The Zoning Conundrum

News Introduction: 
In other lands the press leads in the ntellectual debate and discussion of the future of the country but here, the fourth estate is content with allowing others to dictate the pace in elevating the content of debate about Nigeria's future

All the noise about zoning is really distressing. For me, by far the most critically important issue in the polity is quality of leadership, and I do not see how zoning relates to that. I have to say also that unfortunately the press is not helping matters by giving so much prominence to a subject that is being advocated by failed ideologues and intellectual midgets who constitute the remnants of Nigeria's failed power elite who are clutching at the zoning straw, only as a means of remaining relevant politically. These people are intellectually lazy. They lack the capacity for the intellectual riguor required to run a modern government and are instinctively averse to any attempt to raise the intellectual bar on which our national government should rest. There may be a time when Nigeria will have the luxury of discussing the issue of political rotation in its public space, but for now, getting a capable leader is by far the most pressing and crucial national issue. I do not care where that leader comes from. So for now, I am totally deaf to any discussion of zoning. May be when Nigeria gets the kind of leader it really needs and has enjoyed good leadership for at least four years, then we can begin to address such luxuries as zoning, that is if there is in fact any relevance for it at all. In other lands the press leads in the intellectual debate and discussion of the future of the country but here, the fourth estate is content with allowing others to dictate the pace in elevating the content of debate about Nigeria's future. For example, we have a situation where Nigeria has had a leadership crisis for decades, something almost everyone acknowledges. Since the late President Yar'Adua was sworn in, in May 2007, that crisis has deepened, coming to its highest level when, as it turned out, he was terminally ill and hospitalised in Saudi Arabia last November. In this situation, Nigeria stumbled on a solution in the person of Goodluck Jonathan who, apparently from behind, as a former deputy governor and vice president, with a stint as governor between, rose to the occasion, to fill the vacuum and as a consequence steadied the course of an otherwise dangerously floundering state. This rare feat of leadership is something Nigeria has not seen for a very long time, yet the press is finding it difficult to acknowledge it. Instead, it is giving so much prominence to a discussion of what amounts to a distraction and a negative factor in the schemes of things. Of course, there are strenuous efforts to underplay what President Jonathan represents and has achieved, but such efforts are most visible in the press. One cannot help but wonder whether the nation's media houses, by omission or commission, are in an unholy alliance with the unprogressive forces in the system. If common sense can be allowed to revail, what we should be talking about is how Nigeria should seize the opportunity presented by Jonathan to bring about the long awaited evolution of a virile, competent and purposeful leadership in the country. Instead, we are giving prominence to ultra-conservative, corrupt and unprogressive ideas and the elite who promote them for their vested or selfish interests. The effect of this of course is to demoralise and disorient the Jonathan government and make it vulnerable to the unprogressive forces in the system. The elite who represent and embody these negative forces see the evolving situation as a threat and are fighting a desperate battle for survival at the expense of all Nigerians. It will be very sad indeed if they eventually win the day as they pretty much succeeded in doing in the Obasanjo administration. Why should it be so difficult to look beyond zoning? Those who insist on talking about zoning are unable to conceive the very simple fact that despite its tribal, religious or geographical divisions, Nigeria is made up of people, human beings who all have the same basic needs. Nigeria can have and in the past has had leaders who were genuinely interested in the people's well-being irrespective of which part of the country they come from. In Goodluck Jonathan we have a rare chance for such a leader to emerge and all we seem to be able to do is to balk at it. Even today, as bad as things seem to be, it is still possible to find virile and principled leadership in every sector or level of government but the set of circumstances that produce such leadership at the peak of the national level has eluded Nigeria for a long time. As a leadership commodity, I think that President Jonathan has demonstrated that we can take a chance on him and that is not something that can be said of the nation's immediate past leaders or of so many of those who are making zoning an issue today.