could not breed except what the old bequeathed. A tear for them.
In one of his momentous speeches, he enriched the Nigerian English with the phrase, “let’s use what we have to get what we want.” By that, he inaugurated one of the great moral revolutions in our history: settlement. The student could use what she had to get the grade she wanted. It happened before then. But with that rhetorical grenade, it became a badge of honour. Ditto the customs officer, the civil servant, the professor. Happily, a sedate nation transformed itself into a generation of hirelings. The professor deployed his ideas to write tawdry books as salesman for a decrepit soldier. The civil servant, weaned on Murtala who made their jobs insecure, found solace in using their positions to get what they wanted: posh cars, upscale mansions, holiday in South of France. All on Grade level 13 salary. Unlike in the Western society where people give bribes to get what they did not deserve, we started giving bribes to obtain what were our rights. In IBB’s tenure, it was executed with relish. Nobody got tried for corruption. It was not necessary. It was not in the lofty spirit of the revolution.
Was it not in his regime that he put down the controversial coup plot by Mamman Vatsa? He had said he would “crush with incisive skill” any attempt to undermine his regime. It is fascinating that the word skill should be associated with his regime. But he had a lot of skill, if you look at it. Skill at unleashing bans on protests. Skill in closing down media houses. Skill in clamping down on human rights activists. Skill in flattering and entrapping radicals with ripe fruits of money and position. Skill at creating parallel organizations to federal ministries, ala MAMSER in place of information ministry. DFRRI in place of works and rural development ministries. He also used deft skills in knowing that most human beings had a price. In short, skill at patronages.
In the same spirit, his skills lifted the nation’s crude educational standards, such that we had fewer good teachers around, with the so-called brain drain inaugurated during his glorious years. We developed a new crop of exports to the world.
Dis na una bank O! make una use am well O! He could relate with the despised and lowly among us. Soyinka and Achebe have earned much praise for domesticating the English language. What about doing it officially? In setting up the People’s Bank, he asked Tai Solarin to head it. And he located his quote in the poor’s lair at Ajegunle, in the language they understood. Never mind the bank never got well-funded, the poor never got much loans and Nigeria largely fulfilled Scot F. Fitzgerald’s immortal words: “the rich get richer and the poor get children.”  
As his regime wound down, he decided to “step aside”. The great general left with only half his heart. He left the great exponents of the language to analyse what he meant. Where was he stepping aside to or for? Up till today, the great poet has left those lines with their many-layered reverberations and meanings.
Shakespeare has many such elliptical phrases and so does our own W.S. But one thing we are grateful for is that he left power like the great democrat that he was, and still is.
The great democrat, on one evening, waxed lyrical before reporters. “We are not only in government, we are in power.” This was in the maelstrom of the June 12 crisis. He looked youthful before the television camera, his eyes darting, impishly, his feet bouncy as though poised for ambush. He taught political scientists, in practical terms, the distinction between government and power.
He left his language on the tablets of crime. Where is Anini? He asked the Inspector General of Police, when the duo of Anini and Osunbor became maniacal cult figures in the nation. They haunted the peace and brought a barbarous new chapter to armed robbery. What is routine today was novel when Anini started it. The question was a deft way for IBB to shift blame to his head of police. He is not a coward. He goes for the jugular. But he did not condemn the crooks? He just asked for their whereabouts.
So IBB was the man of letters. His name was even unique. Reporters called him by his initials. No leader adorned his office with such a colourful name. He was loved so much the media called him Maradona, after the footballer who scored with his hand. Even in illness he was colourful. Radiculopathy, the disease that afflicted his foot, was a mouthful that titillated a nation’s consciousness. Not since AIDS has a disease grabbed the headlines.
His words were accompanied by a great many dramas. He looked a drama, his effeminate voice, sly gait, impish grin, gap-tooth, stocky build. Remember the IMF debates. That was his debut play. The great playwrights turned with envy in their graves. Lorca, Brecht, Beckett. We all debated, dueled on newspaper pages, crossed swords on televisions, jousted in seminars. In the end, he said he was not going to adopt it. He made his finance minister console us with the no victor, no vanquished speech. Then what turned out to be an anticlimax became a great climax when we learned he already implemented them anyway. The Maradona, the dramatist, the coiner of words had conned all again.
We also remember the various transition programmes. He used the device of burlesques as he raised many a politician and ended up bringing them down from the high horses he placed them. They became like Chief Nanga in Achebe’s  A Man of the People. IBB made politics great fun, burning our foreign exchange, enriching a few and pauperizing everyone else.
When it was all said and done, he described himself as the evil genius. He even knew how to pick the words tha fit him. Does he have a parallel in history? Can anyone doubt why he could not be shortlisted for the Nobel Prize? After all, Winston Churchill won the prize on the strength of his speeches. There were only two differences. While Churchill was white and English, IBB is black and Nigerian. Secondly, Churchill ended a war and a tyranny with his rhetoric. He once said, it is better to jaw jaw than to war war. IBB burned a nation and capsized a democracy with his jaw jaw. Hurrah, IBB.



Published in  The Nation newspaper of Monday, October 15, 2007. 

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