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Otito lo ma leke iro
Kayode mi o
Ma ma yi wa pada o…
Oti to lo ma leke iro
FANS of Ebenezer Obey, the legendary Juju
musician will immediately recognize the
foregoing lines as an adaptation of the
legend’s lyrics; it simply says truth will
always triumph over falsehood; Kayode
Fayemi, who has now been sworn in as
Governor of Ekiti state after a long battle
spanning 41 months, is advised to go into
office resolutely committed to the
principles that have brought him to this
fine moment in his public career. The
expectedly melodramatic end of the Fayemi-Oni
electoral saga in Ekiti state is truly a
triumph for democracy and the cause of
justice, but it is also the story of one
man’s steely determination and belief in the
justness of his cause. Men of weaker resolve
would long have given up. Fayemi has
fought perhaps the most dramatic battle to
get to any Government House in Nigeria since
1999. He deserves praise for his discipline
and consistency, and faith in the rule of
law.
He began the struggle when he challenged the
election of Segun Oni as Ekiti Governor in
2007. The court eventually resolved the
matter by ordering bye-elections in 63 wards
in 10 local government councils. Oni,
relying on the power of incumbency and the
influence of his party, “won” that
bye-election that was held in 2009.
His was a tainted victory, for the election,
as it were, was marred by observed
irregularities in four wards in Ido Osi and
Ijero local government councils, with
attendant widespread indignation about the
complicity of the state electoral commission
whose chair initially threw in the towel,
citing undue pressures from above, only to
recant later, after she was summoned to
Abuja.
In fact, Mrs Ayoka Adebayo abandoned her
post and ran away initially, declaring that
she was being asked to act against her
conscience. Eventually, she was compromised
and she no longer talked about her
conscience. She returned to declare Oni, the
winner of that election. For the second
time, Fayemi, supported by his party, the
then Action Congress, returned to the
courts. The Court of Appeal sitting in
Ilorin has now granted him victory and
placed the right accent on conscience and
truth. Their Lordships spoke unequivocally
with one voice: that Fayemi won both the
2007 election and the 2009 bye-election, and
they gave a clearly mandatory order that
Fayemi be sworn in immediately as the
Governor of Ekiti state. It is victory well
deserved.
The state-wide jubilation that greeted
Fayemi’s victory is positive proof of his
popularity, and a comment on the 41 months
of Oni’s troublous administration. According
to reports, members of both the PDP, Oni’s
party and the Action Congress trooped to the
streets in Fayemi’s support. The police had
drafted 3,000 armed policemen to Ekiti to
maintain peace. But there was no threat of
violence. So strong was Fayemi’s
determination that even with Oni in the
saddle, he ran an alternate government of
sorts, a virile opposition that constantly
reminded the people of Ekiti through the
regular media and the new media that the
issue of electoral mandate in Ekiti needed
to be resolved.
He kept a busy secretariat which analysed
every government policy and issued press
releases on virtually every issue. Fayemi
has a Ph.D in War Studies, that Sun-Tzunian
exposure may have helped but he also had
very passionate foot-soldiers who believed
in him, including Hakeem Jamiu and his
colleagues who manned a war room that
churned out pro-Fayemi press releases
breathlessly. Fayemi also had behind him, a
very powerful political machinery, the
Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) which has
been built up by former Governor Bola Ahmed
Tinubu into an energetic and robust platform
for the Progressives in Nigerian politics.
Fayemi’s victory will further embolden that
Congress and it is perhaps the kind of
counterpoise that Nigerian democracy
requires to check the reign of impunity and
to limit the audacity of election riggers,
and all those who consider elections a
“do-or-die” affair. During the 2009
bye-elections in Ekiti, members of the human
rights and civil society coalition, Fayemi’s
primary constituency turned out in large
numbers, but some of them were attacked and
detained by uniformed policemen. Abubakar
Momoh, the academic and activist had his
skull cracked and he was detained. He and
other observers reported that the Ekiti 2009
bye-election was far from being free and
fair. Fayemi’s victory is also now theirs:
they have been vindicated. Fayemi’s victory
also provides additional useful lessons; in
the end, the matter in Ekiti has not been
resolved through violence but through the
courts. Developing faith in the court
system, rather than the resort to self-help
can only further strengthen the Nigerian
democracy. This should be encouraged.
However, Oni is to be praised for his
maturity. He has been courageous in defeat,
even asking Fayemi to continue from where he
dropped the baton. But it bears restating
that Segun Oni’s Achille’s heel is not
necessarily the Fayemi electoral and
judicial challenge but the process that
threw him up as a PDP Gubernatorial
candidate. The initial PDP gubernatorial
primaries in Ekiti state was won by Yinka
Akerele who ran a spirited campaign with the
pay off line: “Ajinde Ekiti” (“The
Resurrection of Ekiti”). This was at a time
when then President Olusegun Obasanjo deemed
it his divine right to anoint future public
office holders. Thus, even before Akerele’s
emergence, the likes of Akin Osuntokun,
Obasanjo’s Political Adviser, had been
carefully pushed aside by the party on
frivolous grounds. Osuntokun for example was
disqualified on the ground that he, a good
quality Master’s degree holder, could not
produce a Primary School Leaving Certificate
which no one had asked for!
Akerele who eventually emerged was rejected
and through some mean manoeuvres,
Segun Oni then a complete wanna be, who came
third in the PDP party primaries, was
anointed by Obasanjo’s Aso Rock. His never
knowing peace as Governor was subliminally
also the handiwork of aggrieved PDP members
who by now must be jubilating in secret that
the man Obasanjo thought was best for the
job has been caught with a mandate of clay.
Ironically, before joining the Action
Congress, Fayemi had wanted to join the PDP.
He made the necessary overtures but Obasanjo
snubbed him. So when today Fayemi ascribes
his victory to God, it is a loaded message I
believe to all mortals who at critical
moments try to play God. Rotimi Amaechi in
Rivers, Peter Obi in Anambra state, Adams
Oshiomhole in Edo state, Segun Mimiko in
Ondo state can also all say the same.
Wherever he is, former Ekiti state Governor,
Ayo Fayose is also likely to be jubilating.
Fayemi’s victory resolves not just one man’s
struggle for power, but also the anxieties
of other stakeholders who may have felt
cheated at one point or the other by the
powers that be. Segun Oni, on his
assumption of office worsened his own case
further when instead of seeking to reconcile
aggrieved members of his party, the PDP,
embarked on such triumphalism that excluded
them further. He enjoyed the support of a
minority elite in Ekiti politics who
consider themselves superior to everyone
else. The Court of Appeal has just told them
that they are not as powerful as they think.
Segun Oni spent 41 months in office. The sum
effect is that he exercised an undeserved
mandate, although till the end, he insists
that he did not steal anyone’s mandate. We
should be worried about the absence of a
reliable framework for preventing this kind
of situation, eleven years into civilian
rule. Oni had almost completed a four-year
term! The Ekiti electoral dispute is even
worse than the debacle in Anambra state. It
is the reason why efforts should be made to
ensure such electoral reform that will
address this point. A situation whereby the
possessor of a stolen mandate has already
nearly completed the required term in office
before the law intervenes to right the wrong
detracts from the sweetness of the victory.
In this matter, it is the people of Ekiti
state that are the losers. They have had
almost four years of illegitimate governance
and there is no way the hands of the clock
can be reversed.
So much is expected of Governor Kayode
Fayemi. His emergence increases the number
of Progressives now in political office
across the country, but each one of them,
particularly Fayemi must demonstrate that
they are most deserving of the trophy.
Fayemi should know that there is a world of
difference between being an activist and
being an insider and a man in the saddle. He
now has to prove his mettle in the latter
capacity, and there will be many lessons to
learn along the way as US President Barack
Obama whom he admires a lot, is also
discovering.
He must begin by asking all the hard
questions. Why for example does Ekiti state
own three universities when it can barely
fund one? Where are the common areas between
his politics and the last administration? In
what ways can his administration ensure
economic prosperity for the people? The work
ahead is not about this being “our turn,”
but what can be done with the opportunity to
serve the people. The difference
ultimately, between him and Segun Oni will
not be at the level of credentials, but what
is brought to the table. Fayemi must also
set out with a sense of history. The
primaries process that threw him up as the
Gubernatorial candidate of the Action
Congress also led to disaffection and the
exodus of some key members of the party at
the time, notably Ayo Arise, Dayo Adeyeye
and Dare Babarinsa. Fayemi must seek to
reconcile all the divided groups in Ekiti
state politics and run an inclusive
government; he must refuse to be distracted
by a needless probe of the Segun Oni
administration, and must not allow himself
to be handicapped by his many political
IOUs.
Hear Fayemi: “All this while when it
appeared as if falsehood was miles ahead of
the truth, I kept faith with the mandate
freely given to me by the good people of
Ekiti state. I kept faith with the words of
God that truth will always overcome
falsehood. I kept faith with my strong
conviction that the judiciary is the last
hope of the oppressed. Today, I am
vindicated by this judgement. The glory of
Ekiti has been restored and it is time to
move forward.” Yes, it is time to move
forward in Ekiti and also in the larger
Nigerian community; with regard to the
latter, we must in the immediate future
consider condign punishment for election
riggers in order to check their impunity
properly; there must be clear consequences
for bad conduct. More importantly, we must
put an end to the survival of stolen
mandates and the justice machinery grinding
so slowly that it encourages theft and
illegalities within the democratic sphere.
It is to be hoped that the Kayode
Fayemi-Funmi Olayinka era in Ekiti state
will now bring the people the breather that
they so desperately need.
Ekiti kete, o kun o.
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