Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Nigerian Politicians, Here They Come Again


As a member of the Niger State Chapter of the Christian Corpers Fellowship in 1989/90, I was close to one particular sister who happened to be the prettiest in our set. My closeness to her put me in a position to know that in the course of our service year, no fewer than five brothers "received" for this sister (a Pentecostal euphemism which means God had directed them to seek her hand in marriage). Curiously, every of these brothers had an interesting account of the way God 'spoke' to him about the sister. But this, as I would find out later, did not also prevent 'God' from speaking to these brothers about other sisters. The truth, however, is that the brothers were not led by God; they admired the sister, evidently for her beauty, and lacking the courage of their conviction, they had to come in spiritual garb.


Incidentally, that is what most Nigerian politicians do when they want to seek public office. Rather than tell us they want to be President or Governor or Senator or House of Representative/ House of Assembly member because they like the job (or the money they know would accrue therefrom), many would want to hoodwink us with lies about God leading them to seek such offices. Even when they have prepared all the infrastructure of rigging (money, marabouts, arms) and were certain to run, they would still tell us they are waiting for 'God's direction'. This time, we should be able to tell anyone who comes out to say he/she is contesting to be president, governor, senator, etc., because God has told him/her to do so that he/she is nothing but a fraud!

Unfortunately, given that Nigeria is a very 'religious' country, we are going to hear a lot of these tales in the next couple of weeks as politicians strut the landscape. That explains why it is incumbent on us all to be wary of those who would play the religious card, those who would want to use the faith they profess as the launching pad for their ambition. Not many are brazen in this direction and that is why we should be careful in that some can be rather subtle about it. But it still boils down to the same thing: anyone who would use the name of God to rationalise a personal ambition is not worthy of our votes.

In fact, I am always suspicious of people who use the name of God frequently within the political arena because it is most often pure gimmickry since such Godliness hardly reflects in their character. While we desire that our public officials be religious, it is in the conduct of such a person that we prefer to know how much he/she believes in the God he/she professes. What we expect of our public officials is that they be fair and just to all, maximize our potentials and put our people to work.

However, I need to state that while I do not believe that religion should influence the way we make our choices, this is not, and cannot even be assumed to be, an endorsement of any presidential or gubernatorial ticket that is insensitive to our diversity, including in religion.  What I am saying in essence is that those who seek to be president/governor should be bold enough to say why they are seeking such offices so we can assess them on merit rather than hide under the shadow of the religion they profess. For 2015, as the aspirants come to the threshing floor, we should weigh each against his/her background of integrity, capacity to do the job and track record.

By Según Adeniyi


 Source: This Day

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