By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D. Twitter: @farooqkperogi Buhari’s Nigeria is a suffocatingly fascist, illegitimate rigocracy, and it will ...
By Farooq A. Kperogi,
Ph.D.
Twitter:@farooqkperogi
Buhari’s Nigeria is a suffocatingly fascist, illegitimate
rigocracy, and it will only get worse in the coming years. Dissent is now
violently suppressed. Opposition is pathologized and criminalized. Elections
are militarized and rigged blatantly—and with criminal impunity. Rule of law
and due process are officially disdained and murdered at the highest levels.
The judiciary is now a pitiful poodle of the presidency. Rank nepotism and total
disregard for even the wispiest pretenses to meritocracy are now normalized.
What we are seeing now is Hitler-level fascist conquest of
the Nigerian democratic space. The imperfect but nonetheless emergent culture
of democracy that re-sprouted in the country from 1999 is now being
systematically annihilated and replaced with fascist totalitarianism.
Buhari’s ascendancy to the Nigerian presidency and the
ravages he and his puppeteers are inflicting on democratic culture remind me of
German philosopher Theodor Adorno’s Negative
Dialectics. In this book, Adorno took issue with the conventional Marxian
understanding of the nature of the progress of history. Marxian (and, before it,
Hegelian) dialectics takes for granted that the resolution of the contradictions
between the thesis and the antithesis of historical epochs often leads to a synthesis,
which is invariably positive.
But that’s not always true. Adorno, a German Jew, witnessed
Adolf Hitler’s unspeakable fascist brutalities firsthand; he lived through
fascist barbarities that negated the high-minded promises of the European Enlightenment
and of modernity. I will vulgarize Adorno’s insights to make sense of Buhari’s
pollution and reversal of Nigeria’s democracy.
There is no doubt that from 1999 to 2015, Nigeria did make
minor, scarcely perceptible but nonetheless visible progress in democratic
ethos. Elections have always been flawed, but they became progressively better,
even if only marginally, each year. The 2015 election, defective as it was,
represented a qualitative improvement over all other elections that preceded it,
and is perhaps Nigeria’s best to date.
There has always been intolerance for, even suppression of,
dissent, but because this was often resisted by critical sections of the
society—the media, civil society groups, and sometimes the judiciary— it often
came across as anomalous.
All that has changed. Critics of government lose their jobs
without as much as a whimper from anyone. Critical voices on social media are
arbitrarily arrested and jailed on trumped-up charges. The news media are forced
to self-censor and squelch critical voices in their opinion pages. The
judiciary has been subdued and decapitated. Votes no longer matter. INEC now
arbitrarily allocates fraudulent figures to poodles of the presidency during
shameful shams called “election.” Fraud and state-sponsored violence are now legitimate
instruments of governance.
The Buhari regime legitimizes its strangulation of basic
democratic liberties through duplicitous appeals to a transparently fake
anti-corruption crusade that has been intentionally designed to ensnare only
opponents of the regime while mollycoddling crooked pro-regime fat cats. That
is classic fascism: it subsists on the self-created notion of widespread societal
decadence, which justifies the enthronement of the authoritarian state, the
worship of the supreme leader who reputedly embodies moral regeneration, and
the suspension of civil liberties in the service of a putative moral revival.
To be sure, Nigeria is no stranger to asphyxiating absolutist
tyranny. But it has never experienced this depth, breadth, and severity of
fascist despotism under a system that pretends to be a democracy. Most importantly, under past military
dictatorships, the country always had a robust culture of civil rebellion to
checkmate and neutralize tyranny.
But Buhari’s fascist monocracy is enabled and nourished by
the very people who had made it their life’s calling to fight past military
dictatorships. And that is what is particularly scary about what is unfolding
in Nigeria today. Human rights organizations, pro-democracy groups, and the
legacy news media formation either are in bed with Buhari’s fascist regime or
are too cowed to speak up. The result is that people are increasingly becoming
desensitized to the habitual rape of democracy, and tyranny is being normalized.
Even when Buhari told the Nigerian Bar Association that he
had no use for the rule of law and due process, there was no outrage. When he
illegally “suspended” the Chief of Justice of Nigeria over allegations that
have now turned out to be bogus by the admission of the regime’s own
prosecution counsel (which I’d called attention to several times in the past),
there was no condemnation, much less a protest. Of course, when he coerced INEC
to declare him winner of an election he clearly lost, everyone who should talk
has looked the other way.
The next phase of Buhari’s fascism is to perpetuate himself
in power beyond 2023—if he is lucky to survive the mandate he stole this year,
that is. The incoming National Assembly
will be a pliant, slavish, rubber-stamp congress of yes-men that will tweak the
constitution to legitimize and even prolong Buhari’s tyranny. Opposition
parties will be decimated and Nigeria will become a one-party state.
Since Nigeria’s intellectual, cultural, and political elites
are already compromised, resistance to Buhari’s fascism is a forlorn hope. Most
people know that Nigeria is in the throes of economic collapse, that the
slenderest tinctures of democracy are being eroded every day, and that there is
more division now than at any time in Nigeria’s history, but they feel helpless
and appear to have come to terms with this depressing reality with listless surrender.
A newspaper editor told me last week that, “People here are
carrying on like a conquered people.” There is no doubt most people in Nigeria
outside the circle of the bloodstained buccaneers who are ruthlessly fleecing
the nation now are overcome by a sense of helplessness and have developed ego
defense mechanisms to justify their indifference to the creeping totalitarian
fascism in the nation.
Michael Rivero, an American journalist, actor, and activist,
once captured it this way: "Most people prefer to believe their leaders
are just and fair even in the face of evidence to the contrary, because once a
citizen acknowledges that the government under which they live is lying and
corrupt, the citizen has to choose what he or she will do about it. To take
action in the face of a corrupt government entails risks of harm to life and
loved ones. To choose to do nothing is to surrender one's self-image of
standing for principles. Most people do not have the courage to face that
choice.
“Hence, most propaganda is not designed to fool the critical
thinker but only to give moral cowards an excuse not to think at all."
In other words, in order to free themselves from the twin
burdens of critical thinking and direct action to change or challenge a bad
government, people become willing suckers of sterile government propaganda.
Nowhere is this more nakedly apparent than in Nigeria. Many otherwise sober,
clearheaded people are making peace with the fascism in the country.
They legitimize their moral cowardice by swallowing the
propaganda of the regime: Buhari is fighting corruption; it gets worse before
it gets better; even though Buhari is bad, the alternative is worse; in the
interest of stability, let’s not rock the boat; Buhari will hand over power to
the people of my region, so we can wait out his incompetence for another four
years; and so on.
I warned several times in the past that Nigeria might not
survive a Buhari second time in its present form. Although he did clearly lose
the election, he rigged himself back to power in ways never seen before in
Nigeria’s entire history, and will be sustained in power by people’s moral
cowardice. Then he’ll complete the destruction of the country he started. I
hope people of conscience act before it’s too late.
Prof., thank you for another eyes opening write up. The handwriting of Mr President is on the WALL. Sir, your skill as a journalist and your erudition have make you a PROPHET. I am your pupil for 4 years now which put me in good stead to relate what you have been saying from the past to what is happening now. Sir,though not preponderance of NIGERIA are sensitive enough about the heinous of Mr President and His Cabal, many do. But To take action in the face of a corrupt government entails risks of harm to life and loved ones.' We are afraid of our life but we die every second; morally, intellectually even physical death all embedded with our fear. Sir, hmmmmm, okay.
ReplyDeleteThis is a wake-up call too the slumbering otherwise men of conscience. Nigeria under Buhari's regime is fascistic and our collective destiny as a people currently hangs on a cliff edge only at the verge of a plunge into the abyss. Men of good conscience and courage must act now before the country slides into full-throtled fascism.
ReplyDeleteThis is a wake-up call too the slumbering otherwise men of conscience. Nigeria under Buhari's regime is fascistic and our collective destiny as a people currently hangs on a cliff edge only at the verge of a plunge into the abyss. Men of good conscience and courage must act now before the country slides into full-throtled fascism.
ReplyDeleteThis is a wake-up call too the slumbering otherwise men of conscience. Nigeria under Buhari's regime is fascistic and our collective destiny as a people currently hangs on a cliff edge only at the verge of a plunge into the abyss. Men of good conscience and courage must act now before the country slides into full-throtled fascism.
ReplyDeleteThank u Prof but there is nothing new in what you wrote for a critical thinker bcos I had been saying similar things on Twitter for a while and called out all the National leaders and human rights advocates but nobody said anything including Charlie boy before I realized he was in alliance with APC,the only glimpse of hope is the Judiciary which is why Buhari is trying so hard to disgrace and embarrass the Judiciary to the point that nobody has Trust and Faith in it and that’s why he cooked up some cock and bull story about Onnoghen bcos he knows he is fearless and will follow due process of the law.
ReplyDeleteBuhari is Nigeria biggest problem,he is a fascist and a racist of the highest order,he only believe in the Northerners but will use other Tribes to get to his goal.
The biggest failure in Nigeria Politics which nobody is talking about is NASSA,they allowed Buhari and the Executive arm to usurp their powers and they just sat back and accepted all the wrongdoing without raising any objections to it.Like u said it will get worst with a rubber stamp NASSA in progress,Nigeria is in big TROUBLE.
Once more a bold brilliant piece from an indomitable patriot and fearless champion for a better Nigeria for all. Thanks Professor.
ReplyDeleteAs always the Professor has written to conscientize us on the need to wake up and act. I hope we are aroused by this call
ReplyDeleteAnother unfair diatribe against Buhari. Bertrand Russell said that one terrible human trait is envy. An envious person is himself rendered miserable by envy! Buhari's victory at the polls was a great source of envy for many, who are now rendered unhappy by envy. So the psychology of your diatribe is understandable.
ReplyDeleteFortunately natures clock is already ticking down to his demise. Marxist, marxian. Hmm
ReplyDeleteWell written unsubstantiated rhetoric.
ReplyDeleteProf Buhari and his gang of thieves are contributing their part to the big bang that Nigeria needs to return to the path of progress. My only concern is that a lot of innocent people will be consumed in d raging fire they a putting on. I may sound crude, but better a few hundreds of thousands and them reset than a few undocumented thousand dying every day.
ReplyDelete