I have tried delaying the writing of
this piece in the honest expectation that someone probably misquoted Chief E.K.
when he reportedly publicly disowned former President Goodluck Jonathan. I had hoped
that our dear father, E.K. Clark, would issue a counter-statement and say the
usual things politicians say: “they quoted me out of context!” “Jonathan
is my son”.
That has not happened; rather, some
other Ijaw voices, including one Joseph Evah, have come to the defence of the
old man, to join hands in rubbishing a man they once defended to the hilt and
used as a bargaining chip for the Ijaw interest in the larger Nigerian
geo-politics.
If President Jonathan had returned
to power on May 29, 2015, these same persons would have remained in the
corridors of power, displaying all forms of ethnic triumphalism. It is the
reason in case they do not realize it, why the existent
power blocs that
consider themselves most fit to rule, continue to believe that those whose
ancestors never ran empires can never be trusted with power, hence they can
only be admitted as other people’s agents or as merchants of their own
interests which may even be defined for them as is deemed convenient.
Mercantilism may bring profit, but in power politics, it destroys integrity and
compromises otherwise sacred values.
President Jonathan being publicly
condemned by his own Ijaw brothers, particularly those who were once staunch
supporters of his government further serves the purpose of exposing the limits
of the politics of proximity. Politics in Africa is driven by this particular
factor; it is at the root of all the other evils: prebendalism, clientelism and
what Matthew Kukah has famously described as the “myownisation of power”.
It is both positive and negative, but obviously, more of the latter than
the former. It is considered positive only when it is beneficial to all parties
concerned, and when the template changes, the ground also shifts. As in that
song, the solid rock of proximity is soon replaced by shifting sands. Old
worship becomes new opportunism. And the observant public is left
confounded.
Chief E.K. Clark? Who would ever think, Chief E.K. Clark would publicly disown President Jonathan? He says Jonathan was a weak President. At what point did he come to that realization? Yet, throughout the five years (not six, please) of the Jonathan Presidency, he spoke loudly against anyone who opposed the President. He was so combative he was once quoted as suggesting that Nigeria could have problems if Jonathan was not allowed to return to office. Today, he is the one helping President Jonathan’s successor to quench the fires. He always openly said President Jonathan is “his son”. Today, he is not just turning against his own son, he is telling the world his son as President lacked the political will to fight corruption. He has also accused his son of being too much of a gentleman. Really? Gentlemanliness would be considered honourable in refined circles. Is Pa E.K. Clark recommending something else in order to prove that he is no longer a politician but a statesman as he says?
As someone who was a member of the Jonathan administration, and who interacted often with the old man, I can only say that I am shocked. This is the equivalent of the old man deleting President Jonathan’s phone number and ensuring that calls from his phone no longer ring at the Jonathan end. During the Jonathan years, Chief E. K. Clark was arguably the most vocal Ijaw leader defending the government. He called the President “my son”, and both father and son remained in constant touch.
Chief E.K. Clark? Who would ever think, Chief E.K. Clark would publicly disown President Jonathan? He says Jonathan was a weak President. At what point did he come to that realization? Yet, throughout the five years (not six, please) of the Jonathan Presidency, he spoke loudly against anyone who opposed the President. He was so combative he was once quoted as suggesting that Nigeria could have problems if Jonathan was not allowed to return to office. Today, he is the one helping President Jonathan’s successor to quench the fires. He always openly said President Jonathan is “his son”. Today, he is not just turning against his own son, he is telling the world his son as President lacked the political will to fight corruption. He has also accused his son of being too much of a gentleman. Really? Gentlemanliness would be considered honourable in refined circles. Is Pa E.K. Clark recommending something else in order to prove that he is no longer a politician but a statesman as he says?
As someone who was a member of the Jonathan administration, and who interacted often with the old man, I can only say that I am shocked. This is the equivalent of the old man deleting President Jonathan’s phone number and ensuring that calls from his phone no longer ring at the Jonathan end. During the Jonathan years, Chief E. K. Clark was arguably the most vocal Ijaw leader defending the government. He called the President “my son”, and both father and son remained in constant touch.
There is something about having the
President’s ears in a Presidential system, elevated to the level of a fetish in
the clientilist Nigerian political system. Persons in the corridors of power
who have the President’s ear- be they cook, valet, inlaws, wife, cousin, former
school mates, priests, or whatever, enjoy special privileges. They have access
to the President and they can whisper into his ears. That’s all they have as
power: the power to whisper and run a whispering campaign that can translate into
opportunities or losses for those outside that informal power loop around every
Presidency, that tends to be really influential.
Every President must beware of those
persons who come around calling them “Daddy”, “Uncle”, na my brother dey
there”, “my son”, “our in-law”: emotional blackmailers relying on old
connections. They are courted, patronized and given more attention and honour
than they deserve by those looking for access to the President or government.
Even when the power and authority of the whispering exploiters of the politics
of proximity is contrived, they go out of their way to exaggerate it. They
acquire so much from being seen to be in a position to make things happen.
Chief E. K. Clark had the
President’s ears. He had unfettered access to his son. He was invited to most
state events. And he looked out for the man he called “my son”, in whom
he was well pleased. Chief Clark’s energy level in the service of the Jonathan
administration was impressive. Fearless and outspoken, he deployed his enormous
talents in the service of the Jonathan government. If a press statement
was tame, he drew attention to it and urged a more robust defence of “your
boss”. If any invective from the APC was overlooked, he urged prompt rebuttal.
If the party was tardy in defending “his son”, he weighed in.
If anyone had accused the President
of lacking “the political will to fight corruption” at that time, he, E.K.
Clark, would have called a press conference to draw attention to the Jonathan
administration’s institutional reforms and preventive measures, his commitment
to electoral integrity to check political corruption, and the hundreds of
convictions secured by both the ICPC and EFCC under his son’s watch. So
prominent and influential was he, that ministers, political jobbers etc etc
trooped to his house to pay homage.
In due course, those who opposed
President Jonathan did not spare Chief E. K. Clark either. He was accused of
making inflammatory and unstatesman-like statements. An old war-horse, nobody
could intimidate him. He was not President Olusegun Obasanjo’s fan in
particular. He believed Obasanjo wanted to sabotage his son, and he wanted
Obasanjo put in his place. Beneath all of that, was an unmistaken rivalry
between the two old men, seeking to control the levers of Nigerian politics.
Every President probably needs a
strong, passionate ally like Chief E. K. Clark. But what happened? What went
wrong? Don’t get me wrong. I am not necessarily saying that the Ijaw leader
should have remained loyal to and defend Goodluck Jonathan because they are
both Ijaws, patriotism definitely could be stronger than ethnic affinities,
nonetheless that E. K. Clark tale about leaving politics and becoming a
statesman is nothing but sheer crap. If Jonathan had returned to office,
he would still be a card-carrying member of the PDP and the “father of the
President” and we would still have been hearing that famous phrase, “my son”.
Chief E. K. Clark, five months after, has practically told the world that
President Buhari is better than “his own son”.
It is the worst form of
humiliation that President Jonathan has received since he left office. It
is also the finest compliment that President Buhari has received since he
assumed office. The timing is also auspicious: just when the public is
beginning to worry about the direction of the Buhari government, E. K. Clark
shows up to lend a hand of support and endorsement. Only one phrase was missing
in his statement, and it should have been added: “my son, Buhari.” It probably
won’t be too long before we hear the old man saying “I am a statesman, Buhari
is my son.” I can imagine President Obasanjo grinning with delight. If he
really wants to be kind, he could invite E.K. Clark to his home in Ota or
Abeokuta to come and do the needful by publicly tearing his PDP membership card
and join him in that exclusive club of Nigerian statesmen! The only problem
with that club these days is that you can become a member by just saying so or
by retiring from partisan politics. We are more or less being told that there
are no statesmen in any of the political parties.
It is not funny. Julius Ceasar asked
Brutus in one of the famous lines in written literature: “Et tu Brutus?”
President Jonathan should ask Chief E. K. Clark: “Et tu Papa?” To which the
father will probably tell the son: “Ces’t la vie, mon cher garcon.” And
really, that is life. In the face of other considerations, loyalties vanish;
synergies collapse. The wisdom of the tribe is overturned; the politics of
proximity dissolves; loyalties remain in a perpetual process of construction.
Thus, individual interests and transactions drive the political game in
Nigeria, with time and context as key determinants.
These are teachable moments for
President Jonathan. Power attracts men and women like bees to nectar, the state
of powerlessness ends as a journey to the island of loneliness. However, the
greatest defender of our work in office is not our ethnic “fathers and
“brothers” but rather our legacy. The real loss is that President Jonathan’s heroism,
his messianic sacrifice in the face of defeat, is being swept under the carpet
and his own brothers who used to say that the Ijaws are driven by a principle
of “one for all and all for another”, have become agent-architects of his pain.
The Ijaw platform having seemingly been de-centered, Chief E.K. Clark and
others are seeking assimilation in the new power structure. It is a telling
reconstruction of the politics of proximity and mimicry.
Chief E.K. Clark once defended the
rights of ethnic minorities to aspire to the highest offices in the land, his
latest declaration about his son reaffirms the existing stereotype at the heart
of Nigeria’s hegemonic politics. The same hegemons and their agents whom Clark
used to fight furiously will no doubt find him eminently quotable now that he
has proclaimed that it is wrong to be a “gentleman”, and that his son lacks
“the political will to fight corruption”. There is more to this than we may
ever know. Chief Clark can insist from now till 2019, that he has spoken
as a statesman and as a matter of principle. His re-alignment, is curious
nonetheless.
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