15 May 2013
Bola Tinubu: State of emergency – President Jonathan’s ploy to subvert constitutional democracy
Posted on 12:59 by Unknown with No comments
It is now abundantly clear that President
Jonathan has finally bared his fangs
confirming what was widely speculated.
By declaring a state of emergency in
Borno, Yobe and Adamawa, he has
intimidated and emasculated the
governors of these States. We are
witnessing a dangerous trend in the art of
governance and a deliberate ploy to
subvert constitutional democracy.
The body language of the Jonathan
administration leads any keen watcher of
events with unmistakable conclusion of
the existence of a surreptitious but barely
disguised intention to muzzle the elected
governments of these states for what is
clearly a display of unpardonable
mediocrity and diabolic partisanship
geared towards 2015.
Borno and Yobe states have been
literally under armies of occupation with
the attendant excruciating hardship
experienced daily by the indigenes and
residents of these areas. This government
now wants to use the excuse of the
security challenges faced by the
Governors to remove them from the
states considered hostile to the 2015
PDP/Jonathan project.
Let me be quick to say that this
administration will be setting in motion a
chain of events the end of which nobody
can predict. Experience has shown clearly
that actions, such as this one under
consideration, often give root to radical
ideologies and extremist tendencies, a
direct opposite of the intended outcome
of unwarranted and unintelligent
meddlesomeness. The present scenario
playing out in the country reminds one of
the classical case of a mediocre craftsman
who continually blames the tools of his
trade for his serial failure but refuses to
look at his pitiable state with a view to
adjusting.
It has become crystal clear, even to the
most incurable optimist, that the country
is adrift. That the ship of the Nigerian
state is rudderless is clearly evident in the
consistent and continual attacks
ferociously executed by elements often
referred to as the insurgents in some
northern states of the federation,
particularly Borno and Yobe states
respectively.
Indeed, no part of the country is immune
from the virulent but easy attacks,
veritable indices of a failing state.
Unfortunately, the tenuous and
uncoordinated approach adopted by this
government betrays a grossly
incompetent disposition which stands at
variance with current realities in the
country, nay the international community
where acts of terrorism are engaged and
contained. No Governor of a state in
Nigeria is the Chief Security Officer.
Putting the blame on the Governors, who
have been effectively emasculated, for
the abysmal performance of the
government at the centre which controls
all these security agencies, smacks of
ignorance and mischief.
Terrorist acts are perpetrated routinely
and the government at the centre
appears incapable of stemming the tide of
the horrendous crimes unleashed on the
hapless populace. The considerable ease,
with which lives and property are
destroyed on a daily basis, should excite
deep introspection on the part of a
government truly desirous of finding a
lasting solution.
The Constitution provides that the safety
and welfare of citizens shall be the
primary purpose of having that structure
of any political leadership in the first
instance. This Government, through acts
of omission and commission, has fallen far
short of expectation. It actively
encourages schisms and all manner of
divisive tendencies for parochial
expediency. Ethnicity and religion become
handy weapons of domination. Things
have never been this bad.
The response to the pervasive chaos in
the Northern region of the country has
been militarisation, mass arrests and
extra judicial killings by the Joint Task
Force, JTF, a convenient euphemism for
an army of occupation seemingly set
loose on the people of the localities
concerned. The tenor of the State of
Emergency declared by the Federal
Government yesterday portends danger
for the polity. The full militarisation of
security operations in these states will
compound the already tense situation.
Both local and international media are
awash with news of reckless attitudes of
the invading forces. The fact that security
operatives are killed cheaply and reprisals
from the state find expressions in
organised pogroms in the immediate
communities is sure evidence of a
government which lacks basic
understanding to appreciate the enormity
of the current security challenges. If
development is about the people, all
measures put in place for the sustenance
and maintenance of the super-structure
of the society must take into cognisance
local contents.
It is evident from the grim experiences in
recent times that this government has
failed, or does not know that it is
necessary for it to avail itself of the
benefits accruable from exchange of ideas
and notes on the latest in terms of
technology and human resources among
nations of the modern world, especially
those which have been fighting terrorist
organisations over the years, on the most
effective mode of combating this menace.
Technologically advanced countries of the
world will never discard the idea on the
need for the establishment of an
effective local intelligence outfit.
Our suggestions along this path have
always been met with suspicion and
acerbic criticisms from both the informed
and the ignorant alike. A government
which stoutly defends its opposition to
the decentralisation of the police force
from its present over-centralised
command structure is already
experimenting with all manner of means
patently extra-legal.
The massacres of local communities
attendant upon the attacks on security
agents by unknown elements will further
alienate the people who should,
ordinarily, partner with the government
in securing their immediate
environments. An army which invades a
community maiming, raping and killing
defenceless civilians will end up
radicalising the youths whose parents and
young ones have been wiped out most
cowardly and recklessly. This government
should concentrate more on encouraging
the development of local intelligence
which will, inexorably, lead to the practice
of true federalism. Adopting the use of
excessive force against those perceived as
harbouring terrorists does not portray
this government as possessing the
wherewithal to find abiding solutions to
the lingering security challenges.
The President’s pronouncement, which
seeks to abridge or has the potential of
totally scuttling the constitutional
functions of Governors and other elected
representatives of the people, will be
counterproductive in the long run. A
State of Emergency already exists in the
states where JTF operates. Residents of
these communities live in constant fear.
Their rights are violated with impunity
under the guise of searching for terrorists
in their respective domains.
Hiding under some nebulous claims which
border on the intractability of the security
challenges posed by Boko Haram or some
acclaimed traditionalists who have killed
some policemen to render ineffective the
constitutional powers vested in elected
Governors and other representatives of
the people, perceived as not amenable to
manipulation for the 2015 project
amounts to reducing serious issues
bordering on the survival of the country
to partisan politics.
Let all those who love this country
genuinely advise the federal government
not to tinker with the mandates of these
Governors under any guise. It is a
potentially destructive path to take. If
security of a society is about the
protection of lives and property of the
citizenry, the involvement of the people is
a sine qua non to effective intelligence
gathering. Any measures put in place
which alienate the people, in particular
their elected representatives, should be
considered as fundamentally defective by
every right thinking person in the
country.
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