By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D. Twitter: @farooqkperogi There is no doubt that Kaduna State governor Nasir El-Rufai embodies one of the ...
By Farooq A. Kperogi,
Ph.D.
Twitter:
@farooqkperogi
There is no doubt that Kaduna State governor Nasir El-Rufai
embodies one of the most morbidly toxic strains of political intolerance in Nigeria.
He exteriorizes his discomfort with opposition by literally wishing death upon
his opponents or claiming credit for their death.
At a Kaduna APC stakeholders’ meeting last
Saturday, he told political opponents that should they insist on fighting him,
they would die like the late President Umar Musa Yar’adua did. “I had fought
with two presidents,” he said. “Umaru Yar’Adua ended in his grave, while
President Goodluck Jonathan ended in Otueke.”
Several groups in Katsina have taken this statement as
El-Rufai’s self-confession of culpability in the death of the late president.
This is, of course, an inaccurate interpretation of his words.
Apparently, El-Rufai cherishes the illusion that the late
Yar’adua died not because he was sick, but because he opposed him politically.
He imagines himself to possess supernatural powers that send his opponents to
their untimely graves. This means, of course, that El-Rufai did rejoice when
Yar’adua died since he thought he was responsible for his death, although not
in a physical, corporeal sense. It also means that he fancies himself as some
invincible, immortal man-god who is beyond censure, and who deserves only
worshipful admiration from everybody.
This is dangerous and disturbing on so many levels. There
are at least three reasons why this should worry us. First, that someone of
El-Rufai’s exposure and education thinks the hurt emotions of his punny,
fragile, insecure ego have the supernormal capacity to kill political antagonists
shows the depth of superstition and ignorance into which he has sunk. I confess
that although I am not a fan of El-Rufai’s politics, I used to give him credit
for clear-headedness. Now, he has shown that he has a pre-scientific, atavistic
mindset that makes him indistinct from the unwashed masses.
Second, it betrays the shallowness of his humanity that the
only thing he thinks his opponents are worthy of is death. That’s an outward
manifestation of a disturbingly murderous inner disposition. In hindsight, this
isn’t surprising. This is a governor who endorsed, defended, and even
celebrated the brutal, cold-blooded, and unjustified mass slaughter of hundreds
of Shiite Muslims in his state.
Third, it seems to me that El-Rufai is suffering the early
onset of a condition some psychologists call “megalomania with narcissistic
personality disorder.” He obviously has grandiose delusions that lead him to
think that he deserves unquestioned obeisance from everyone. He also thinks he
has a special relationship with imaginary supernormal powers that fight his
opponents to death. Those are classic symptoms of malignant megalomania. The American
Psychiatric Association defines megalomania, which it also calls “delusional
disorder, grandiose subtype,” as “delusions of inflated worth, power,
knowledge, identity, or special relationship to a deity or famous person.”
Mayo Clinic, a go-to site for medical research, defines narcissistic
personality disorder as “a mental disorder in which people have an inflated
sense of their own importance, a deep need for admiration and a lack of empathy
for others. But behind this mask of ultraconfidence lies a fragile self-esteem
that's vulnerable to the slightest criticism.”
El-Rufai’s claim that Yar’adua’s death was the price he paid
for opposing him politically, his oversensitivity to even the mildest
criticism, his legendary lack of empathy (evidenced in his perverse love to
remorselessly destroy people’s homes, the joy he exudes when people he hates
die, etc.), and his exaggerated notions of his importance, for me, show
symptoms of a man held hostage by megalomania and narcissistic personality
disorder. And this man is scheming to be president. Good luck, Nigeria.
This isn’t the first time El-Rufai has demonstrated morbid
intolerance of criticism. In 2015, he also told his critics to go die. Here is
an excerpt of what I wrote about it in my November 1, 2015 “Politics of
Grammar” column in the Daily Trust on
Sunday titled, “El-Rufai’s Kufena Hills and Metaphors of Death in Nigerian Public Discourse”:
“On October 16, 2015, Kaduna State governor Nasir el-Rufai
joined a long list of public officials who invoked bloodcurdling thanatological
allusions to shut down criticism. ‘All of us in Kaduna State Government have
sworn with the Qu'ran—Christians with the Holy Bible—to do justice and we will
do justice,’ he said in Hausa during a town hall meeting in Kaduna. ‘We better
stand and tell ourselves the truth. Everyone knows the truth. No matter the
noise, the truth is one. And as I stand here, no matter who you are, I will
face you and tell you the truth. If you don’t want to hear the truth, you can
climb Kufena Hills and fall.’
“Falling from Kufena Hills is a chilling local metaphor for
death. No one falls from a tall, steep hill and survives. That was why Sunday Vanguard of October 17, 2015
interpreted el-Rufai as asking his critics to ‘go and die.’ Although Governor
el-Rufai didn’t directly utter the word ‘die,’ Vanguard’s interpretive extension of his thanatological metaphor is
perfectly legitimate, even brilliant. It’s interpretive journalism at its
finest. It helped situate and contextualize the governor’s utterance for people
who don’t have the cultural and geographic competence to grasp it.
“Since anyone who jumps from the edge of a hill will
naturally plunge to his death, it’s impossible to defend the governor’s choice
of words with the resources of linguistic logic. Plus, text derives meaning
from context. The video clip of the town hall meeting where el-Rufai enjoined
his critics to go climb Kefena Hills and fall shows him in a combative and
livid mood. He wasn’t joking. That’s why I think it is singularly disingenuous
for el-Rufai’s media team to insist that their principal didn’t ask his critics
to go die.
“El-Rufai’s
intolerance of criticism is particularly noteworthy because he is famous for
describing himself as a ‘certified ruffler of feathers,’ and his political rise
owes a lot to his trenchant criticism of political opponents from the late
President Umar Musa Yar’adua to former President Goodluck Jonathan. That’s
probably why he thinks ‘the truth is one’ and only he is its custodian. All
else is ‘noise,’ and whoever can’t stand the one and only truth that only he
embodies is worthy only of violent death. This takes arrogant discursive
intolerance and rhetorical violence to a whole new level.”
Can you connect the dots between his October 16, 2015
utterance and his September 16, 2017 utterance?
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