Following
the outrage that trailed the decision of 2face Idibia to cancel his
involvement in the nationwide #IStandWithNigeri protest, 'Niran Adedokun
has explained why Nigerians actually owe the pop star some gratitude.
2Face Idibia
In all the trade of war, no feat is nobler than a brave retreat. – Samuel Butler
As news broke Sunday morning that Innocent Idibia, popularly
called Tuface, one of Africa’s most decorated music talents, had
withdrawn from the mass protest he called, and vilification poured in
from Nigerians who would gleefully watch another man put his head down
for the breaking of a coconut, a flurry of ideas about human beings and
their impossibility hit me. And this brought back memories of an article
I read on history.com sometime last year.
Titled, “7 Brilliant Military Retreats”, the article spoke about
seven leaders of war who took tactical retreats which, with the benefit
of hindsight, were lifesaving. One of them was America’s General George
Washington.
According to the article, a few weeks after the Declaration of
Independence was signed in 1776, Washington’s army got into a tough
fight known as “The Battle of Brooklyn” in which it suffered a
“disastrous defeat” with some 9,000 Americans caught midstream.
The piece reads: “Washington ordered his men to round up all
the flat-bottomed boats they could find. As drenching rains fell on the
night of August 29, he used his hastily assembled flotilla to silently
ferry unit after unit across the river to the safety of Manhattan. The
regiment of Massachusetts fishermen that manned the boats used rags to
muffle the sound of their oars, and campfires were left burning to
deceive the British. Many Continentals had still yet to be evacuated
from Brooklyn by sunrise, but luckily for Washington, a dense fog rolled
in and masked the final stages of the withdrawal. By the time the
British finally realised what was happening, all 9,000 colonists had
slipped away along with most of their equipment and artillery.”
Someone would ask if the situation with Tuface was war and how it
relates to this story. But, it is war! Aside from the fact that life is
war and that there is a time to advance and a time to retreat in every
war, taking on government in Nigeria is war on two fronts!
Successive governments here have not found the grace to submit to
the supremacy of the people. Those we elect constantly turn the coercive
instrument of state, sustained by our sweat, against us. They spare no
gear in their arsenal. They tackle us psychologically with ceaseless
propaganda, half-truths and outright deception. And when these fail,
they employ physical intimidation by deploying the services of security
agencies; you get threats, arrests, sabotage and all sorts just in the
desperation to silence opposition.
Concerning democracy, Nigeria currently seems to be walking
backwards like overburdened ants. Elections have been conducted and won
with strong fists; political parties have been driven to their deaths,
as citizenship has become increasingly shy and beaten. Agencies of the
state have also continued to lend themselves to the manipulation of
executive authority in that deceptive “voice of Jacob, hand of Esau” manner.
And this last point is understandable in the Tuface case. Without
the adoption of this subterfuge, the world would have screamed at the
irony that a group of people, who attained office on the wings of
protests and protestations, would inhibit popular expression.
So, while the Nigeria Police was speaking from both sides of the
mouth, allowing, disallowing and finally supplicating on why Tuface
should not actualise his decision to lead a protest in demand of good
governance and amelioration of the hardship in the country, the Federal
Government played the innocent child who only knows to suckle. But we
saw through the cacophony within government.
The second point of war in taking on government concerns the
attitude of the Nigerian people. Consider the volume of opposition that
visited Tuface’s January declaration of his intent.
Now, it would be welcome, acceptable even if these reactions were
based on the principles of the protest, but no! A lot of people went
personal and deprecating, questioning the qualification of a Nigerian,
who works and lives here to lead a protest against the government that
serves him.
Now, here is the thing: Quite a number of Nigerians are so
star-struck with President Muhammadu Buhari that what his government
does or does not achieve would make no meaning to them.
That the honcho of an administration evangelising change would,
after close to two years on the saddle, seek medical attention abroad
instead of building the system at home, that we are talking about an
economic direction in the second year of the administration, that top
players in government have been repeatedly accused of corruption without
repercussion, that freedom of expression is in systematic jeopardy mean
nothing to hardline Buhari supporters.
To a majority of them, those “wailing” about the meagre
achievements of this administration are an impatient lot, who do not
understand that it could take forever to rebuild Rome. Incidentally,
this group has the loudest voice; they are most articulate and
omnipresent on social media and are ready to shoot down unfavourable
ideas. Anyone who dares to confront such reasoning from a number of the
very compatriots on whose behalf he plans to protest is facing no mean
war.
So, when the state turns against you and a sizeable number of your
people see no sense in your venture, even blackmailing that lives might
be lost in the cause of your protest, common sense calls for a tactical
retreat. This was all that Tuface did!
Critics of the musician’s capitulation have lamented the
self-abortion of a very rotund opportunity to attain the heroic or
revolutionary status, but was Tuface motivated by those prospects?
Some have drawn illustrations from the doggedness of the late Fela
Anikulapo-Kuti and Nobel laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka, but they forget
that these men were born into families with streaks of rebellion and
that each of them went on to hone their capacities becoming identifiable
non-conformists in their 20s. Did Tuface, now in his 40s, set out to
become the latest revolutionary in town?
My reading of the situation is that, the man just realised that
hope built on Buhari is gradually fading away and decided to draw the
attention of government and his compatriots to these issues when
redemption is still possible. A citizen needs not aspire for heroism
when armed with his nationality to pursue such protests. And while
trying to deconstruct this, we must realise that an idea is not an
event. Some people are born to move ideas while some are born to
actualise those ideas!
In all of this however, it will be unfortunate to imagine that Tuface did nothing for us by calling this protest.
Most important for me is the reawakening of Nigerians to the
reality that, as former French leader, Charles De Gaulle, once said,
politics is too serious a business to be left in the hands of
politicians. Unless the Nigerian citizen rises up to defend his rights
to life and fair treatment, politicians will take advantage of the
people forever. It is indeed what politicians are called to do and only
an alert citizenry can save a country from their shenanigans.
Tuface steered up the spirit of nationalism and events have shown
that there would be no end to this even if traditional leaders of such
protests are now too reluctant to stand against the government that they
helped bring into power. But here, again is where we miss it. Genuine
love for the emancipation of a people is loyalty to nation and not
loyalty to transient administrations. However, if those who should
speak on behalf of the people are too cozy in bed with government, help
will come from most unexpected places and voices will rise in protest
against misgovernance.
Even if the protest did not hold, news already travelled all over
the world and the administration got the message “loud and clear.” But
thank God for prominent Nigerians like Prof Chidi Odinkalu, Mr Charles
Oputa, Ms Yemi Adamolekun, Omoyele Sowore, Comedian Seyi Law and others
who ventilated the view that Nigerians will no longer be taken for
granted.
************
Written by ‘Niran Adedokun
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