THE extent to which Nigerians have
fragmented along ethno-religious components can only be measured in the
direction of wish list drafted along unfortunate cleavage based perspectives.
The nation is balkanised, serially polarised and dangerously fired up with hate
agenda hot enough to make the sun shy of how cold it before the hate heat. The
recent death rumour of President Muhammadu Buhari across social media platforms
is only a reflection of how some segment of Nigerians would want to bury the
President just for mischief value occasioned by
the unabated hate mantra
wielded across the country. Who could the possible culprits of the death rumour
be? Is it those calling for an independent country, or those who believe the
present administration favours a religious group, or those who believe his
death will shift power from the North, or those corrupt politicians who loath
the fight against corruption, etc? Nigerian leaders since 2011 have suffered
ethno-religious rejection, culminating into what Buhari is experiencing. For
former president Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, some Northerners see him as the worst
president ever produced in the country. The war against terror was used to
measure his administration and the thirst of the North to get their “mandate”
back formed a blinding shield to whatever good intentions he had for the
country. An evil seed is already growing in the country. It is difficult to
predict where the hate mantra will take Nigeria. The issue of a collective
heritage is fast eluding us. Those who set off the rumour understand the extent
of our gullibility as a country in swallowing information without filtering.
For me, it is sad how we mostly allow ourselves to be part of those who made
the news go viral. Authors of the death rumour know Nigerians will take the
information to the next level of hate. Only a few may foolishly believe it, the
other divides used the information to unleash hate speeches. Those in support
of Buhari, used it to release avalanche of curses at those perceived against
him, the other divide used it to gloat, hoping to draw flaks. It is instructive
to intimate that Nigerians are already fighting a virtual war on social media
platforms. The heat coming from the wave of assault hauled at perceived enemies
is only waiting for a physical base to trigger off a full scale war between
North, South, Christians and Muslims. Let no one make any mistake, we are more
divided than we have ever been since independence. We have more reasons to hate
ourselves based on ethnic, religious cleavage with leaders who have axe to
grind with the system based on complicity over corruption fanning the embers
for the rest to blow hot steam. We have the social media platforms showing us
real and doctored images of carnages to drive even the simple minded towards
murderous tendencies. We have the very corrupt throwing monies around to make
governance difficult by selling terrorism to distract governance and promote
fragmentation of our nation. On the top of the chain of events, the politicians
Nigerians are building forces to fight or protect are simply enjoying their
lives. To make matters worse, they are relating with themselves in the most
civil way they can while the hailers and wailers are daggers drown, ready to
slaughter each other for these class of individuals who only care for
themselves. Hate was once directed at Jonathan until it consumed him, now hate
is hovering on Buhari and poised towards drowning him. The culture of seeing
Nigerian leaders along regional, ethnic, religious divides has begun like a
roaring monster. The hate culture may fester and even worsen as we move up the
ladder of cleavage based politics. Nigerians need to correct the mistake
grounded immediately after the death of President Umar Musa Yar’Adua. The
ethno-religious card will certainly do the country under. Nigerians are no
longer praying for their president to succeed, instead, they hope the one
“representing” another ethno-religious divide should fail. We must evaluate our
democratic practice. Americans sold democracy to us. Even for the Americans,
democracy has over simplified everything. I must confess, our democracy should
be evaluated to fit into our own cultural underpinnings. If China is succeeding
as a one party country, we must find a system that accommodates our differences.
It is indeed instructive for us to understand that the kind of democratic
practice we are operating is changing, taking a turn for the worse. Aside the
hate mantra, our political system must be fashioned to fit our peculiarities.
Mr. Israel Ebije, a public affairs analyst, wrote from Abuja.credit: http://www.vanguardngr.com/
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