Racoon(m): 8:12am On Nov 20, 2023 |
Professor Wole Soyinka, Africa’s first literature Nobel laureate, published his critically-acclaimed novel, Chronicles from the Land of the Happiest People on Earth, in September 2021. So, he probably did not have the 2023 presidential election and Bola Tinubu, who emerged as president, in mind when he wrote the book. However, reading the novel, one gets the impression that Professor Soyinka foreshadowed the election and its aftermath.
In a post-publication interview with the Financial Times, Professor Soyinka said he wrote the book “to confront Nigeria with its true image.” Indeed, Sir Ben Okri, the recently knighted Nigerian-British writer, described the book as Soyinka’s “magnus opus on the state of his homeland.” Of course, when someone writes a novel, he or she has no control over how the reader interprets it, more so when the novel is verisimilitude, having an appearance of reality. Therefore, for me, Professor Soyinka’s novel provides a powerful framework for analysing the 2023 presidential election, the Supreme Court verdict and Tinubu.
This article is also an attempt to confront Nigeria with its true image. Some, ostrich-like, ignore the reality, but this year’s presidential election and its fallouts will have far-reaching consequences for Nigeria’s democratic development and political stability. So, let’s examine the situation through the prism of Professor Soyinka’s extraordinary political novel.
The novel’s main character is Dennis Tibidje, who later changed his name to Papa Davina. The narrator describes Tibidje as “the man whose origins remained a cause for endless speculation.” He claimed Lagos ancestry, but “his explanation for claims of Lagos origins was that he was sired into a Lagos household.” Tibidje left Nigeria for America under mysterious circumstances but got into troubles with the US authorities. However, by the time he returned to Nigeria, Tibidje, a man with “all-engrossing ambition”, had assumed: “A new name. A new history. A new beginning. A new life.”
Professor Soyinka says that “the novel includes one or two characters modelled on friends.” But although Tinubu is close to Soyinka, it’s doubtful that he is one of the friends. However, anyone who follows the controversies around Tinubu’s identity and origins will conclude that the character Soyinka constructed in Tibidje has a striking resemblance to Tinubu. The dubious identity, the questionable claims of Lagos ancestry and the transition from the unknown Tibidje to the all-powerful and manipulative Papa Davina are, well, Tinubu-esque!
By ignoring substantive justice and validating Tinubu’s questionable election, based on technicalities, the Supreme Court gives him legal victory but denies him legitimacy
But moving away from character description, the novel gives us insightful commentary on Nigerian elections. In one scene, a character boasts that his party has done “its arithmetic, cashrithmetic and thuggerithmetic.” In another, a character says: “You know there are no elections. Everything is decided in advance.” Well, the truth is, in this year’s presidential election, the ruling party, its candidate and allies did their arithmetic, cashrithmetic and thuggerithmetic. And not a few will swear that the outcome was decided in advance.
However, the book’s most apposite analogy is the 1986 World Cup quarter-finals between England and Argentina when Diego Maradona scored a controversial goal, which he later called “The hand of God”.
Soyinka captures the story brilliantly in the novel. Hear him: “There was a goal. Some cried foul. And so it seemed. The moment was caught on camera, played and replayed afterwards. How come the referee, the two linesmen, were so positioned that they did not see the foul? The ball had indeed been handled. The goal remained validated.”
The Maradona analogy is apposite because of its parallel or read-across with this year’s presidential poll. Put simply, there was a controversial presidential election. INEC, the referee, ed by Returning Officers, call them linesmen, ignored the blatant foul play, and declared Tinubu winner. And just as FIFA refused to invalidate Maradona’s controversial goal, the Supreme Court declined to nullify Tinubu’s controversial election.
It was, therefore, baffling that Professor Soyinka later accused Peter Obi, Labour Party’s presidential candidate, of doing “gbajue”, that is, forcing a lie on Nigerians, by claiming he won the election. In truth, it’s Tinubu who has done gbajue on Nigerians and got away with it.
He did gbajue in 2015 when he inflicted Muhammadu Buhari, a three-time presidential-election loser and disastrously inept ‘leader’, on Nigeria in a quid-pro-quo Faustian deal. He did gbajue when he staked a claim for the presidency based on “emilokan” – it’s my turn and used his bottomless slush fund to muscle his way through his party’s primary to secure its ticket.
He did gbajue when he declared that his approach to getting power was “to grab it and run with it at all costs”, and actually grabbed and ran with the presidency at all costs.
In my considered opinion, Tinubu did not win the presidential election. The first results came in from the South-West, his supposed political stronghold. He performed poorly, winning only 2.3million votes, just 53.6 per cent of the total valid votes. He lost Lagos and Osun States, only won Ekiti and Oyo States with the help of PDP renegades, led by former Governor Ayo Fayose and Governor Seyi Makinde.
Then, the North’s results came in: he lost Kano, Kaduna and Katsina States. Despite his pernicious Muslim-Muslim ticket, he won only one of the six states in the North-East, his Muslim running-mate’s geo-political zone. In all, he won only six of the 19 Northern states. The 5.6million votes attributed to him from the North certainly lacked authenticity. Furthermore, he had just 927,327 votes in the South-South and South-East combined.
He was losing the election, or it was tending towards a rerun. Then, INEC struck. The BVAS/IReV technology that worked perfectly for the National Assembly polls the same day suddenly failed for the presidential election. The rest is history! Of course, the subsequent presidential election petitions were a monumental waste of time. For one, everyone knows that Nigeria’s judiciary is utterly corrupt and dysfunctional.
Senator Adamu Bulkachuwa proved it when he boasted in the Senate that he influenced the judgements of the Court of Appeal when his wife was its president. And Justice Dattijo Muhammad, the second-most senior Justice of the Supreme Court, incontrovertibly confirmed it when he said in his damning valedictory remark that the Supreme Court “has become something else,” characterised by “filth and intrigues”.
But leaving aside the judiciary’s acute corruption and dysfunction, the truth is that no election petition court will remove a sitting president in Nigeria. Pragmatically, a verdict removing a sitting president, who has entrenched himself in office and surrounded himself with loyal security chiefs, would be hard to enforce, or it would be extremely disruptive.
In the UK, the courts have established the principle that even if a claimant/plaintiff wins a case, they may not grant him a coercive remedy, such as quashing order, if it would cause huge disruption to public istration.
The Supreme Court should have established a similar principle that it will never remove a sitting president even if he’s invalidly elected. But it should then have made prospective declarations that would safeguard the integrity of future presidential elections and recommended a constitutional change requiring all presidential election petitions to be concluded before a president is sworn into office.
Sadly, the Supreme Court strung Nigerians along and gave the impression it could deliver substantive justice, yet delivered a perverse, technicality-driven and idiosyncratic verdict.
By ignoring substantive justice and validating Tinubu’s questionable election, based on technicalities, the Supreme Court gives him legal victory but denies him legitimacy. What’s more, by wholly endorsing this year’s deeply-flawed presidential election, the Supreme Court makes free and fair presidential elections a mirage in Nigeria. The verdict is a licence to grab power at all costs! That puts Nigeria’s democracy and political stability in danger!
https://businessday.ng/columnist/article/supreme-court-verdict-tinubu-wins-legal-victory-but-lacks-legitimacy/
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Racoon(m): 8:14am On Nov 20, 2023 |
The criminality of the 2023 election is going to hunt all those who have a hand in it forever and ever. They have invoked a curse upon their live that will follow their generations because of the blood of the innocent that were shed to justify this avoidable evil.
79 Likes 6 Shares |
Racoon(m): 8:14am On Nov 20, 2023 |
This article is also an attempt to confront Nigeria with its true image. Some, ostrich-like, ignore the reality, but this year’s presidential election and its fallouts will have far-reaching consequences for Nigeria’s democratic development and political stability.
Sadly, the Supreme Court strung Nigerians along and gave the impression it could deliver substantive justice, yet delivered a perverse, technicality-driven and idiosyncratic verdict.
By ignoring substantive justice and validating Tinubu’s questionable election, based on technicalities, the Supreme Court gives him legal victory but denies him legitimacy.
What’s more, by wholly endorsing this year’s deeply-flawed presidential election, the Supreme Court makes free and fair presidential elections a mirage in Nigeria. The verdict is a licence to grab power at all costs! That puts Nigeria’s democracy and political stability in danger!
Please go and read this piece; https://nairaland.unblockandhide.com/7916122/judicial-mercenarism-chidi-anselm-odinkalu#127059660 to have a better understand of this article.
17 Likes |
SpatialKing(m): 8:21am On Nov 20, 2023 |
Coming from Soyinka himself
13 Likes 1 Share |
Racoon(m): 8:22am On Nov 20, 2023 |
So a whole literary icon of Prof Wole Soyinka can write a true satirical story about the dubious and fraudulent 2023 presidential election yet have the audacity to call Peter Obi a fraud? Omase o! This is the double face of hypocrisy.
Truth is really sacrosanct. You can never diminish or add to the solemn truth. No amount of hypocrisy, bare shamelessness or twisting can ever change the truth.
94 Likes 4 Shares |
olisaEze(m): 8:24am On Nov 20, 2023 |
Interesting write up, one that calls for a critical rethink of how the youth have aided the so called elders of the land to enable state capture in Nigeria. The mistake of 2015 is still hunting the nation eight years later. The number of generations that of 2023 will affect, is left to see.
33 Likes 2 Shares |
richeeyo(m): 8:35am On Nov 20, 2023 |
Racoon:
So a whole literary icon of Prof Wole Soyinka can write a true satirical story about the dubious and fraudulent 2023 presidential election yet have the audacity to call Peter Obi a fraud? Omase o! This is the double face of hypocrisy.
Truth is really sacrosanct. You can never diminish or add to the solemn truth. No amount of hypocrisy, bare shamelessness or twisting can ever change the truth.
No Obi is obviously a fraud
Anything but obi
12 Likes 5 Shares |
Re: Supreme Court Verdict: Tinubu Wins Legal Victory, Lacks Legitimacy - Olu Fasan by Nobody: 8:39am On Nov 20, 2023 |
richeeyo:
No Obi is obviously a fraud
Anything but obi
Very fake person. Nigerians are majorly hypocrite hence why Obi easily appeal to them and they tag themselves obidients (sheep), they can't think for themselves.
13 Likes 4 Shares |
money121(m): 8:41am On Nov 20, 2023 |
Ok
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OkpaNsukkaisBae(m): 8:57am On Nov 20, 2023 |
Medicine after death.
11 Likes 1 Share |
BTC120i: 8:57am On Nov 20, 2023 |
1 Like 1 Share 
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BigBlackPreek(m): 8:58am On Nov 20, 2023 |
..
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Altery: 8:59am On Nov 20, 2023 |
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EdiskyHarry: 8:59am On Nov 20, 2023 |
Of course
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Racoon(m): 8:59am On Nov 20, 2023 |
richeeyo:
No Obi is obviously a fraud. Anything but obi
"...Then, the North’s results came in: he lost Kano, Kaduna and Katsina States. Despite his pernicious Muslim-Muslim ticket, he won only one of the six states in the North-East, his Muslim running-mate’s geo-political zone. In all, he won only six of the 19 Northern states. The 5.6million votes attributed to him from the North certainly lacked authenticity.
He was losing the election, or it was tending towards a rerun. Then, INEC struck. The BVAS/IReV technology that worked perfectly for the National Assembly polls the same day suddenly failed for the presidential election. The rest is history!
54 Likes 5 Shares |
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ZKOSOSO(m): 8:59am On Nov 20, 2023 |
Mandate Thieves won't have peace till Justice is done
INEC under Mahmoud Yakubu n Supleme Cunt under K-yo na Scam...
19 Likes 1 Share |
honestivo(m): 8:59am On Nov 20, 2023 |
The Judiciary and Inec are the biggest problems in Nigeria
28 Likes 1 Share |
Millimann: 9:00am On Nov 20, 2023 |
12 Likes 1 Share |
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atobs4real(m): 9:00am On Nov 20, 2023 |
He is our president if you like.
Live it or commit suicidal
1 Like |
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ShenTeh(m): 9:01am On Nov 20, 2023 |
This istration is going to have to deal with legitimacy throughout its span.
2 Likes |
Dontcry09985: 9:01am On Nov 20, 2023 |
atobs4real:
He is our president if you like.
Live it or commit suicidal
Maaaaad Mohammed
10 Likes 
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CuteTj(m): 9:03am On Nov 20, 2023 |
Olu Fasan said and I quote "
In my considered opinion, Tinubu did not win the presidential election."
Well it's just a personal opinion and it doesn't mean it's fact.
11 Likes 3 Shares |
mascot87(m): 9:03am On Nov 20, 2023 |
Una go cry for 8 years non stop
4 Likes 2 Shares |
Irony1: 9:03am On Nov 20, 2023 |
richeeyo:
No Obi is obviously a fraud
Anything but obi
How is Obi a fraud and Tinubu and Atiku aren't?
9 Likes |
Angelfrost(m): 9:04am On Nov 20, 2023 |
Sigh... Too many words for a needless wailing.
You handed the nation to APC, what's the issue now?!!
Abeg abeg... Make everybody rest.
Una mind go touch ground.
3 Likes 1 Share |
Irony1: 9:04am On Nov 20, 2023 |
Lukepeter:
Very fake person. Nigerians are majorly hypocrite hence why Obi easily appeal to them and they tag themselves obidients (sheep), they can't think for themselves.
Again i ask you how is Obi a fake person. What substantial evidence do you have to say he is a fake person?
13 Likes 2 Shares |
George234(m): 9:05am On Nov 20, 2023 |
Confused Professor
3 Likes |
Re: Supreme Court Verdict: Tinubu Wins Legal Victory, Lacks Legitimacy - Olu Fasan by Nobody: 9:06am On Nov 20, 2023 |
Heddssi:
na your reason I no gree
Why would you accept a fake person and praise him to the extend of deluding yourself that he is the best thing after slice bread?
1 Like |