"'... and I say Nigeria is being piloted by God himself. It is not going to be easy, but with God using you and us, we will get to where we want to go…' Now, as a Christian and a minister to men, who has been taught and teaches that it is God, who wills and works in us to do of His good pleasure; a statement like that gladdened my heart when it came from my president. It did then because I thought it meant that this president was going to trust and depend on God, who brought him into office, to keep him in office only for as long as He will. I thought that it would mean avoiding desperation to remain in office. I thought it would mean neither participating in nor allowing abuse of power under his watch."
In
likening President Goodluck Jonathan’s current mutation to King Nebuchadnezzar
in the Bible, Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka said he was predicating his choice,
not on its aptness, but more on the president’s earlier attempt to repudiate
any similarities.
That
earlier attempt, we noted here last week, was at a church service in September
2011, where he said, among other things, that he didn't need to be a Nebuchadnezzar
to govern Nigeria.
For ease of reference, here again is the relevant
part of that statement: “Some others will want
the President to operate like an army general, like my Chief of Army Staff
commanding his troops. Incidentally, I am not a lion; I am not also a general.
Somebody will want the President to operate like the kings of Syria, Babylon,
Egypt, the Pharaoh, all - powerful people that you read about in the Bible.
They want the president to operate that way, the characters of the Goliath.
Unfortunately, I am not one of those. But God knows why I am here, even though
I don’t have any of those attributes, or these kinds of characters I have used
as an example. But through your prayers, God placed me here. The only thing I
ask you to do for me, and that is the prayer I pray every time, is for God to
use me to change this country. I don’t need to be a lion. I don’t need to be
Nebuchadnezzar. I don’t need to operate like the Pharaoh of Egypt. I don’t need
to be an army general but I can change this country without those traits.”
'Kongi' went on to imply that those words have not been matched by the president’s
actions when he told Nigerians through the media: “Perhaps he meant it at the time when he
claimed: ‘I am no Nebuchadnezzar’. Perhaps not. One judges leaders on acts however,
not pronouncements, which are often as reliable as electoral promises.”
As proof of that, he pointed to various
acts of impunity by the government led by Dr Goodluck Jonathan including what
he described as “this latest outrage” - the November 20 attempted lock-out of
national legislators from the premises of the Parliament. Describing it as “one
in an escalating series of impunity”, he argued that “the buck stops yet again
at the presidency and that incumbent, Goodluck Ebele Jonathan” whom he said “continues to surprise
us in ways that very few could have conjectured.”
Readers may recall that I expressed my
own surprise that the professor or anybody else could have been surprised by Dr
Jonathan’s resort to impunity; my reason being that his very ascendancy to the
president was the product of impunity. I
had written in part: “… I agree absolutely that his support for the minority in
the matter of the NGF election was indeed the clearest indication that the age
of innocence was gone for good. Truth is the age of impunity, which, in my
dictionary, is the good old habit of doing things, anything at all, just
because you can, dawned on us the day Jonathan decided to and ran for office
the very first time. In my book, if any man would violate the rules in his
age-grade group or boys and girls club because he has the power to, he’ll do it
anywhere else - including the presidency.”
So, perhaps Goodluck Jonathan has
really not metamorphosed at all, then. Perhaps we had simply known him “in
part” and we are simply just nearing fullness of knowledge?
As I said last time, one other thing
that he said at that September 2011 church gathering caught my attention then
and now. The president, in continuation of his defence of his governance style,
said:
“You know
these days for you to be an intellectual and for people to listen to you, you
have to abuse government. Somebody was asking, is Nigeria on an auto pilot?
Meaning a plane without a pilot and I say Nigeria is being piloted by God
himself. It is not going to be easy, but
with God using you and us, we will get to where we want to go…”
Now, as a
Christian and a minister to men, who has been taught and teaches that it is
God, who wills and works in us to do of His good pleasure; a statement like
that gladdened my heart when it came from my president. It did then because I
thought it meant that this president was going to trust and depend on God, who
brought him into office, to keep him in office only for as long as He will. I
thought that it would mean avoiding desperation to remain in office. I thought
it would mean neither participating in nor allowing abuse of power under his
watch.
Three years
down the road, it is clear that I thought wrong!