PERSPECTIVES ON NIGERIA’S LEADERSHIP CRISIS
By
Olufemi ADELUSI (Ph.D)
and
Hassan SALIU (Ph.D)
ABSTRACT
This
chapter examines the various perspectives on
the Nigerian Leadership crisis. It situates the crisis at the footsteps
of visionary- fewer leaders that have governed Nigeria since her independence
in 1960. The main causes of leadership failure
in Nigeria were highlighted. These include the crisis of followership,
poverty of thought, social injustice and the cult of mediocrity, and compromise
of principles. The consequences of the observed failure of leadership on the
State were also analyzed in terms of stunted economic development and growth as
well as fraudulent foreign policy and external image.
The
study concludes that every Nation-State gets the type of leaders that it wants.
Nigeria is no exception. It posits that visionary leadership will emerge in
Nigeria when the volition expressed by the people to be led consists of
upward-looking, loving and a desire for justice, peace and harmonious
relationships.
I- INTRODUCTION
“ Our rulers have ruined not only our
economy, but they have also snapped the
little thread which bounds the very many peoples of this country together as a
Nation in the embryonic stage” (Aguda.A;1993).
“The trouble with Nigeria is simply and
squarely a failure of leadership. There is nothing basically wrong with the
Nigerian character …..The Nigerian problem is the unwillingness or inability of
its leaders to rise to the responsibility, to the personal example which are
the hallmarks of true leadership”.(Achebe.C;1983:1).
The above statements
although made at different times in the past best describe the situation in
Nigeria today. The country has suddenly fallen from from her enviable position
in the world to that of scorn. Thus, these days either in Africa or
outside,when an African affair comes up for discussion, it is most probable
that it will be the inability of the once liberator of the continent to
liberate herself from the intractable crisis of political succession (Mugabe.R.1995).
One common feature of a
mature political system however is its ability to recruit its leadership among
the contending forces with relative ease. Thus when the election date is
approaching in the United States and the Great Britain, the various peoples of
the world follow events in these countries with keen interest. What really
baffles people is that despite the bickering that go with electioneering
campaigns, the processes of political succession are usually concluded without
litigation or a serious threat to the existence of those States. Elections in
post-colonial countries have always been a difficult assignment to conduct. One
is not only being disturbed by the negative/foul means which the politicians
use , rather the scars of elections are retained long after they have been
concluded thereby plunge the military into the political arena.
The Nigerian case, which
is the subject of this chapter, seems to reveal more about the crisis of
political succession. It is rather sad that despite the long history of Statehood, the country is still unable to
resolve the basic issue of who succeeds who. At the roots of this national
malaise is the failure of leadership.
One agrees that leadership cannot be
divorced from the socio-economic system being operated in a society and also
that leadership is one among several
other factors that may
impinge on a Nation’s progress. The abysmal performance of the
leadership has supported a view, which this chapter shares that the real problem
with Nigeria is the failing leadership. The cloud of uncertainty, which now
pervades the Nigerian State, is fundamentally caused by the leadership. Hardly
would one pass through the news stand these days without seeing a caption that
reveals the apparent leadership crisis in Nigeria.
In this chapter,
therefore, we seek to contribute to the
debate on Nigeria’s leadership crisis by highlighting some of the perspectives
which people have taken on the crisis. We will proceed after this introduction to
look at the emergence of indigenous
leadership, performance of Nigeria’s leadership, causes of its failure
on the State and lastly, the Conclusion.
II- THE EMERGENCE OF INDIGENEOUS LEADERSHIP
When the British came on
colonization, it was not their immediate intention to grant independence to the
colonized territories. Consequently, at the initial stages , no effort was made
to prepare Nigerians for leadership roles. The deliberate policy of using the
traditional rulers fitted into the scheme. The preference of the British for these largely unlettered traditional rulers
at the expense of the few available educated elites was ably demonstrated in some sections of the country. In the
North, for instance , the flourishing
traditional emirate system
initiated after the Usman Dan Fodio jihad was a tempting cause for the
British to establish the indirect rule system of government. The Emirs as they
were and still called commanded a lot of respect. Indeed, their words were laws
unto themselves. The convenience which the emirate systemprovided for British
exploitation made the imposing colonial authorities to shut out the large
expanse of land in the North from activities of the missionaries who had
pioneered the establishment of western schools in other parts. Surprisingly,
the colonaial administration discouraged the establishment of educational
institutions even where islamic education would take precedence over western
education.
Consequently, the
indigenous political class emerged earlier in the south than the North. The few
educated elites in the south had necessarily seen themselves as the inheritors
of the colonial masters. This explains the vibrancy and militancy which their
nationalist agitations assumed especially after the Second World War. As
asserted by BABAWALE(1992), despite the heated nationalist activites in the
south, nationalism started in the North in the 1950’s. The late start of
nationalism has been blamed on the slow pace of western education in the North.
This contradicted with the situation in the south, where the4 initial
nationalists were not necessarily from the royal class. Indeed, they were sons
and daughters of the working class who through the dint of hardwork had made it
to the tops educationally. This reality impacted on the emergence of indigenous
leadership in the country. Instead of developing a Pan-Nigerian outlook, the
nationalists who Babawale(1992) has criticized for betraying their initial
Pan-Nigerian outlook when they lapsed into ethnic chauvinism, felt that their
early access to western education qualified them to speak for the North which
its access to western education and the entrenchment of the Native Authority
had successfully eliminated the chances of “revolutionaries” developing in the
region. This has been considered as a serious oversight on the part of the
southern leaders(Tijjani,1994).
In 1953, when Chief
Anthony Enahoro moved a motion for independence and the motion was modified by
Ahmadu Bello, the Northern members of the legislature were booed and jeered by the
Lagos crowd. This incident raised the level of mutual suspicion far beyond the
level the Akintola-led delegation to Kano could contain.
In this apparent show of
contempt, the masses from both sides were at the receiving end. Babawale(1992:63)
argues for the Northern leaders:
“These leaders, given
their feudal aristocratic background, saw a coalescence in their ambition to
maintain effective colonisation of the people of Nigeria, most especially in
the North. Thus , they willfully supported the British effort to create an
unbridgeable gulf between the North and South of the country, through the
mobilization of prejudices against the south and the heightening of the
people’s fear of southern domination.”
The gains of this
manipulation of prejudices, of course, were the consolidation of the political
power and the easy access to wealth which it guaranteed its perpetuators. Not only that, the ethnicization of politics
under colonial rule in a way enabled the Northern leaders to hide their
apparent failure to canvass for national support beyond the confines of the
North(Babawale,1992:63).
One fundamental event,
which really gave out the British as working against the emergence of a
national leadership, was the proclamation of the Macpherson constitution in
1951. Its provisions, among others, included; the creation of regional
assemblies, which removed all pretensions from the hitherto tribal or ethnic
leaders who had been masquerading as national leaders. The National Council for
Nigerian Citizens and the Cameron’s(NCNC) which had grown from the debris of
the Nigerian Youth Movement(NYM), was later to become identified with the
Igbos, the Action Group(AG) grew out of the Egbe Omo Oduduwa and the Northern
Peoples Congress(NPC), an off-shoot of Mutane Arewa never for once, claimed to
be national both in context and operation. All these political platforms
assisted in executing the provisions of the clearly anti-unity Macpherson
constitution. Therefore, when the post of a Prime Minister was created in the West, East and the North
under the constitution , Sarduana of the NPC held sway in the North, Awolowo of
the AG in the West and Azikiwe ran from the West to the East to assume the premiership under the then Igbo
dominated NCNC(IGE,1994:14).
The tripod held tenaciously
to their regional roots. Although Azikiwe and Awolowo later moved to the centre
to play largely regional politics, Sardauna pushed Tafawa Balewa to represent
the NPC at the centre. These arrangements continued throughout the days of the
post independence government in Nigeria. On the surface of it, the two Grand
Alliances formed for the 1964 Federal elections in a way was an admission of
failure of the then national leaders to lead political parties that could make
their impact felt beyond their original regions. The disputations that followed
the elections and the inability of the alliances to endure in the face of
pressures should create little difficulties in discerning the tribal roots of
the initial Nigerian leadership.
The personal interest of
Nigeria’s leadership was not only initially reflected at the level of power
play. The management of the economy also reveals the stark reality that our
leaders did not only emerge as parasites but also as agents of colonial exploitation
(HASSAN, 1995).
Originally, colonialism
was an economic enterprise which needed political support to endure. Little
wonder, after the subjugation of the Nigerian territory by the British lethal
power, the imposing colonial administration began to have an unhindered access
to the nation’s resources. This continued until the rank of the educated elites
began swollen with the attendant prosperity. At this point, the elites began to
recognise the importance of uniting their factions in all sectors of the
economy. Being relatively prosperous, the elites in the economic sector began
to be the providers of funds to their political counterparts. In return, the
political elites assisted in publicising the grievances of the Nigerian
businessmen against the British colonial administration in its management of
the economy. The granting of local buying agent licenses to Europeans at the
expenses of burgeoning Nigerian economic class was advantageously capitalised
upon to the displeasure of the British. It is important to stress here what
local buying agent means for a better appreciation of the term. Essentially, it
refers to a person who has no business with the process of production. His
primary role, rather, is to serve as the intermediary between the British
conglomerates and the Nigerian consumer (OKOLO,1987). The incorporation of
Nigerians into the local buying agent structure in a fundamental sense served
as the take-off point for the present day commission agents in the country.
Surprisingly, the ruling
class has preferred to play this role even after the attainment of
independence, perhaps because of its low risk content. BABAWALE(1992:61),
argues further,” the realities of Nigeria’s history have shown that the ruling
class has no root in productive activities but rather in distributive trade…”
The whipping up of sentiments rather than ideas, emphasis on the areas of
difference not commonalties, have become the ready tools in the hands of the
leadership to sustain itself in view of its vulnerability(JOSEPH,1991).
The emergence of indigenous
leadership in Nigeria was characterised by the politics of ethnicity, mutual
distrust, deceit, and greed e.t.c. all taking their roots during the period of
colonial rule. The ruling class, of course, was formed by the people who had no
faint ideas on the productive sector of the economy. All these would be
expected to have serious repercursions on the state later. The performance on
the leadership which is considered in the section that follows illustrates this
point.
III-THE PERFORMANCE OF
LEADERSHIP
While it is true that
leadership, among factors, impringe on development, one strongly shares DUNMOYE’s
view (1994:1) that poor leadership can vitiate the attainment of human
resources for development….”(DUNMOYE,1994:1) In the Nigerian context, the
performance of leadership could be assessed according to the way it has managed
the economy, and how it has been able to keep the multi-ethnic societies
together in one state.
With regards to the
economy, it is lamentable that the leadership has fared badly. Really, the huge
resources at its disposal do not justify what it has been able to put on the
ground. A once vibrant economy in the 1970’s has now been grounded by the inept
leadership. ROBINSON(1995a:12) has commented on the issue. “ After 35 years of
oil exports, valued at $210 billion,
Nigerian today has a per capita income of about $250, down from $1000 in
1980.”
Although economic
mismanagement and corruption were abundantly levied against the Balewa government
(1960-1966), in our view, the constitutional crisis of the time coupled with
the political outbursts in some sections of the country substantially
contributed to the early termination of the regime. It is however difficult not
to carpet the regime for its apparent failure to realise the complimentary role
which industrialisation can playto agriculture. The heavy reliance on the
regime on agricultural earnings and its feeble pursuit of industrialization via
the western preferred import substitution strategy worsened the foreign
exchange position of the country.More and more foreign exchange were taken out
to import foods, spare parts, machinery and indeed personnel under the import
substitution policy. The legacy of the regime in this regard is progressive
increase in Nigeria’s import bills in the face of declining export receipts.
On the social policy, the
regime despite its infancy, made desperate efforts to unite the whole country
behind it. This was evident in the unsuccessful attempt of the Prime Minister
to woo the Action Group(AG) to participate his government after the 1959
presidential polls. Unrelenting, the head of government reserved the foreign
affairs portfolio for Anthony Enahoro of the AG. It was the failure of the
latter to accept it that made the Prime Minister to passit to the NCNC,the
junior partner in the coalition administration. The conciliatory gestures of
Balewa have been interpreted in some quarters(GAMBARI,1980) as borne out of the
high regard he has for the southerners This reasoning however seemed to
collapse with the decision of Balewa to declare a state of emergency in the
western Nigeria in 1962 and the eventual trial and sentence of Awolowo and
others, accused of treason felony. The manner in which the Western regional
crisis was approached by the regime and its aftermath would suggest the low
rating of the regime on this score.
It is difficult to say
however that the Gowon’s regime managed well the national economy. Despite the
oil boom that crept in shortly after the civil war, it could not develop the
economy.Due to the amateurish way in which the oil windfall was managed, lack
of imagination and vision seemed to have taken a firm root in the lexiology of
leadership in the country(Dudley, 1982). What seemed to matter most was the
concept of personal accumulation (Dunmoye, 1994:6). The leadership during this
period enjoyed complacency at the expense of vital national projects which
should have given its support. Thus, the Ajaokuta steel project, Liquefied
Natural Gas and the economic diversification policy were not nurtured to
fruition by the buoyant Gowon administration.
The short-lived Murtala
Mohammed regime somewhat attempted to give an ideal leadership. Under him,
Nigeria was further Balkanized into nineteen states. The democratic question
which had acted as an albatross on the previous administration was promptly
addressed through the inauguration of the constitution Drafting Committee in
1975.Corruption and indiscipline were effectively tackled. All the military
governors who had served under Gowon were probed with only three rising above
board. The great purge of the civil service was hailed as a good step. For the
Obasanjo regime that inherited the Murtala Mohammed’s legacies, the decision of
the government to abide by its handing over date marked it out as sufficient in
honesty, integrity and honour.
The Shagari civilian
regime was the immediate product of the Obasanjo transition programme. The
regime did not only polarise the people, its economic policies produced
reckless results because they were poorly formulated and executed. For example,
its Open General License Policy of 1980 contributed substantially to the
depletion of the exchange reserves from N5.5 billion in 1980 to about N0.025
billion by March 1982(SALISU,1995). As a panicky measure, the economic stabilisation
law was passed in April 1982. But as available statistics have shown, the
policy was late in coming and mild in effect. Consequently, the debt overhang
rose from N1,611.5 million in 1979 to N10,200.0 million in 1983(SALISU,1995).
All these poor economic
readings necessarily worsened thelot of Nigerians. With a high unemployment
rate, hyper-inflation to contend with, the government on its own alienated the
people from it and thus giving a different meaning to Umaru Dikko’s concept of
landslide electoral victory.
The first administration
that started the process of recouping the losses recorded under Shagari’s
government was the Mohammadu Buhari regime. It really succeeded (Gambari, 1994).
However, its resort to the use of force in the implementation of its war
against indiscipline set the regime a pole apart from Nigerians.
In terms of innovation and
adventure, the Ibrahim Babangida regime stands out clearly among others. Either
by design or cumulatively, the Nigerian economy suffered its worst under this
regime. Transparency and accountability were on piligrimage in Nigeria under
president Babangida (Momoh.A,1993:30), (Okigbo.P,Report,1994), (Salisu.H.A.1995).
Indeed the collapse of the political transition programme instigated by te
regime itself carried with it many repercursions. On the one hand, it brought
the issue of leadership to the centre stage. On the other the level of
political apathy has taken a worst turn in the country. Nigerians are still not
convinced as to why an eight years old transition programme could be subverted
by the authors themselves (BUHARI.M,1994). These repercursions have their
external dimensions. For one, Nigeria’s image got worsened by the apparent self
–serving policies of the Babangida regime. Today, Nigeria is a country of scorn
in Western World and a laughing stock in Africa (Obasanjo.O,1994a), (Tutu.D,1995).
The Sani Abacha leadership
is not unaffected both by the disease of failing leadership and its long
affiliation to the infamous Babangida leadership. Although still in power, it
is difficult to divorce it from its roots.All pretensions to the contrary notwithstanding
(Abacha.S,1994),(Ofonagoro.W,1995), (Robinson,1995b).
On the whole, a recent
World Bank report sheds more light on what Nigerians have come to appreciate
about their leaders. According to the report, between 1973-1990 public
investment in Nigeria amounted to $115 billion ; 30% of which needed to have
been spent (Kehinde,1995). The same bank released a report in December 1993
validating William Keeling’s report on how Nigeria’s leadership squandered the
oil windfall occassioned by the Gulf war.
III-
CAUSES OF FAILURE OF
LEADERSHIP IN NIGERIA
Having examined the
performances of Nigeria’s leadership through its activities from independence to
date, the question that readily comes to mind is; what are the likely causes of
leadership failure in Nigeria?
Too many people have taken to blaming
leaders for their failure to achieve goals without sparing a thought on the
role of the followers. In order to access correctly the causes of failure of
leadership in Nigeria, it is best to first accept some fundamental facts about
the circumstances as well as the objectives these leaders seek to achieve.
Indeed, if ‘a group’s goal is ill-defined and because of this lack of clarity,
it is difficult to determine how to achieve it or to tell if and when it has
been achievede’ (LAMPE.S, 1994). We are prone to have thoughtlessly blamed the
leaders. It is in order to stress the point that while a leader should accept
responsibility for clarifying and explaining a common goal; some situations
demand a completely different leader from the one in place- thus necessitating
the unfairness and unreasonableness to expect such a leader to succeed.
Consequently, the success or failure of leadership would then be assessed
against the progress made toward achieving the goal of human existence (Lampe.S,
1994).
When applied to Nigeria, the causes
of the failure of most of the leaders who have imposed themselves over
Nigerians since independence must have been derived from the main elements of the
arguments put forward above.
Furthermore, it is being argued also that the problem at hand is not
just a crisis of leadership but a crisis of a followership as well. Put in
another way, one of the main causes of the failure of leadership in Nigeria is
that of crisis of followership.
It follows that no matter how
well meaning and how good a leader may be, indolent, irresponsible and
undisciplined people cannot be led to greater heights. On the other hand,
upward –looking people, imbued with love and a desire for justice, peace and
harmony will attract a leader with similar volitions and together they will
succeed in building a peaceful and harmonious society. Pushing the argument further, it has been observed that
anybody with a contrary volition (to those expressed above by the people) who
seeks to lead would be rejected by the people and would only become their
leader through imposition and force. If the people remain steadfast in their
good volitions, they would with time be able to get rid of such impostor (LAMPE.S,1994).
Just as vain glorious and
aggresssive people wwould attract a dictatorial and militaristic leader who
would fan their fame of vanity, so does, a people who desire material material
progress at all costs and have no regard
for moral principles would have as a leader one who holds similar views. The
above reasoning leades to a well established fact that the quality of
leadership will always be a reflection of the condition of the followers .
Accordingly, a people has no right to expect good leadership when it remains
indifferent and supericial human beings. This is precisely one of the points
being made in Nigeria that “our leaders have failed because we have allowed
them to fail us” (Obasanjo.O, 1994b:21). In the same vein, it has also been observed
that the
“the abnormal
degree of materialism prevailing in Nigeria is one manifestation of the problem
of leadership.A warped mind motivates avarice and mindless acuisition. Thought
is banished from such a mind. All it thinks is aquire acquire.” (LAMBO.A,1994:17).
Thus, besides the first established cause
of failure of leadership in Nigeria, which is the crisis of followership, the
second most notable cause is what has been described as the poverty of thought”
(BOOTH.T,1981:49). Developed further, it has been observed that often, there is
the
“refusal to
admit that the quality of thought and reflection within a leadership is vital
measure of that leadership’s capacity to sustain practiceto achieve it’s goal”
(ANYA.O,1994:29).
This apparently leads to “impatience
with ideas and the rigorous intellectual analysis of problems” (ANYA.O, 1994:29)
which has been found to have bedevilled Nigeria’s leadership formation right
from the onset, that is pre-independence and largely since independence. Put in
different word there is this “absence of objectivity and intellectual rigour at
the critical moment of a Nation’s formation “(Achebe.C,1983:11). This view
point has been well expantiated in the study cited through a review, though
restricted, of the thought systems of Nigeria’s leading founders fathers. The
conclusion drawn from this was the discovery of “seminal absence of
intellectual rigour in the political thought of our founding fathers (Achebe.C,1983:11).
While the two founding fathers under examination in the Achebe’sstudy were
found to have advancedbeyond scope discovered. The pattern of thought system
earlier exhibited by them still perpetuated itself in the generations that
followed them (Oladepo.W, 1995:10-15).
The critical role played by this
considered cause of leadership failure poverty of thought is highlighted by the
centrality of the warped mind phenomenon that it produces (Lambo.A; 1994:17).
Certainly, majority of the leaders at all levels and sectors of the Nigerian
Nation had displayed and still displaying this studied tendency.
Another important cause of leadership
failure worth considering is what has been described as “social injustice and
the cult of mediocrity” (Achebe.C,; 1983:19) and ‘their inexperience and
gullibility “ (Ade-Ajayi.J.F;1993;1). Explaining further whatsocial justice
implies, it is “…not only a matterof morality but of sheer efficiency and effectiveness’
(Achebe.C; 1983:19). The significance of this for the current discussion is
that "ne“er hire a man to perform an important task unless he is best
" for it. Nigeria has been observed to be “a country where it would be
difficult to point to one important job held by the most competent person” (Achebe.C,
1983:19). This state of affairs has been aptly described as reflective of “a
consistent inclination since we assumed management of our own affairs to opt
for mediocrity and compromise” (Achebe.C; 1983:20). Concerning the issues of
inexperience and gullibility, it has been critically observed that the
aboveissues have reared their heads at most important forum where African
leaders nays Nigerians are in parade- The Organisation of African Unity
(O.A.U). As
“Formost
of the time, the O.A.U has been run, like a club of rulers, many of whom are
failures, usurpers and exploiters at home. Many of them have not shared the
dream or ideology of Pan-Africanism that political power be used to repair the
damage done to the African by the legacy of slavery and colonialism
“(ADE-AJAYI.J.F,1993:1).
Talking about shared dream and ideology,
this brings us to an important cause of leadership failure in Nigeria. It has
been observed that, societies that have no well articulated values, no clear
mission which can be used as sure guides ny leaders and followers alike would
always talk of failure of leadership (Lampe.S; 1994:A16). Thinking about the
Nigerian case, it is observed rather unfortunately that the Nation has
instinctively chosen to extol easy virtues of unity and faith which are
amenable to the manipulation of hypocrites “rather than difficult ones like
Justice and Honesty which would have imposed the strain of seriousness upon us
“(Achebe.C, 1983:13). This lack of well defined nationally held values has
often led to leadership which has the propensity for “dishonesty and
disposition to speak from both sides of the mouth at both time’(Anya.Y,1994;29).
It has also led to a sombre assertion that “there does not exist at present a
leadership class, responsive and responsible, with shared values embodied in a
shared vision of the society and its future “(Anya.O, 1994:29).
The
variants of causes of leadership failure that emanate from the above point, have to do
with compromise of principles by public office holders in Nigeria and those
angling for public office (Obasanjo.O; 1994:25).
Concerning the compromise of principles,
it has been critically observed that “the situation is so bad that it now seems
an aberration for anyone to resign from public office on matters of principle
“(Obasanjo.O; 1994B: 25). Instead, you find the described situation
degenerating into one of “retrogressive-conservatives” who called themselves
“progressives “ (Fasheun.F; 1995:12).
Pushed further,
“one expected that those who held political office especially elective office
both in the SDP and NRC would rally and stand up for political fairness and
justice. It is on record that some governors actually threatened fire and
brimstone if the annulment of the election was reversed…that was a fundamental
Political principle being destroyed, trampled underfoot to suit the greed of
inordinately ambitious individuals thereby setting a dangerous precedent “(Uwechue.R,
1995:20)
. Indeed, “that the military government which usurped
the position of an elected government found itself being supported and being
served by people who actually contested the elections… They went for quick but
unmerited political gains “(Uwechue.R, 1995:200.
The analog between the above
described Nigerian event and the “Sao Tome and Principe Progressives shows that
in the later case, the politicians are real progressives; they refused to serve
the military and under 48 hours, the military take –over collapsed” (Fasehun.
F; 1995:12), (Ajasin. M; 1995:20). This
leads us to the last but not the least in our consideration of what are the
likely causes of failure of leadership.
This is related to resistance to bad leadership. In what has been observed and equally
described as a consequence of the ‘Law of Homogeneity’ that a people deserves
the leaders they get… People who genuinely hate on them. It should be remarked that if a people do not
want dictatorship they must be willing to take the necessary actions to
overthrow it; failure to do so is tantamount to an acceptance of it “(Lampe. S,
1994:A17). It must be added that” to
dislodge a dictator does not require violence, several non-violent options have
been tried successfully in some countries “(Lampe. S, 1994:A17).
This factor under consideration has been well observed in the Nigerian
setting at two levels. The first level,
opens up “a situation where you do wrong today, lie low for a while and without
remorse emerge to a red carpet reception to continue to do greater wrong” (Obasanjo.
O; 1994b:23). At the second level, it
has been advocated that “ Evil is no reformable, it must be removed… Although the present administration …has not
yet completely turned evil, the trends and tendencies are obvious. It is the responsibility of all Nigerians to
prevent another government from becoming completely evil”.
(Obasanjo. O; 1994b:29). Indeed, this call has earned the caller a
coupist label and incarceration in prison for life (Abacha. S; 1995:5 &
11). The additional method being
advocated with regards to resistance to bad leadership is the term passive
resistance. This has been defined as
“refusing to cooperate with or promote what you do not agree with” (Uwechue. R,
1995:23).
This is best illustrated by the example
that “when it comes to political appointments and illegal political decisions
then the population should say … we don’t agree with this, we are not party to
it and are not a part of it “(Uwechue. R, 1995:23). Extending further our example above, it was
observed that if certain leading Nigerians who had been taken seriously until
now did not join a government of military dictatorship, the regime would have most
probably had much less credibility by now and would have been more prepared to
negotiate for a fair and peaceful way out (Uwechue. R, 1995:23), (Fasehun. F;
1995:12).
V.
CONSEQUENCES OF THE CRISIS
OF LEADERSHIP ON THE NIGERIAN STATE.
The immediate and visible consequences of
the crisis of leadership and its attendant crisis of followership on the State
are that “a nation of crass materialists should not be surprised if thugs, drug
pushers and thieves emerge as its leaders
“(Lampe. S; 1994). Nigeria has
had 25 years of army rule and is going to be 28 years of military rule by
October 1998, the year of disengagement by the current regime (Abacha. S;
1995:5 & 11). Certainly, it has been
correctly observed that” our experience with the military regime has shown what
problems lack of focus and appreciation of what governance is about as well as
over concentration of power can so dismally create “(Ciroma. L, 1994:A19). The argument has been pushed further by
recognising that “the Nigerian
leadership group-political, economic, intellectual e.t.c have consciously or
not, for far too long presided over the development of very gross inequalities
between persons, classes, communities and regions within the country however
one chooses to explain or rationalise the existence of these inequalities” (Ciroma.
L; 1994: A18).
Beside the identified immediate
consequence above, another one flows from it, in that;
“the retention of power
became the sole motivation of rulers. It
created distracting stresses, leaving no room for either the performance of
great deeds or the erection of lasting legacies, the State remained unfriendly,
relating to ordinary people as an uncaring force” (Fakaya. M; 1994: 13).
Indeed, in practical terms, it became
obvious that;
“endless defeat at trying to build a steel project at
Ajaokuta, through the junkyards that are the Railways and the rot in our
schools, the failure of leadership screams loud” (FAKEYE. M; 1994: 13)
This has been aptly described by the
statement, which says;
“the political leadership in Nigeria had been more of
the problem than being part of the solution to the country’s development pains
“(GAMBARI. A. I; 1995: 1).
Tracing the relationship between
leadership and development of the State, the following problems were
highlighted;
“The mode of
recruitment to the leadership class should have been such that merit and a
track record of excellence becomes the anchor on which performance and the
rules of succession can be elaborated.
How the conservation of the individual experience and the maintenance of
continuity in the system can be assured; present climate of instability in both
policies and personnel must be contained.
How to pursue a programmed to tackle our present state of technological
under development through the linkage of science and technology to the
productive capacity of the political economy such that the emphasis shifts from
consumption and sharing to production and building and, how to implant and
sustain the rule of law in the leadership” (ANYA. O; 1994:25).
It is precisely the absence of the above
that the consequences of the failure of leadership on the State became
devastating. Other observed and
illustrate consequences of the failure of leadership on the State include
indiscipline which has been defined as
“a failure or refusal to submit one’s desires and
actions to the restraints of orderly social conduct in recognition of the
rights and desires of others” (Achebe.
C; 1983:27).
The indiscipline of leaders and people in
authority in Nigeria is legend (Obasanjo. O; 1977:5-7). There is the inevitable paralysis brought on
the society and State by the cult of mediocrity. The denial of merit has been recognised as a
form of social injustice which can hurt not only the individuals directly
concerned but ultimately the entire society (Achebe. C; 1983:21). Indeed, this cult of mediocrity breeds cases
of leadership without vision (Kehinde. F; 1995:7). There are two illustrations of this
phenomenon worthy of mention;
“According to a world Bank
report on public expenditure management in Nigeria between 1973 when the oil
boom commenced and 1990, public investment in the country amounted to 115
billion dollars (about N4,600 billion then), out of this sum, 30 per cent,
about 70 billion dollars (2,800 billion) need not have been spent” (Kehinde. F;
1995:7).
A little arithmetic shows
that 45 billion dollars seem to have evaporated with the leadership during the
period.
The second illustration is that, “The
ECOMOG was reported to have gulped N360 billion when Nigerian universities need
only N165 billion to be on their feet” (Kehinde. F; 1995:7). This translates to the fact that a mediocre
set of leaders without vision chose to engage in huge expenditure which profits
a handful of individuals than on education, which would in the future produce
Scientists to build the State, and increases its power to carry out wider
external operations at a least cost.
The phenomenon of mediocrity in high
places of rulership and leadership had been recognised and cried against
earlier in the post independence life of Nigeria by some of her citizens, as
observable in statements credited to one of the Nigeria’s five majors who
staged the first Military coup’d’etat in January 1966;
“and we must put a stop to blind leadership in this
country…. Fancy a nation where a full
minister of Defence knows next to nothing about the Armed Forces he is supposed
to be responsible for” (Gbulie. B; 1982:46).
The supposed attempt to stop blind
leadership by coups d’etat had left Nigeria with a legacy of vicious cycle of
Military regimes succeeding itself.
A bye-product of the cult of mediocrity is
the corruption and corrupts practices by the leadership and followership. Put in a more robust form;
“The point is that systematic corruption and
the consequential indiscipline in a society social organisation, which is why
our deteriorating organisation as a polity is largely a consequence of our
corrupt State and its corrupt apparatus, agencies, personnel, collaborators and
hangers-on.” (Odekunle F; 1994:404).
It was submitted that “a real crusade
against corruption could never hope to succeed, except our leader’s honesty
becomes transparent” (Eso. K; 1995:5).
Elaborating further, on this transparency of leadership, an observer of
the government orchestrated and ceremonial campaign, tagged War Against
Indiscipline and Corruption’ (WAIC) opined, that;
“…any
campaign to wipe out corruption must not only begin from the top, but must be
seen to have begun from the top. For
WAIC to succeed, therefore, the first task before the present members of the
Provisional Ruling Council is not only to declare their assets, but also to
surrender to the public treasury all excesses acquired over the years” (Akintola.
L. I; 1994:2).
Finally, the perceived linkage between the
absence of effective and efficient leadership became glaring when;
“The nation staggered from one crisis to another, with
the government appearing to pursue a welter of conflicting and self canceling
purposes. The outcome of policies became
erratic and apparently well-intentioned measures and programmes aimed at
dealing with socio-economic and political problems seemed increasingly inept
and sometimes futile: more fertilisers and agro-business, less food at
affordable prices, more electric power stations, less electricity supply; more
telephone exchanges, more phone hitches; more schools and universities, less
education; more service taxes, less quality services; more policemen with guns
and walkie – talkies, more crimes, more drug law enforcement officers,
more drug traffickers; more mosques and
churches, less ethnic; more political transition decrees, more political
crisis, etc, “ (Odekunle F. 1994, 406-407).
CONCLUSION
The consequences of leadership failure in
Nigeria are innumerable. The salient
identifiable ones which have multiplier effects have been mentioned. In essence, every country deserves the type
of leadership that it has. Nigeria is
not an exception.
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