By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D. Twitter: @farooqkperogi The late Sir Ahmadu Bello, defunct Northern Nigeria’s first Premier, gets an unde...
By Farooq A. Kperogi,
Ph.D.
Twitter:@farooqkperogi
The late Sir Ahmadu Bello, defunct Northern Nigeria’s first Premier,
gets an undeservedly bad rap from the South for being the patron saint of the
sort of exclusionary, reactionary regional chauvinism that political leaders of
the North have been accused of. But he wasn’t nearly the monster of retrograde
ethnic particularism he has been presented to be in the South, and he would
definitely be ashamed of Buhari’s insensitive, in-your-face, knee-jerk “northern”
sub-nationalism.
Of course, as a leader of the North, which was engaged in a
battle of regional supremacy with the South, Ahmadu Bello was naturally
protective of his region—as other regional premiers were. But he was the
premier of a less homogeneous and infinitely more labyrinthine region than the
West or the East. This fact heightened his sensitivity to diversity and to the
merit of fair, if symbolic, representation of this diversity in employment and
positional hierarchies in the Northern Nigerian regional civil service.
During a June 2000 interview, Chief Joseph Aderibigbe, who
was provincial secretary of Sokoto and Kano provinces during the First
Republic, told me a story about how he became the Provincial Secretary of
Sokoto Province that, I think, strikes at the core of Ahmadu Bello’s foresighted
northern Nigerian ecumenicalism.
Aderibigbe was a Yoruba man from what is now Kwara State.
His hometown, Erin-Ile, is on the border between Kwara State and Osun State,
and he was socialized in the West, having attended the University of Ibadan
before being recruited into the Northern Nigerian Civil Service. He said one
day the Premier asked for him because he had never paid a personal visit to the
Premier’s office as others did.
While at the Premier’s office, he met everyone seated on the
carpet. He couldn’t bring himself to do that, so he stood. He said Ahmadu Bello
really wanted to earn his trust, so he invited him to come eat with him. He
said the premier kept pushing juicy pieces of meat to him until he ate more
meat than he had intended to. So the Premier cracked a joke along the lines of,
“Look at this Yoruba man who didn’t want to sit on the floor. Now, he has
finished all my meat! I am not sure he sees this much meat at his village.”
Everyone laughed at Aderibigbe’s expense, and he was
enraged. In anger, he said, he told the Premier that it was because his people
didn’t spend their money on meat that they could afford to send him and his
kind to school to man the northern Nigerian civil service. There was dead, impenetrable
silence everywhere. He thought he would lose his job, and he was fine with it.
A week after he got ready to return to Lagos, Ahmadu Bello
invited him again. Instead of a sack letter, the Premier told him he had been
posted to Sokoto as the Provincial Secretary, which is the equivalent of a
governor now. (Sokoto Province is now present-day Sokoto, Zamfara, Kebbi and Niger
states). Ahmadu Bello said to Aderibigbe, “I want you to go teach my people how
to spend their money on education, not meat.”
This anecdote is a prototypic instantiation of Ahmadu Bello’s
bridge-building efforts across Northern Nigeria’s many fissures. He wasn’t
perfect. He was, for instance, accused of wanting to universalize his cultural
and religious particularities to the whole region, which ignited forceful
resistance among northern Christians. Nevertheless, the one thing no careful
student of Ahmadu Bello would deny is that he was evolving and showed profound sensitivity
to inclusivity, even if it was only token. He didn’t live long enough to
realize the ideals he set out, but he did leave a template that anyone who
leads an intricate, multi-ethnic and multi-religious polity can tweak and
adopt.
He identified the multiplicity of ethnic groups in northern
Nigeria, physically visited most of their places of origin, and sought to give
them a sense of belonging in the region. This template can be extended as an
instrument for nation building. A real, Ahmadu Bello-type northerner, which
Buhari is not, would regard Yoruba people from Kwara and Kogi states as his or
her “regional kin.” Well, if you can do that, you might as well extend that “kinship”
to other Yoruba people in the Southwest in the interest of nation building.
If you accept Ebira people in Kogi as your regional kin, you
might as well extend it to the Igara in Edo State whose language is mutually
intelligible with Ebira. If you regard the Idoma of Benue as your regional kin,
why not do the same to the Yala in Cross River who are linguistically and
culturally similar to the Idoma? If you regard the Igala in Kogi as your
regional kin, you might as well like the ethnic kin of the Igala known as the
Ebu in Oshimili North LGA of Delta State or the Ilushi in Edo State, who are
linguistically and culturally indistinguishable from the Igala.
If your benign northern sub-nationalism causes you to accept
Iyiorcha Ayu as your brother because he is Tiv from Benue, why would you not
accept his own brothers and sisters in Obanliku in Cross River State who are
also, for all practical purposes, linguistically and culturally Tivs?
In fact, we are only now getting to know that there are Igbo
people in Ado, Oju, Obi and Okpoku local government areas of Benue State who
are native to the state. Had Ahmadu Bello lived long enough to know this, he
would definitely have drawn them close to him. In other words, being a genuinely
benign northern sub-nationalist draws you close to being a pan-Nigerian
nationalist.
That is why the embarrassingly undisguised Arewacentricity
of Buhari’s appointments in the last three and a half years—and counting—is
such a betrayal of Ahmadu Bello’s template for inter-ethnic relations. Ahmadu
Bello was supposed to be Nigeria’s first Prime Minister, but he instead passed
the honor to the late Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa because he knew he hadn’t yet
evolved to the point where he could regard the whole of Nigeria as his
constituency. He was still learning to come to terms with Northern Nigeria’s
complexity.
Buhari’s
Arewacentricity is not even reflective of the complexity of the North. The only
visible appointment he gave to Northern Christians, for instance, is the
position of Secretary to the Government of the Federation. Everything else is
dominated by Northern Muslims. Going by the precepts Ahmadu Bello idealized,
Buhari has neither the temperament nor the moral qualifications to even be a
northern Nigerian leader, let alone a Nigerian ruler.
In late 2015 when I
started to call out Buhari’s skewed appointments in favor of the Muslim North,
many people, mostly southerners, asked why I was bothered since I'm a northern
Muslim who is “favored” by such appointments—“favored,” that is, on the
emotional and symbolic plane. Well, I did and still do so out of embarrassment.
It’s the sort of embarrassment you feel when your best friend visits you in
your home and, during a family dinner, your mother gives you a considerably
bigger food portion size and choicer pieces of meat than your friend.
Buhari’s self-defense for his provincial appointments is
that he needs to appoint only people he can trust. Well, if after working for
more than two decades in the Nigerian military, by far Nigeria’s most cosmopolitan
institution, he can’t trust anyone outside his cultural, regional, and
religious comfort zone, HE IS the problem, not the people he distrusts.
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