More 'Politricks" as Nigeria Moves Closer To Another Civil War!

Wole Adejumo
Recent events in Nigeria’s political arena have made many citizens anxious, forcing many to conclude that the country is in trouble. The gradual descent into anarchy readily brings to mind the events that preceded the coup of January 15, 1966. That day marked a turning point in Nigeria’s history, a point Nigeria has not been able to recover from, almost five decades after.
So bad is it now that the Hausa- Fulani, Igbo, Yoruba, Ijaw, Efik, Ibibio, Itsekiri, Nupe and the many others that make up the country have realized that they were bounded together in a country that could fail if care is not taken.
Those who were around in 1966 have also admitted that the things that led to a military coup that sparked off the Civil War of 1967-70 could be considered small when compared to the pure drop into lawlessness that the country is going through.

Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu, a Major, led the coup that terminated the lives of some of the greatest politicians Nigeria had then. The Sardauna of Sokoto, Sir Ahmadu Bello, the Prime Minister, Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, the Aare Ona Kakanfo of Yorubaland, Chief Samuel Ladoke Akintola and Chief Festus Okotie Eboh were among those who lost their lives. Brigadier Samuel Adesoji Ademulegun, then the most senior Yoruba officer in the army and Brigadier Zakari Maimalari were brutally cut down.
Apart from having refused to join the plot, Ademulegun's respect for traditional institutions particularly irked Nzeogwu who found it absurd that “a General of the Nigerian Army would remove his military boots and sit on the floor in the palace of an emir.” That was the main reason for the “gun him down” stand Nzeogwu took when Ademulegun's fate was to be decided.
Unfortunately, not only have almost all uniforms been desecrated today, evils are perpetrated while uniformed personnel look the other way.
As to what led to the coup and subsequently laid the foundation of where Nigeria is today, Major General IBM Haruna (rtd), said:  "The dominance of the NPC and the perceived dominance of the North in the centre were like a threat to the presumed more enlightened and better educated Southerners who believed they were the backbone of the movement for Nigerian independence but did not succeed the colonial power to run the affairs of the state.  So with that background one can now lay the foundation of the perception of the military struggle in Nigerian politics."
It would therefore not be wrong to say the desperation for power, as being witnessed today formed the crux of the problem back then.
The use of the police and the military to cow opponents into submission also ended up being a major error as most soldiers watched keenly and read meanings to postings. Sadly, our politicians don’t seem to have learnt from history as the police force has become a willing accomplice to some politicians. Back in the 1960s, 'Operation Banker', a joint Army-Police operation in the Western region was led by Lt. Col. Maimalari, who was the Commanding Officer of the 4th Battalion on the orders of the Premier of the Western Region, Chief Akintola. The action led to the declaration of a state of emergency in May 1962 following a mêlée in the House of Assembly and the appointment of an administrator.
Another undoing of the politicians then was the refusal of the ceremonial President, Nnamdi Azikiwe, a member of the NCNC to invite the Prime Minister, Tafawa Balewa of the NPC to form a government after the Federal Election of December, 1965.
Rather than work with Balewa after the controversial elections, Zik issued orders to the Army to enforce his authority to suspend the government, annul the elections and appoint a temporary interim administrator to conduct elections. 
The military’s refusal to carry out the President’s orders (which were not quite constitutional anyway) paved way for a resolution which culminated in the formation of a government of "national unity" under Balewa, the Prime Minister.
The 1965 elections happened to be the last straw. The breakdown of law and order was the invitation the military, which had been on standby needed. Major Emmanuel Ifeajuna, Captain Emmanuel Nwobosi and Chuikwuma Nzeogwu all agreed that the politicians had failed to find a solution to the problem of the country which they felt was heading towards “chaos and disaster”. There was also apprehension that the Federal Government, controlled by the NPC would declare a state of emergency in the Eastern State, controlled by the NCNC due to agitation for the creation of Rivers State. 
Interestingly, Nigeria has found itself almost at the same spot today. In parts of Adamawa, Yobe and Borno States, where Boko Haram terrorists have hoisted their flag, the President declared a state of emergency, which has been renewed twice. More alarming is the fact that the states are under the control of the opposition party, All Progressives Congress.
In trying to sanitize the system, favouritism reared its head. While Northern leaders were executed, with Nzeogwu describing how anti-tank guns took down the roof of the Sardauna’s house and how he was caught in the full glare of his wives and children, it was found out that the President, Chief Nnamdi Azikiwe had been informed of the plot by his cousin, Major Ifeajuna, hence the medical check-up that took him abroad for months.
Though the counter of July 1966 was believed to have been caused by General Ironsi’s “misrule”, the truth of the matter remains that the situation the country got into was the result of the mess created by the political class. 48 years after, the mess is reappearing and rather than caution the politicians before an all out war results, some find it funny that members of the House of Representatives resorted to scaling the fence to gain access to a chamber into which they were voted to make laws for the country. 
Unguarded utterances and uncouth statements capable of inciting violence are being made by people in authority as the rot goes deeper. A Governor made it emphatically clear that if his party loses the general elections and feels the poll was rigged, it would go ahead to form a parallel government.
Another Governor was caught on camera urging his supporters to fight and kill members of the opposition if necessary. He used the derogatory word “cockroach”, a term that sparked off the genocide that terminated the lives of close to a million Rwandans years ago.
The power show and the state of the economy are factors that could bring the khaki boys back. In his address on December 31, 1983, when the Shagari administration was overthrown, Brigadier Sani Abacha who led the men that overran the Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria, Ikoyi, pointed out that “our economy has been hopelessly mismanaged. We have become a debtor and beggar nation. There is inadequacy of food at reasonable prices for our people who are now fed up with endless announcements of importation of foodstuffs. Health services are in shambles as our hospitals are reduced to mere consulting clinics without drugs, water and equipment. Our educational system is deteriorating at an alarming rate. Unemployment figures including the undergraduates have reached embarrassing and unacceptable proportions. In some states, workers are being owed salary arrears of eight to twelve months and in others there are threats of salary cuts.
Yet our leaders revel in squandermania, corruption and indiscipline, and continue to proliferate public appointments in complete disregard of our stark economic realities”. 
The situation Nigeria was before Buhari took over cannot be said to be very different from what we have today. Nigeria’s educational system has worsened while the rate of unemployment has doubled and till date, our leaders have not really changed.
The desperate pursuit of power has brought about a culture of impunity. There had been impeachments of Governors in Nigeria, with Balarabe Musa being the first during the Second Republic but when 18 out of 32 lawmakers impeached Governor Ladoja in Oyo State years back, it was agreed that a bad precedence had been laid by the pacesetter state.  No one however thought it would be so bad that 6 lawmakers would sit and impeach a Speaker of a House of Assembly in Rivers State. Even in Ekiti State that prides itself as the “Fountain of Knowledge”,7 members of the House sat and impeached the Speaker.
The situation has not surprised many, especially those who saw full page advertisements in newspapers, congratulating Governor Jonah Jang who had 16 votes as against the 19 votes polled by his opponent as the elected Chairman of the Nigerian Governors’ Forum.

As the country gradually inches towards another military rule which may take the country back by another few decades, it would be wise for the leaders to draw lessons from history and tread cautiously before they plunge Nigeria into a gigantic catastrophe. 

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