As the PDP turns 12
On August 31, Nigeria’s ruling party, the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) turned twelve.
As expected, the party pulled out all the stops in
its self-congratulatory mission. A press statement from the party’s
Chairman and National Publicity Secretary described it as, “the most
successful political party in Nigeria’s history.”
The statement listed the party’s many reasons for
celebrating: 29 state governors, 96 Senators, 260 members of the House
of Representatives, uninterrupted occupation of Aso Rock since 1999,
Nigeria’s first civilian-to-civilian transition, a telecoms revolution,
amongst many others.
The party however conveniently forgot to mention
many other achievements – the fact, for example, that the transition it
is boasting of was described by the head of the European Union observer
mission as having “fallen far short of basic international and regional
standards for democratic elections…”
Shortly after the murder of Bola Ige, Attorney
General and minister of justice, in his home in Ibadan in December
2001, Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka described the Peoples Democratic
Party as a “nest of killers.” Barely two years later, following the
sacking of the Anambra State government house and abduction of Governor
Chris Ngige by thugs loyal to Chris Uba, a powerful member of the PDP,
Soyinka restated his charge.
“I repeat indeed, insist that there is a nest of
killers within the PDP. From Ngige’s recent experience, the well-laid
plans for his ultimate fate, it is evident that the vipers in the nest
do not strike only outwards but inwards,” Soyinka was quoted as saying.
Shortly before then, Iyiola Omisore – principal
suspect in the murder of Ige – was elected from prison to the Senate,
on the platform of the PDP.
Has the party forgotten so quickly the unresolved
murders of high profile members: National Vice Chairman, A.K. Dikibo in
2004, and governorship aspirant Funsho Williams in Lagos in 2006; to
mention just two?
This is also the party that produced Lamidi
Adedibu, the man who ensured that Ibadan politics did not rise above a
crude, thuggish scramble for power and money. In 2007, Obasanjo said of
Adedibu: “Let it be known to all in the PDP that in Oyo State, the
southwest and all over the country, Baba Adedibu is the father of the
PDP, who cannot be looked down on, rather, we will continue to pray for
long life and good health for him so that he will always be there for
us.”
The PDP also did not remember to take credit for a
vocabulary of militancy introduced into the political space. Former
President Obasanjo famously described the 2007 governorship elections
in Lagos State as a “do-or-die” affair.
The party’s disgraced Deputy National Chairman, Bode George, announced that the party would “capture” Lagos.
In July, former governor of Cross River state,
Donald Duke, said of his former party: “PDP held a lot of hope for
Nigerians. It started off as a great party.
But today, it has ceased to be a party. It is now
a platform to win elections,” Mr. Duke said. Mr. Duke must know what
he’s talking about, having won two elections on the platform of the
party.
One of the first things that any observer will realise about the party is that it is a nest of delusions of grandeur.
In April 2008, the then Chairman of the party,
Vincent Ogbulafor, announced that the party would rule Nigeria for the
next sixty years. “I expect that every Nigerian will soon join the PDP.
I don’t care if Nigeria becomes a one-party state. If we succeed in
bringing all the states under the control of the PDP, we would have
achieved a lot.”
A few months later, Edet Nkpubre, National
Vice-Chairman of the South-South region of the PDP updated his boss’
declaration. “Ogbulafor said PDP will rule Nigeria for 50 years, but
I‘m saying that the party will rule for 100 years,” Nkpubre said.
This is clearly what forms the very kernel of
PDP’s philosophy. Here is a party that judges success by quantity, not
quality; to wit its oft-pronounced self-description as “the largest
political party in Africa.”
Here’s a party that has ruled Africa’s most
populous country for eleven years, yet failed to cobble together even
the mere outlines of a coherent manifesto.
It would however not be fair to deny the party
credit for the economic reforms of 2004 to 2006, and the isolated
successes of agencies like NAFDAC and the EFCC during the Obasanjo era,
and perhaps the Niger Delta peace plan. But in truth, those successes
are few and far between. On the whole the PDP has failed the country
woefully, and, just like the country it is in charge of, lacks any
justification for celebrations.
All the other parties themselves however also
deserve censure. Every one of them is a PDP-in-waiting – one only need
turn to the states ruled by these parties to see that they are not very
different from the PDP. Alien to them all is the idea of a manifesto.
The leading opposition parties at national level, the Action Congress
of Nigeria and the All Nigeria Peoples Party are perpetually in crisis,
consumed by internal wrangling while the PDP runs the country further
aground.
The truth is that Nigeria, as things stand now, is at the mercy of
all its political parties. Were the PDP to relinquish control of the
national government to another party today, there is no evidence that
Nigeria would fare any better. Might this realisation – that it is not
much worse than its alternatives – really be what the PDP is
celebrating?
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