Dear Mr. President,
I am constrained to write this open letter to you before this season of letters comes to a close.
I will go straight to the issues at stake. Let’s start with the level
of toxic-ness in the air, sustained to a large extent by the attitude
of your array of spokespersons, who today do little more than insult and
dismiss everyone deemed to be an “enemy” of the President. Just as you
have a point when you said that the easiest way to be deemed
“progressive” is to abuse Jonathan, it has also become that criticising
the President quickly earns one all sorts of unprintable labels from your camp.
Everyone in your camp seems obsessed with the fact that the world is
against you. One adviser recently accused everyone criticising you of
lacking home training. Another, who made his name writing brilliant
articles that skewered the governments of the day, recently lamented —
without any sense of irony — that all Nigerian media is in the hands of
the opposition. Continue...
There’s a siege mentality at work, us versus them. I can assure you
that that is not at all a helpful attitude to adopt. Let’s get one thing
clear – if the Nigerian media seems to be against you, it is because it
has always been that way; always tending to be deeply critical of the
abuse and misuse of power. At the next Council of State meeting, you
might want to ask your predecessors about their experiences with the
media and the “opposition”.
If the media was unusually “nice” to or tolerant of the self-styled
Evil Genius, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, why did he spend so much time
proscribing media houses? If it was nice to Gen. Sani Abacha, why was
his government obsessed with hounding journalists? If it was nice to
President Olusegun Obasanjo, why did he once boast that he never read
newspapers? The late President Umaru Yar’Adua earned himself a
reputation as “Baba Go-Slow”. Remember the joke that circulated widely a
few years ago, about going into a restaurant to order amala, shaki and
‘Yar’Adua’ (where Yar’Adua stood for ‘snail’).
My point is: I doubt that Nigerians and their news media are singling
you out for ill-treatment. It’s not about you being a Southern
President, or a Christian, or an Ijaw man, it’s far more likely to be
about the action and inaction of your government.
Mr. President, step out of the trenches. Your battle is not against
the media, or ordinary Nigerians wont to express their frustrations and
disappointments. I suspect that your battle is instead with many of
those characters who surround you, claiming to be friends and loyalists,
but who imprison you within a dangerous Bubble and delight in
misleading you for their own selfish ends.
I have slowly come to realise how the condition of power easily sets
up the wielders of that power for incarceration within a Bubble. It’s
prison without the uniform and without the realisation that you’re in
prison.
In that Bubble, you’re cut off from reality, and people come up to
you and say all sorts of things. They give you lists of your “friends”
and “enemies”, they concoct allegations, they worship you, they call you
their Alpha and Omega, the best thing to happen to Nigeria since 1914;
they endlessly whisper rumours and rumours of rumours. They will tell
you that everyone hates you because you’re from a minority ethnic group.
They will tell you to ignore what “all those yeye newspapers and
critics” are saying.
It’s time, perhaps, for you to fight to step out of that Bubble. Your
own long walk to freedom ought to commence now, considering that it’s
almost too late.
We all know that governance is largely a series of perception games.
Thus far, your government has, like many of the governments that
preceded you, has played those games badly. When people perceive your
government as corrupt, it is because they see no evidence otherwise. We
all saw fuel subsidy payments rise four-fold during your first year in
power. No one took responsibility, no one was punished.
When the Ikeja Police College incident happened, it was an angry you
who said the revelations were the work of your enemies. It was, and is
still, puzzling – did the opposition somehow corner all the funds
allocated to the College(s), making it impossible for the police bosses
to spend their funds responsibly? Then, there was the aviation industry
scandal – and I’ve reliably heard that it is only a tip of the iceberg.
The “Oga At The Top” is still sitting pretty, invoking the “Law of
No-Shaking”.
Meanwhile, that same government wastes no time pushing Prof. Bart
Nnaji out for “conflict of interest’; and hounding the Central Bank of
Nigeria Governor, Sanusi Lamido, on the unproven ground that he “leaked”
a letter to the President. Perhaps, you will be able to explain to us
how a Sanusi has managed to embarrass your government to a greater
extent than a Stella Oduah.
With scenarios like this, you shouldn’t be surprised that Nigerians are angry and confused.
If you stood where Nigerians stand, and gave the affairs of your
government a proper consideration, you’d probably – hopefully – come to
the same conclusion. That something is just not right somewhere.
The tragedy is that someday, maybe in 2015, or 2019, you will step
down from the Bubble. Your eyes will “clear”, and like Obasanjo, you
will become an advocate of good governance. Perhaps, you will even write
longwinded letters (or emails) to your successor complaining about
corruption and about how the international community is deeply worried
about Nigeria.
And we will be forced to remind you of your own time in office, and
wonder aloud what it is about the water in Aso Rock that turns occupants
into this strange species of Homo Sapiens.
Perhaps, you would like to backtrack a little, to the beginnings of
your Presidency. To the circumstances in which you, an underdog of
underdogs, came to power. When you were at the mercy of the “cabal” that
ran Nigeria in the absence of a then ailing President Yar’Adua.
I, like millions of other Nigerians, was angered by the antics of
that cabal, at how you, the sitting Vice-President, was treated. You
were kept out of the loop, humiliated. I recall joining protest marches
in Lagos and Abuja, calling for an end to the shameful state of affairs
that kept you away from taking charge of Nigeria. We didn’t do it
because you were an Ijaw man, or because your loyalists “mobilised” us
to march for you. We did it because it was the right, sensible and
decent thing to do.
Recall the promise and potential with which you came to power. A
Nigerian President who came from outside the hegemonic contraptions that
have run Nigeria since independence. No one doubts that your victory in
2011 was legitimate; those elections, while not perfect, were the most
credible we had seen in almost two decades. I recall describing your
appearance on the social media in 2010 as a “breath of fresh air” – a
mantra that eventually became one of your campaign themes.
The question to ask yourself is: What happened? How did we get here,
where the name “Jonathan” has become a byword for goofs and gaffes, for
complete helplessness in the face of oil theft and corruption?
In trying to answer that question (and maybe, there are some answers
above), the least we expect is that you will try to make amends. Because
that is all that will really matter, in the long run. You will probably
need to sacrifice some of those Untouchables in your cabinet. There’s
news of an impending cabinet reshuffle. Go ahead and do it. Surprise us.
You will also need to do something about your communications set-up.
Your achievements – and they do exist (these might form the basis of
another letter) – deserve to do better than get lost amidst the din of
mindless propaganda and abusive language flowing from your spokespersons
and aides.
You would need to come and meet Nigerians where they are – sadly
trapped beneath layers angry cynicism – to directly tell them what
you’ve been doing, what you’re currently doing, and what you plan to do
in 2014. A handful of Presidential Media Chats per year will no longer
cut it; not in these dire times.
You will have to face up to the difficult questions that Nigerians
are asking, and answer them yourself. Go on TV, get on radio, get out
there on the social media. You can no longer continue to depend solely
on a battery of spokespersons speaking dangerously off-the-cuff,
hyper-excited by the sounds of their own intemperate voices.
The siege mentality has to go. You’re not the first, and will not be
the last, Nigerian President to feel beleaguered. It is the nature of
the task. And, considering what they receive in compensation and
benefits for the job of ruling or misruling Nigeria, our politicians
should generally learn to take all the heat, or leave the kitchen.
I have written this letter in genuine concern. I am not currently a
member of any political party, and I do not have anything personal at
stake in this brouhaha – no bids for a marginal field or NIPP power
plant or import licence that might possibly be affected by the way
things play out. I do not hate you.
I am simply an ordinary Nigerian, concerned about the direction in
which our country is headed; concerned about seeing that Nigeria gets
the highest quality of governance that is reasonably possible,
considering our very complicated circumstances.
Thank you.
***
Tolu Ogunlesi wrote the letter for Punch. Click here to see
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