In
the present political configuration of this country, I’m a committed
member and partisan of the PDP. Does this commitment stop short of
regretting Omisore’s defeat? Since I’m in no position to categorically
rule him in or out of culpability in the death of Ige, the answer has to
be yes.
I have always had an ambivalent attitude
towards the politics of Osun State since the death of Chief Bola Ige in
December 2001. It is routine for him to spend his Christmas break at
his home town, Esa-Oke, and usually arrived there on the 23rd December.
In the year of his death, he told me he would arrive a day earlier than
this routine schedule and so in anticipation of the variation, I went to
his country home on the evening of 22nd December to visit him. Esa-Oke
and my town Okemesi are neighbours separated only by a 10-minute drive
and our families are some sort of ancestral cousins.
It was habitual for his young friends
and admirers to spend time with him, especially those of us who are also
close friends of his children, Funsho and Muyiwa. I got there around 7
pm and was told he had not arrived. And then the news broke in the early
hours of the following morning that he had been assassinated. It turned
out that as I was knocking on his doors at Esa-Oke, death was paying
him an unwanted visit in Ibadan.
I first met Senator Iyiola Omisore in
the company of the late Ige at Ado-Ekiti in 1998. The background to
their political companionship was the pragmatic response to the pressure
imposed by the brevity of the transition programme of Gen. Abdusalami
Abubakar following the death of Gen. Sani Abacha. After many years of
internal political exile (occasioned by the 1993 presidential election
annulment crisis) Ige and the traditional Afenifere political leadership
were confronted with the immediate challenge of responding effectively
to the chosen option of participation in the 1998\99 political
transition programme.
In their absence, Yoruba politicians of
different political persuasion who chose to participate in the Abacha
transition programme had filled the vacuum they left behind. It was
practically impossible for them, within the short span of the transition
programme, to re-establish fighting-fit structures of electoral
mobilisation from the ward level upwards to the national level. In the
circumstance they found themselves somewhat compelled them to seek
recourse in the realistic strategy of co-opting the extant political
structures on ground, which were largely controlled by politicians who
had participated in the political programme of Abacha.
In Osun State, Omisore was the leading
governorship aspirant and had built a formidable political war machine
towards the realisation of this purpose. In a calculated marriage of
convenience, Ige simply co-opted and matched Omisore as the running mate
to Chief Bisi Akande, his protégé and follower on the Afenifere
hierarchy. The general idea was that Afenifere would provide the
credible political leadership to which the penitent Abacha politicians
were expected to deify and defer. And for the most part, the arrangement
worked as designed.
In putting this formula to practice, Ige
had embarked on the herculean task of selling Omisore to the Afenifere
establishment and it was in this capacity that both of them attended the
Afenifere town meeting called at Ado Ekiti. The group’s leader in Ekiti
State, Dr. Nathaniel Aina, openly expressed his dissatisfaction with
Omisore’s presence and remarked he only tolerated him in deference to
the authority figure of the deputy leader of Afenifere.
In the ensuing general election, Ige got
the duo of Akande and Omisore elected as governor and deputy governor.
To the extent of the potential for conflict implied in this complicated
background, the crisis that pitted the two against each another was
inevitable. Both of them are assertive and turbulent personalities and
their disruptive incompatibility presaged the do-or-die antagonism that
came to characterise the relationship between governors and their
deputies.
The constitution is partly to blame by
suggesting that the downfall of the governor equals the good fortune of
the deputy. And so right from the onset of their tenure, there is the
subconscious anticipation (by the deputy governor) of the only clear
role assigned to that office by the constitution — to fill in the vacuum
that may be created by the exit of his principal. All pretensions to
the contrary, which politician would not secretly crave this
mouth-watering opportunity?
In fretful awareness of this doomsday
scenario, the governor invariably becomes susceptible to paranoia and
begins to see the ghost of his deputy first thing in the morning and the
last encounter at night. Remember the fierce resistance of the late
President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua’s inner circle to the idea of acting
President Goodluck Jonathan setting his eyes on a supposedly
recuperating principal?
The ancient Oyo Empire had a simple panacea to such succession psychosis. The crown prince was made to have a vested interest in the longevity of the reign of the king through the constitutional contrivance specifying that they die together. The death of the king is a compulsory invitation to the prince to equally take his earthly exit.
The ancient Oyo Empire had a simple panacea to such succession psychosis. The crown prince was made to have a vested interest in the longevity of the reign of the king through the constitutional contrivance specifying that they die together. The death of the king is a compulsory invitation to the prince to equally take his earthly exit.
Prior to the change of Nigeria’s
political leadership in 1998, Omisore had his sights firmly set on the
governorship seat, not that of deputy governor; and from his first day
in office in May 1999, the indications were that he regarded himself as
governor-in-waiting (and would tell you that was the deal he had with
Ige) rather than the appendage designation of deputy governor. He took
the position that he occupied the office of the deputy governor as of
right not a privilege and did not accommodate himself to the suppliant
mentality that would make his principal comfortable.
On account of his political pedigree and
rather confrontational temperament, Omisore did not fit into the
tradition-bound hierarchical order of Afenifere. The simmering feud soon
blew out into the open and Omisore found himself confronted less with
Akande and more with the mentor and godfather.
The crisis escalated with the
impeachment of Omisore and the battle line became boldly encrypted in
the swampy soil of Osun State. The sacred palace of the Ooni at Ile-Ife
played host to the deux-ex-machina (the catalyst) to the climax
of the tragic drama. It was the arena of Ige’s last public appearance
and where his unprecedented physical molestation signposted the grim
fate that awaited him.
The inability of the Nigerian state to
unravel the mystery of the late attorney-general’s sudden death has not
helped Omisore’s case and persistently prompts the quip if not him then
who? If he is innocent of this accusation, as his sympathisers had
repeatedly argued, then he would be the victim of the gravest injustice.
Sincere friends and associates of the
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship candidate often marvel at
his penchant for overstating his importance — arrogating to himself
godfather influence over issues he has little or no leverage and knew
little about. He has persistently got himself into trouble on account of
this illusion of grandeur complex. At the Ife encounter, he was
reported as directing some roughnecks to manhandle Ige and “get his cap
for me”. Against this incriminating background, the preponderance of
opinion was that the state should look no further than him in the search
for Bola Ige’s killers.
Incidentally the last discussion I had
with anyone on the murder case was with a former governor of the state,
who categorically dismissed any attribution of the murder to Omisore as
false and unfounded. He believed that the incident was the case of an
armed robbery gone horribly wrong. In an ironical twist, the same
personality wove a narrative of the murder in a most devastating
propaganda attack on Omisore at Governor Rauf Aregbesola’s mega rally a
few days before the August 9th governorship election.
He recalled that all the key PDP-related
political appointments from Osun State including the Minister of Police
Affairs, the national secretary of the PDP, the state chairman of PDP,
and an anointed senatorial aspirant in the state, were co-detainees with
Omisore as suspects in the murder of Ige. It was a propaganda coup — a
rousing reminder and incitement to the troubled conscience of the Osun
electorate to default on the side of the American legal cannon, which
stipulates that an accused has to prove his innocence rather than being
deemed innocent until proven guilty by the law as in the tradition of
British jurisprudence.
At the nomination of Jelili Adesiyan as
ministerial candidate from Osun State, I had argued that it was a
strategic political blunder on the part of Omisore. Anybody running for
the governorship of the state, who is remotely implicated in the
controversy over the Ige murder case, can do without the liability of
reopening this deep-seated political wound by refraining from any action
with a potential to reawaken public consciousness all over again on
such a heart-wrenching tragedy. Typically the PDP governorship flag
bearer could not just resist the opportunity to flaunt the range and
depth of his powerful connections and so he went ahead to nominate an
individual whose sponsorship no one could be in any doubt.
To make a bad case worse, Omisore’s
propaganda, publicity and goodwill outreach was practically
non-existent. He had no promotional message on either AIT or Channels
all through his campaigns. The double jeopardy here is that his
opponents in the election are past masters in the science and art of
propaganda in Nigeria.
In the present political configuration
of this country, I’m a committed member and partisan of the PDP. Does
this commitment stop short of regretting Omisore’s defeat? Since I’m in
no position to categorically rule him in or out of culpability in the
death of Ige, the answer has to be yes. And in specific terms of the
politics of the South-west, I’m concerned more with the regional
preference in the forthcoming presidential election than the outcome of
state governorship elections.
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Op-ed pieces and contributions are the opinions of the writers only and do not represent the opinions of Kevin djakpor's Blog.
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