Nigeria: Elections or A state of War?

Adeola Aderounmu

240 000 policemen will roam the length and breadth of Nigeria this April as Nigeria sets for elections to usher in a new dispensation in the faulty democratic process.

I have argued in several essays that Nigeria needs to become a truly democratic country and that she needs several radical reforms and citizen orientation to genuinely position herself as the giant of Africa.

It will be extremely sad- say in 2015, if Nigeria survived up to that point- to have the repetition of this system that will bring 240 000 policemen and an unknown number of military personnel to the streets to supervise another kangaroo process.

If you have 240 000 policemen/women supervising a process as simple as casting and counting votes then the implications are too severe to be ignored.

It partly implies that the people who are engineering the process and the people for whom it is made have very questionable levels of cognitive reasoning. It is as if the process is made for animals that need to be guided around a farm area or by nomads around undefined zones.

I want to always stand on the side of reason under these circumstances.

What is so complicated in casting a vote, going back home or to your business and trusting that the system works for you and for itself as a matter of fact?

Why is it impossible to create a system that works in Nigeria? Why does it have to be so hard?

There are uncountable arrangements and de-arrangements for these April elections in Nigeria. The Inspector General of Police will say one thing today and deny it tomorrow. The Minister of Police Affairs will state one thing now and change the tone at the next briefing. The Minister of Internal Affairs will issue a press release from nowhere to add to the mountains of confusion.

Wait, INEC will appear from the blues to say all what has been stated and corrected are wrong. That only two policemen out of the 6 500 per state will be at each polling booth. INEC has done at least 2 press briefings to state that military personnel will only be on stand-by.

From the charge and bail system that I know in Nigeria, I am too convinced that the Nigerian police and military personnel will create a number of fracases where there are none.

The National Security Adviser in Nigeria has said that people don’t need to defend any vote. He said it is only the party representatives that have reasons to stay at the polling stations.

Under the INEC arrangement, Nigeria is like “No Country For Old Men (and women)”. People are lining up before 12 and counted and so on. The procedures invariable have excluded the old and the weak. People who have other form of hindrances may as well forget about the elections altogether.

An electoral process that does not allow you to vote by walking in and out of voting centers is bound to fail.
In developed countries you can send your votes by post. The intelligence gap is not the only thing getting wider. Trust, accountability, reliability, probity and the pursuit of Common Good are light years apart when you compare the developed countries to pretentious continental giants like Nigeria.

My arguments are simplified further. Stupid people have no business in governance. Nigeria and indeed Africa must learn to entrust the affairs of their nations in capable hands through genuine democratic means. Nigeria needs functional democracy which can only be achieved by electoral reforms.

In Nigeria rulers must be replaced by leaders. Dictators must be replaced by civil people. Indeed the road to recovery for Nigeria on the political scene is not only long but extremely convoluted. The damage done has been farfetched and almost irredeemable. But hope must not be excluded from our undertakings.

There is no common sense in Nigeria’s political terrain. We must find it and make it a hallmark.

I don’t know if we need a miracle or an uncommon and yet to be defined radical change to transform the collective deformed mentalities and thinking faculties of Nigerians. Our views of politics are lost somewhere in the B.C years. Some of the things that emerge from Nigeria have not helped the perception of Africa from overseas.

People have already killed one another during campaigns, why should we expect less on election days? Even Jega does not even know how far the electorates should stay after casing their votes. He has now said that we should leave the decision in the hands of the security agents. Lawyers are arguing for the 300m provided by law. What a useless law?

That law is unnecessary if people use their senses and leave criminal attitudes for the socially misfits who are always negligible and easily taken care of by the law in normal civilized societies. Unfortunately poverty and ignorance have sent Nigerians on errands of slavery within their own very domain. Shame!

Nigerians must demand electoral reforms immediately after this useless electoral process is concluded. This nonsense situation must not be with us in 2015. If it does this country will never make it, never!

aderounmu@gmail.com

My Blog: Thy Glory O’ Nigeria..! 2010 in review

The stats helper monkeys at WordPress.com mulled over how this blog did in 2010, and here’s a high level summary of its overall blog health:

Healthy blog!

The Blog-Health-o-Meter™ reads Wow.

Crunchy numbers

Featured image

A helper monkey made this abstract painting, inspired by your stats.

About 3 million people visit the Taj Mahal every year. This blog was viewed about 53,000 times in 2010. If it were the Taj Mahal, it would take about 6 days for that many people to see it.

In 2010, there were 91 new posts, growing the total archive of this blog to 451 posts. There were 2 pictures uploaded, taking up a total of 47kb.

The busiest day of the year was June 1st with 380 views. The most popular post that day was Nigeria’s Final World Cup List.

Where did they come from?

The top referring sites in 2010 were facebook.com, en.wordpress.com, bbc.co.uk, search.conduit.com, and google.com.ng.

Some visitors came searching, mostly for patience jonathan, nigeria at 50, goodluck jonathan, nigeria world cup squad, and jay jay okocha.

Attractions in 2010

These are the posts and pages that got the most views in 2010.

1

Nigeria’s Final World Cup List May 2010
28 comments

2

Patience Jonathan: Nigeria’s Most Powerful Woman October 2007
4 comments

3

Nigeria is still probably the most corrupt country in the world December 2007
33 comments

4

Austin Jay Jay Okocha-Probably the Greatest Footballer since Pele. An unsung hero November 2009
36 comments

5

Mass Poverty in Nigeria June 2007
29 comments

The Day I crossed The Daniel-Bankole Bridge

By Adeola Aderounmu

Nigerian Politicians have no shame. I had the opportunity to drive over the stupid bridge that Bankole and Daniel were fighting over. I went to Olumo Rock on a tourist visit.

Me at Olumo Rock Dec 2010

Me at Olumo Rock Dec 2010

One question that never ceases to cross my mind is: How do Nigerians think? Or better still, how do Nigerian Public officers think?

Daniel_Bankole "yeye" Bridge

Daniel_Bankole "yeye" Bridge

In their eyes, that bridge is a big achievement. Daniel and Dimeji are two men who are widely travelled. I’m sure they have seen how other countries in the world have developed their network of roads, rail, air and water transportation mechanisms.

My cousin told me that the bridge has eased the movement of cars into/ out of Ogun State. I was shocked because for me that is a very strange comment. What it means is that Nigerians don’t know how terrible their living conditions are. Hence the stupid Nigerian politicians continue to deceive them with stupid projects like the Daniel-Bankole Bridge. Would it be wrong to construct a wide and long bridge that would span the entire Abeokuta-Lagos Road?

I mean that the project could have been done better and more extensively to eradicate for all time the traffic situation at the Sango-Otta border area. Just before and after the bridge, the roads are extremely bad and remain un-motorable. What is the significance of the bridge? To ease the movement of cars. Really?

Bad Road By Daniel and Bankole's Bridge

Bad Road By Daniel and Bankole's Bridge

From my perspective the project (that has taken years and looted funds) is worthless. Both Daniel and Dimeji should cover their faces in shame.

What would be more worthwhile will be a joint effort between the Lagos State Government and the Ogun State Government. My suggestion to the two governors will be to check on the internet for the bridge that connects the south of Sweden to Copenhagen. They need to fashion out a similar bridge to connect Lagos and Ogun State. It would not be that long but it should be that splendid.

Malmo-Copenhagen Bridge

Malmo-Copenhagen Bridge


Nigerian politicians must find ways to develop our country and ease the pains that people go through for all time. All these half-baked projects are just too messy and disappointing. Stop looting our monies. Do something tangible that the future generation will see and appreciate.

aderounmu@gmail.com

I’m On Holiday…

By Adeola Aderounmu

For the first time in 4 years I have taken a well deserved holiday. Some people already know where I am spending my holiday. The rest of you will wait till I get back to know about the journey.

I will be back with regular blogging after my holiday. It will be loaded and I continue to pray for journey mercies.

Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to you all.
Cheers!

FIFA suspends Two Members Provisionally

Adeola Aderounmu

FIFA today 20th Oct unanimously suspended Amos Adamu and Reynald Temarii. Provisional suspension is based on FIFA’s principles and code of conducts.

There will be another meeting in Nov to reach a final decision / verdict. FIFA wants the rights of the individuals involved to be respected until the matter is finally concluded, say in the next 30 days.