By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D. Twitter: @farooqkperogi The Muhammadu Buhari regime, in a fit of fascist rage, shut down the African Inde...
By Farooq A. Kperogi,
Ph.D.
Twitter:@farooqkperogi
The Muhammadu Buhari regime, in a fit of fascist rage, shut
down the African Independent Television (AIT) and RayPower FM for electing to
not be an appendage of the Presidential Villa like NTA , FRCN, and other
broadcast stations are; for not being a willing tool in an illegitimate
government’s fascist, self-serving propaganda; and for providing an outlet for
the ventilation of democratic anxieties about Nigeria’s descent into
unimaginable depths of hopelessness.
This didn’t come to me as a surprise because I had warned
about it several times. In fact, in last week’s column titled “Formal Enthronement of Buhari’s Fascist Rigocracy,” I said, “Because he lacks
legitimacy to rule again, expect the official inauguration of fascist
totalitarianism in the coming days, weeks, months, and years. All illegitimate
regimes brutally suffocate their citizens who stand up to them. That is why François-Marie Arouet, aka
Voltaire, famously said, ‘It is dangerous to be right when the government is
wrong.’”
Several decades ago, African-American abolitionist and
newspaper editor Frederick Douglas eloquently prefigured the unfolding
take-over of the right to public expression by Buhari’s fascist tyranny when he
said, “Liberty is meaningless where the right to utter one’s thoughts and
opinions has ceased to exist. That, of all rights, is the dread of tyrants. It
is the right which they first of all strike down.”
The broadcast licenses of AIT and RayPower FM were withdrawn
because the stations reputedly "embarked on use of inflammatory, divisive,
inciting broadcasts and media propaganda against the government and the NBC for
performing its statutory functions of regulating the broadcast industry in
Nigeria," among other silly, asinine reasons invented by the NBC to mask
its willful, preplanned strike against Daar Communications’ constitutionally
guaranteed liberty of expression.
One of AIT’s professional infractions, according to the NBC,
was that, on January 18, 2019, its presenter for a program called Kakaaki
Social “Read out a tweet from @Gold Rush: ‘…Aticulated FC consolidated its
position at the top of the table with a huge away win in America…while lifeless
FC is battling with relegation at Ogboru Presidential Stadium, Warri. Presenter
just laughed.”
This is unnerving pettiness. For people who are not clued in
on Nigerian social media lingo, this tweet merely said Atiku (represented as “Aticulated
FC”) scored an enormous political capital by traveling to the United States in
January even when Buhari’s propagandists had said he couldn’t travel to the
country because he would be arrested and prosecuted for an alleged
transnational money-laundering crime.
The tweet contrasted the political capital that the US visit
conferred on Atiku with the political diminution Buhari (represented as “Lifeless
FC”) suffered in Delta State during the same time when, in a fleeting moment of
senile dementia, he declared Delta State’s APC governorship candidate Great
Ogboru as APC’s presidential candidate.
The NBC was peeved not only because the tweet was read out
on air in a program where trending tweets are read out, but also because the
presenter laughed when he read it out! How does one even engage with that sort of despotic,
overweening juvenility? Well, scholars of fascism have long found that in
fascist tyrannies, even humor, especially transgressive humor, is a threat that
must be eliminated. Buhari’s tyranny, like most tyrannies, is not only humorless
and artless; it is also afflicted by a cripplingly lumbering intellectual
deficit, which ensures that it doesn’t even understand the codes it purports to
enforce.
Nevertheless, transgressive humor is crucial to critical
democratic citizenship and to the sustenance of a healthy state, and there is no
greater evidence of Nigeria’s tragic descent into the atrocious pits of
totalitarian suffocation of the discursive space than the fact that even oppositional
political humor is now treason.
Buhari and his malevolent puppeteers have found a dutifully
alacritous minion of fascist monocracy in the morally impaired and explicitly
politically partisan Ishaq Modibbo Kawu who, as Director General of the
National Broadcasting Commission, vied for the governorship of his home state
of Kwara on the platform of the ruling APC.
A man who didn’t have
the common decency to resign his position as the non-partisan arbiter of the
broadcast industry before running for a partisan political position and, even
worse, who returned to the same position after losing his partisan political
bid has no moral authority to sit in judgment over professionalism and political partisanship.
As I mentioned in a previous two-part column titled “Ilorin is an Ethnogenesis: Response to Kawu’s Anti-Saraki Ilorin Purism,” Ishaq
Modibbo Kawu, whom I knew as Olanrewaju “Lanre” Kawu in the 1990s, is someone I’ve
called a friend and a brother for years, not because we come from the same state
but because I thought we shared the same passion for a juster, fairer, more
progressive society.
I now realize that I didn’t know him. Access to power has
exposed the rotten underbelly he had artfully hidden for years. Former US First
Lady Michelle Obama, who should know, once said power doesn’t change people; it
divulges who they really are. It lays
bare their inner core. Kawu is a fawning, servile enforcer of the fascist
strangulation of the broadcast industry on behalf of Buhari and Abba Kyari, his
equally ethically stained benefactor, because he was never true to the ideals
he professed.
As I write this column, he is being tried by the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related
Offences Commission (ICPC) on 12-count charges, including a N25 billion naira
fraud. A man who flouted the provisions of the Nigerian constitution that requires public servants
to resign their positions 30 days before standing for elections, who is an unabashed
political partisan, and who is on trial for colossal financial fraud against
the nation and the organization he heads has no moral power to regulate any
institution.
But this is Buhari’s Nigeria where people buy immunity with
political loyalty, where people evade the legal consequences of their moral indiscretions
by not only showing loyalty to the president but by performing it with
exhibitionistic glee.
For instance, just a day after he met with Buhari, withdrew his
candidature for the position of senate president, and endorsed the president’s
candidate for senate president, the EFCC withdrew its N25 billion fraud case against Danjuma Goje and transferred it
to the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation, which is now the
euphemism for discontinuation of prosecutorial pursuit of malefactors with whom
the government is now pleased.
Kawu knows that the only way to earn himself reprieve from
his N25 billion fraud trial is to, like Goje and others, perform spectacular
partisan loyalty to Buhari. In the coming days and weeks, expect the Office of
the Attorney-General of the Federation to take over his case from the ICPC.
This is a thoroughly corrupt, lawless, and fascist totalitarianism that does
not even pretend to spare a split second’s worth of thought for moral propriety
and sense of shame. The Buhari regime, as I’ve repeatedly said, will be the
undoing of Nigeria.
Related Article:
Please remain true to your conscience and profession. God will continue to protect you. Criticising Buhari has been equated with blasphemy against God.
ReplyDeleteGod will judge him for the injustice and extreme hardship Buhari has make Nigerians went through.
ReplyDeleteI stand with President Muhammadu Buhari 100%
ReplyDeleteI Love President Muhammadu Buhari because they have Nigeria in his Heart
ReplyDeleteMuhammad Inuwa Azare
Gullible Nigerians will still not be able to read and comprehend
ReplyDeleteThe figure in the trial of Is'haq Modibbo Kawu is 2.5 billion not 25.
ReplyDelete