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Peter Obi. |
While Sam Omatseye is taking a forceful vacation from the backlash he incurred from his recent baseless attack on the person and aspiration of the Labour Party presidential candidate, Peter Obi, it became the turn of one Jesutega Onokpasa to take the increasingly toxic platform of The Nation newspaper to impugn the claims the Anambra-born business king and politician is making to Nigeria’s highest political office.
Omatseye’s
baleful “Obi-tuary” headline has lived its distasteful short life, interred, as
it has been, in a hail of angry condemnations by peeved Nigerians, but it seems
that The Nation, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu’s political propaganda
machine is devising new ways, even if devoid of value, of ridiculing the dreams
and hopes Peter Obi represents.
After
reading the article by Onokpasa, titled, “What is Peter Obi really up to?”, I
did a random check on Google and could not find anything useful about the
writer except that he is a businessman based in Warri, Delta State. Other stuff
about him is not worthy of even a cursory read. The article itself is also
empty of facts, and it would seem the only thing that qualified it to be
published and promoted lavishly on Social Media was its presentation of Peter
Obi in the negative.
Just
before I dissect the points Jesutega futilely attempted to advance, it is
important to draw the attention of those who have been blowing the trumpets of
Peter Obi of the sister landmines that have been laid for them, and which they
are all, in righteous ignorance, stepping on.
I
have been keenly observing the direction the campaigns for the 2023 elections
is being cleverly twisted to take and can rightfully say that the number one
objective of the All Progressives Congress (APC), and of course, the
strategists in the Tinubu campaign office, is to progressively condition the
minds of Nigerians across all the regions, that Peter Obi is a mere regional
tiger, with no footprints in other parts of the country.
Obi has been tagged a “closet IPOB.” In fact, Sam Omatseye highlighted
this in his now villainous intervention. All these are very intentional efforts
to carve a centrifugal stature of Peter Obi. There have been many of such
examples, and if history will serve as reference, this strategy is not new.
To
ensure this comes to be, members of the Tinubu vuvuzela club have selectively
been creating content designed to provoke Obi’s Igbo tribesmen into angry
reactions, and once this happens, the next is the emergence of a horde of hired
hands on the social media, pushing narratives of a caustic Igbo trolling a
harmless and innocent Tinubu. There have been many efforts in this regard.
Luckily, it has not been as effective as the design intentions prescribed, but
I am aware that, given the marathon that the campaigns will be ahead of 2023,
this drive will be sustained to ensure that those who love Obi in other regions
will be discouraged from voting because of the contrived regional candidature
of a man whose footprints of philanthropy spread all across the country.
Obi
has been tagged a “closet IPOB.” In fact, Sam Omatseye highlighted this in his
now villainous intervention. All these are very intentional efforts to carve a
centrifugal stature of Peter Obi. There have been many of such examples, and if
history will serve as reference, this strategy is not new.
During
the campaigns for the US Presidency between 2018 and 2019, Donald Trump hired a
digital agency, Cambridge Analytica, to help him on the road to victory. Faced
with the uphill task of upsetting a former senator, White House veteran, former
Secretary of State, and wife of a former President, Hilary Clinton, Trump knew
he stood no chance in an open contest of ideas and issues. Rather than work on
becoming versed in campaign rhetoric, Trump deployed his agency to be sending
“disappearing emails” to most of Clinton’s supporters, emphasizing how she was
crooked and untrustworthy.
Cambridge
Analytica was so good at this rogue job that people who hitherto supported Mrs.
Clinton got so annoyed that they abstained from voting on election day. They
could not bring themselves to go out and vote for Donald Trump, but they could
not also risk voting for Hilary, whom they just have been made to discover, was
“crooked.”
The
consequence was an electoral victory that almost cost America all of its
credentials as the world’s beacon of democracy. While Hilary Clinton’s
supporters refused to go and vote, Trump’s supporters voted in their numbers
and that was how Clinton lost many of her traditional bases and the election.
Cambridge
Analytica has long ceased its operations and entered bankruptcy, but its modus
operandi are lessons that have apparently been learned by a few people in
Nigeria as preparations for 2023 gathered steam quite early. For instance,
while the people Peter Obi is up against have been screaming themselves hoarse
that Obi’s support remains only on Social Media, the same people are daily
recruiting influencers with the sole objective to dilute the soaring influence
of the Labour Party, singularly influenced by Obi’s personality. I am also
aware of data mining efforts, not exactly similar to what Steve Bannon and his
group did at Cambridge Analytica, but also not too different.
The
idea is to increasingly tag Obi an Igbo irridentist, thereby luring away his
supporters from other parts of Nigeria. Any person who has not seen this
pattern is not following the election closely, reason the central command of
Obi’s campaign, if there is any at the moment, should sieve the momentum so far
generated before the soaring popularity of their candidate is manipulated to
shrink to the dance of a few.
I
had to do this because it was clear to me that this Jesutega Onokpasa was also
attempting to reinforce the same objective. There is nothing in his article
that is new. But the guiding rule of all pernicious propaganda is to be
pluralistically repetitive. If many people from different places appear to be
echoing the same thing about a person or an issue, the chances of people
believing it increases quite rapidly. Advertising works in much the same way.
The more you repeat same advert, the more people remember it and that also has
a direct correlation to increased patronage.
Jesutega,
I must say, was very pathetic in his very brief article, although I am sure he
must be pleased with himself, having found his name in print. In one breath, he
said he was sure Obi is qualified to be president, but in the same sentence, he
claimed he did not know “how such an astonishing miracle could occur.” He went
on to say rather strangely that Obi does not know how to work with people and
has never been able to assert himself as a political leader.
This
is a very horrible untruth. Peter Obi won elections twice in Anambra State and
was able to assert his policies of low-cost government on the people for eight
years, emerging without any corruption blemish. Perhaps, Jesutega’s idea of
assertiveness is the type of highhandedness that has become the way of
political leadership in Nigeria. That is not the Obi style, and I also believe
that is the turn Nigeria is desperately in need of making
He
also talked about how Obi was “supposed to be able to navigate the minefield of
Nigerian politics when he failed so woefully in politically establishing
himself in Anambra, just one of its thirty-six states?” This is very
unfortunate. At a time Nigerians are speaking of increasing civility in its
politicking, someone in Delta State is suggesting there are minefields that
need navigating. If we are to play politics based on issues, what will make the
political space so dangerous as to be compared to a field full of landmines?
I
do not want to even respond to his claim that Obi could not command the loyalty
of the legislators in the 21 local government areas in Anambra State. It says a
lot about Jesutega’s orientation and suggests he s rooted in the maximum
rulership kind of government that every Nigerian detests.
A
governor is not supposed to command the loyalty of legislators. That is the
definition of tyranny. Legislators are supposed to act as CHECKS on the
governor, and any governor who seeks to control the parliament is deemed to be
anti-people. The misrule we have witnessed in the past decades in Nigeria has
been fueled by legislators being a pliable extension of the governor. We are at
a point where an independent legislature should be pursued with collective
national vigour. Loyal legislators are essentially not democratic. Does
Jesutega know this?
If
Obi wins and becomes President of Nigeria, his good works will speak for him,
if he does good, and it would not matter if he has one, two, three, or even no
legislators in his party. He ruled Anambra with a minority House of Assembly
membership, but he was able to work with them, surviving two impeachment
attempts and going ahead to build, through goodwill and people-oriented
programmes, a base for his political party, the All Progressives Grand Alliance
(APGA). The party he left behind in Anambra has continued to dominate the
government of the state ever since, producing two governments consecutively and
going on to become the majority party, long after he was gone.
How
else should a governor be assertive if not to build such a lasting legacy that,
as far as political leadership is concerned, has consistently defeated the two
behemoth parties in every election in the state?
It
is true, like Jesutega pointed out, that Peter Obi has no politician of note in
the southeast behind him. But this point that he raised in ignorance, missed
two very key facts. The first is that, the writer forgot that when he contested
for the governorship of the state, Obi had no political leader in Anambra State
behind him. He presented himself to the people, laid out his plans and
programmes, and got the votes of the people. This was enough. His contract was
with the people of the state and not with any comity of political godfathers.
And that was why he never let the people of the state down throughout his
tenure.
Secondly,
Jesutega thinks Peter Obi is running for the Presidency of Anambra State. That
is not correct, no matter how desperate the efforts to tag him as a regional
champion. He is running for the presidency of Nigeria and does not need
political leaders from any particular region to usher him into the arena. He is
presenting himself as a Nigerian with solutions to our collective problems as a
nation. He is not going to Abuja to solve Anambra’s problems. He is going to
solve the problems of Mustapha, Adebayo, Okechukwu, Nsikak, Amina. Terngu,
Akenzua, Timi, Abdulmalik, Aisha, Useni, Nenritdung and, if I may add,
Jesutega. This is the space Peter wants Nigerians to get him into, and the
sooner this is realised, the easier this election will be for all of us.
Ikem
Okuhu is a journalist, a Public Relations professional, brand strategist and
teacher. With a career that traversed Print Media, Oil & Gas, Banking and
entrepreneurship, Ikem is the author of wave-making book; PITCH: Debunking
Marketing’s Strongest Myths, a dispassionate exposition of the dos and don’ts
of successful engagement in the marketplace, especially the Nigerian
marketplace. He is the founder/publisher of BRANDish, Nigeria’s first
nationally circulating Brands and Marketing magazine. He has also handled the
PR and reputation management consultancies for a number of brands, businesses
and public figures.
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