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| Olusegun Adeniyi |
What made the “report” believable, as I said at the time,
was that the said injunction was obtained from a court in Abuja, a city
notorious for breeding judges for whom “justice” is a commodity that
can be traded even on the Stock Exchange.
The point here is that the judiciary is becoming a source of concern,
especially in this election season, and there are undercurrents to
suggest that some judges in Abuja are being primed to game the process.
It is perhaps for that reason that the recent admonition by the Chief
Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Mahmud Mohammed, is instructive. He
said: “Let me use this opportunity to sound a note of warning to all
judicial officers.
Do not allow any political party or politician to
compromise your integrity or your future. We must never again be used as
tools to truncate our nation’s democracy.”
Certain things going on within the polity today remind us all of the
orchestrated June 12, 1993 presidential election fiasco. One, there is a
growing perception, as it was in the past, that the only way to get an
incumbent out of power in Nigeria is through some form of negotiated
exit, however unpopular such a leader may be. Two, there is currently a
widespread but dangerous narrative that the incumbent President Goodluck
Jonathan can only win the rescheduled election by rigging. So even if
he secures more votes than his main opponent, Major General Muhammadu
Buhari (rtd), in a credible process, the result would be disputed by
those who have made up their minds that “Buhari has already won.”
Seven, and this is the critical point here, there are reports that some
politicians and their agents are working the courts in Abuja to ensure
either that the elections do not hold as rescheduled or that the
Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) and Card Readers are not used, knowing that
without them, it would be a matter of simply writing results with all
the attendant consequences for the peace of Nigeria.
The sum total of the foregoing is that there are increasing signs that
if care is not taken, our nation could be plunged into a serious crisis.
That then explains why the next five weeks and two days (to the
presidential election) have become crucial.
The good bit though is that
whatever anybody may say, this election is not being fought along, and
would not be lost and won on the basis of, Nigeria’s traditional
fault-lines. Indeed, what I find particularly interesting is that most
of the people leading the political assault for the president are
Northerners (and they are predominantly Muslims) while the political
strategists around Buhari are from the South (and they are mostly
Christians). The lesson here is simple: For the average Nigerian
politician, whether from the North or from the South and regardless of
the religion he/she professes, politics is more often about the pursuit
of personal interests.
Now that a significant number of Nigerian prospective voters have been
availed the opportunity to collect their PVCs, it is important for both
the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the opposition APC to
support the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in the bid
to conduct credible elections. And that will not happen by clamouring to
have INEC jettison the idea of using the PVCs and Card Readers or by
embarking on a needless propaganda against the authorities, including
President Jonathan.
Neither is it in the interest of our country if
those who once gleefully told Nigerians that the acronym for the name
JEGA means Jonathan Ebele Goodluck Azikiwe continue to blackmail the
INEC chairman with unfounded allegations.
While June 12 may mean different things to different people, what is
not in doubt is that Nigerians paid an enormous price for the contrived
and prolonged crisis that held back our country from peace and progress
and for a long period divided our people. Therefore, for us to avoid
going back down that unfortunate road, critical stakeholders must pay
attention to Abuja courts. A word, as they say, is enough for the wise!
Source: Thisday

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