by Reuben Abati (23rd April 2008)
If DSP Alamiyeseigha, the
embattled Governor of Bayelsa state knows what is good for him, he
should call his lawyers and advisers and draft a sober, apologetic
letter of resignation, and give up the fight. He has lost whatever moral
ground he may have occupied before now, the conspiracy theory that was
contrived around his travails has been watered down. If he receives any
support from any quarters at this moment, such support ought to be taken
with a pinch of salt: all because Alami himself has chosen to ruin his
chances, destroy his own moral base if he ever had any, by conducting
himself in a manner that is unbecoming of a leader and a gentleman. By
running away from England under the cover of the night, away from the
British judiciary which was probing him on charges of money laundering,
by taking evasive action from the law and communicating with his feet,
Alamiyeseigha, a man who until now was known and addressed as His
Excellency, has shown himself to be a dishonourable fellow, unfit to
rule, unfit to sit among men and women of honour and integrity, unfit to
preach to the people that he leads about ideals and values...
The
drama that he has organised around his return as a fugitive from
England is so comical that it merely shows him in worse light. He has
managed to entertain Nigerians with the mystery of his escape from
London, his smart salute before a guard of (dis)honour and the
histrionics that he has put up in the last few days, but all he has done
in reality is to raise questions and concerns about the quality of
leadership in Nigeria, about the Ijaw nation and the values of its
people, and the future of Bayelsa state. I am told that he acted out of
desperation: what desperation could that possibly be? Is it desperation
borne out of guilt? Or desperation borne out of simple criminality?
Alami has told his audience that nobody should pity him, because he is
merely paying the price for leadership.
What leadership? He did
not explain. Faced with a charge of money laundering in British courts,
Alamiyeseigha, and his sponsored agents had argued ad nauseam that he
Alamiyeseigha being an important man in Nigeria, leader of a "sovereign
state within a federal system" was entitled to immunity within the
purview of Section 308 of the Nigerian Constitution, which in their
reckoning, is transportable across boundaries, and that by arresting
Alami for being in possession of an odious amount of foreign currency,
the British was just acting illegally and as a neo-colonial entity. This
was a futile argument as the British courts determined that Alami had a
case to answer. He was remanded in prison, and later granted bail with
conditions, while his case continued to be heard in court. This is the
same process which Alamiyeseigha truncated by running away from England.
He was required not to travel near any English port. But he did. He
jumped bail and escaped. It has been said that he left England as a drag
queen, dressed as a pregnant woman using forged documents. He insists
that his escape is "an act of God".
All told, by conducting
himself after the fashion of a common felon, Alamiyeseigha has brought
the people of Bayelsa state and all Ijaws to great ridicule. If he was
so supremely sure of his innocence in the matter, he should have stayed
back in London to prove his innocence. If he had won victory through due
process, he would have been a great hero and his points about
conspiracy and the President of Nigeria not liking his face would have
deserved more than a closer attention. But to jump bail, subvert the
judicial process, only to show up in Yenagoa like a thief in the night,
and then turn himself into a major means of measuring the moral fibre of
the Nigerian society, Alami suffers a defeat in what he may think is a
victory over the British and Aso Villa. When he showed up in Yenagoa, he
was celebrated by a group of uninformed youths who insisted on
identifying him as a hero. But what we are dealing with is what J P
Clark another Ijaw man, has described as "the hero as a villain". This
particular hero, anti-hero in fact, has a character flaw which in spite
of him confirms his guilt, and the emptiness of his strivings. Leaders
are supposed to be men of honour who are socially aware and imbued with a
strong sense of ideals and values. In Nigeria, there is so much
dissonance in leadership. Alamiyeseigha has proven to be a master of
dissonance. He has brought great embarrassment to the Ijaw people, who
in their reaction to his travails have shown an ambiguity that is most
unimpressive. Nigeria's stature has also been further diminished.
It
does not matter what Alamiyeseigha says, he cannot remain as Governor
of Bayelsa state while he remains a prisoner of his own guilt, not
knowing whether he would be abducted by the British or not. He cannot
attend meetings of the Council of State, as a fugitive who is on the
wanted list in Britain. He cannot remain as Governor when his tomorrow
is in so much doubt. He has sounded so far as a man who is ready to drag
down the whole of Bayelsa state with him if he must. Since his
mysterious return, he has been exploiting the emotions of all Ijaws and
using blackmail as a shield; his agents have been trying to prove his
innocence. The pity is that Alami has not been charged to any court in
Nigeria. Here, if he so wishes he can steal all the money in the Bayesla
treasury. If the people of Bayelsa are okay with that, so be it. But
Alami has a case to answer in Britain. He is being accused of violating
the laws of England. If he has anything to say, let him go and do so in
the courts of England not on the streets of Yenagoa.
As for those
persons who have been packaging Alami as a victim and who have been
mouthing the asinine line: "If Ijaw man thief Ijaw money, wetin concern
Tony Blair inside", may the good Lord forgive them for they do not know
what they are saying. All Ijaw must feel embarrassed for this is a
difficult moment for them as a nation. They are being blackmailed
emotionally to defend not a principled fighter, not a spirit of
Ijawland, but an Ijaw leader who danced Unclad in a foreign land. The
questions that would be asked are: what do Ijaws stand for? Where is the
ancient and modern glory of the Ijaw nation? These are difficult
questions. Alami must save his own people the embarrassment by stepping
aside. Let him return to England and act like a honourable man. He has
ridiculed the lawyers that he employed to argue his case, and not
surprisingly, his lead counsel is so embarrassed, he has refused to
comment on this resort to self-help. He has also jeopardised the
integrity of his sureties: they will lose money and face if they cannot
produce the accused person in their care.
But where were the
British? Alamiyeseigha's escape is a bad comment on British security.
Alami has demystified the British and across Nigeria, questions are
already being raised about the integrity of the British security
network. Did the British collect bribe like Nigerian policemen? Did they
work out a deal with Alami to embarrass the Nigerian government? If
there is such a deal, what are the details? What is certain is that more
Nigerians have lost respect for Britain in the last few days. How could
the British who prevented the "exportation" of Umaru Dikko from Britain
now allow Alami to escape? Is this the cynicism of the British at work
or the opportunism of free enterprise capitalism? Whatever it is, the
British have been relieved of the political burden of prosecuting a
leader of Nigeria's oil rich Niger Delta in their courts. The Federal
Government nearly ruined the case by showing an over-anxious interest in
the trial: now Obasanjo has to clean up the poo in his backyard and
deal with the Alami mess.
One of the points made by the embattled
Governor on his return is that he has proven the "Nigerianness" in him.
This may have been a slip of the tongue, but it is the truth. For
indeed, there is an Alami in every Nigerian leader. We are a country of
desperadoes to such an extent that when we criticise Alami and sound
holier than thou particularly the sanctimonious crowd in the PDP and Aso
Villa, what we are actually criticising is an aspect of our lives which
has now been exposed due to a twist of fate in a foreign land. What has
Alami done? One, he showed up in England with sums of money whose
source he could not explain when he was asked to do so. How many big men
in Nigeria can confidently explain the source of their wealth? You
could be as poor as a church rat in January and become a
multibillionaire in March, nobody will ask any questions. Because
Nigerians love miracles, they will attribute the sudden change of
fortune to a miracle made possible by a certain pastor's intervention.
Two,
Alami told the British that he is entitled to immunity. This is typical
Nigerian-speak. In our country, every big man is free to do as he
wishes. He is above the laws of the land and there have been celebrated
cases of persons conducting themselves as if they were the law itself.
Three, when Alami became convinced that the judgment of the British
court may not favour him, he fled. This is also quite Nigerian. It is
the standard practice around here that public persons do not respect the
courts of the land. Not even the ruling Peoples Democratic Party or the
President. We live in a country where individuals can overrule a court
of law, as the PDP Chairman, Ahmadu Ali once did in the Anambra/Ngige
case and as President Obasanjo, the Ebora of Aso Villa, has always done.
Alamiyeseigha simply transported these "Nigerian" attributes to
England, and placed them on display.
It is perhaps why he is
being lionized in Bayelsa as the "conqueror of the British Empire". The
Nigerians who have also been defending him and placing the blame at the
doorsteps of President Obasanjo are also being Nigerian. They have
asked: why is Alami being persecuted when other Governors commit the
same offence and they pass through London all the time? In other words,
Nigerians are no longer shocked by any kind of malfeasance. If someone
commits a crime, we are not moved by the nature of his crime, instead we
rationalise it: he should be declared innocent because he is not the
only person who commits that kind of offence, he has been caught only
because he is unlucky or he is being persecuted. And thus, what we are
faced with is a country without moral boundaries. But thank God for a
few voices of reason who in the face of blackmail, intimidation and
violence still insist on the truth. The members of the Bayelsa House of
Assembly are not saints themselves; it is true that they are being
pushed by Abuja, but if they succeed in removing Alamiyeseigha, they
would have done Nigeria a favour: they would save us from the British
who may be playing games out of self-interest.
For His Excellency, the Executive Fugitive of Bayelsa state, it is over. Resign now, get on a boat across the border, and run..VIA NAIRALAND
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