It is a disturbing irony that Nigerian lawmakers, besides their knack
for sponsoring anti-people bills, have gained considerable notoriety
for lawless conduct and outright rascality. This conduct, which has
attracted untold opprobrium and significantly bastardized the Nigerian
identity, is a skewed image of responsible lawmakers.
But whatever the kind of garment we may choose to robe them in, they
remain the product of a shameful people with no self-worth - they are
the product of our own doing! This is why questions such as: 'how on
earth did Dino Melaye become a Nigerian lawmaker?' represent the most
dim-witted question(s) any Nigerian should be heard asking, at a time
when the most unscrupulous political candidate can secure the vote of a
Nigerian with only the mere flash of ill-gotten Naira notes (the 's' in
'notes' is employed only for the sake of dignity). The Nigerian
electorate is so vulnerable, ignorant and desperate that these
Machiavellian ploys by the oppressors succeed with no one raising the
crucial question of credibility and probity.
These are the nauseous circumstances under which Mr. Dino Melaye got
ushered into what was supposed to be one of the most hallowed houses in
the land, and which has given him the 'senator' appellation. Sadly, very
sadly indeed, it is a grievous situation that is bound to stay with us
for a long time. At the height of Dino Melaye's recent scandal, I was
privileged to have perused and heard a plethora of critical reactions,
but it is my personal opinion to assert that we are without the moral
competence to question Mr Dino Melaye's deleterious conduct. The
rationale for this is not unfathomable. If, for instance, fresh
elections were held today, Nigerians will throng to the polls and
re-produce a mass of Dino Melayes and Bukola Sarakis. That is the
tragedy of our nation, from which our political and social retrogression
stem. It is like cladding a mad man in ceremonial robes and expect him
to admire his new looks for the simple fact that he has spent years
roaming the streets ungarbed.
That said, Dino Melaye is not alone in this show of infamy.
Misconduct has tragically become synonymous with Nigerian 'lawmakers'
(or should it be lawbreakers?), and a whole people have had to put up
with the ignominy created by a group of people whose conduct should be
the archetype of excellence in the Nigerian life. Obviously, moral
excellence in this respect is totally out of the question as we have
seen them create discreditable scenes on countless occasions.
In the recent past, and precisely in July of 2013, the Rivers State
House of Assembly hugged the limelight when members of the House staged
what was completely an eyesore - an eyesore that naturally debased the
Nigerian character. A similar occurrence manifested on the floor of the
National Assembly in June of 2015. During these grotesque occurrences,
there were flying punches, flying chairs, missing or broken maces,
hospitalized people, to say the least. But the grandest of them all came
on the 20th day of November, 2014 when our 'distinguished' lawmakers
were caught on cameras throughout the world whilst scaling the fence of
the National Assembly complex, on the day security operatives locked the
entrance of the complex in a move that was politically driven. That day
remains indelibly gloomy in the political history of Nigeria - a day
created by indiscipline, nurtured by impunity and embraced by docility.
At this stage, it is not clear if these ruinous acts by the nation's
'lawmakers', which are tantamount to hooliganism, have in a little way
spared the sanctity of the Nigerian state. Indeed, there is bound to be
wholesale anarchy when the man who enacts laws is the first to pick up a
sledgehammer to smite the same laws he enacts.
At school, we were taught about the importance of history in the life
of any nation or individual, and how history shapes present events. It
follows therefore, quite naturally, that Dino Melaye and Company are
good students who astutely studied the history of the Nigerian Senate.
In their study, Melaye and his unruly colleagues have learnt,
indefectibly too, that anyone who aspires being a member of the House
must indeed embody misconduct, lawlessness, grand scale corruption,
hooliganism, and so on and so forth.
That the Nigerian state is presently battling a dire ailment is
clearly not a mendacious claim. It desperately needs a leader(s) whose
desire to serve is honest and reassuring to stir the nation to a safe
destination. If this is not done, Nigeria will remain a big joke in the
hands of these clowns.
Elias Ozikpu is a playwright, novelist, essayist, polemicist and a thinker
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