Editor’s note: Just yesterday, the Senate president, Bukola Saraki’s, trial has been postponed.
Saraki himslef says his 13-count charge against Saraki at the CCT is
politically motivated. But Ibrahim Magu, the EFCC chairman, Solomon
Arase, inspector general of police, and Abubakar Malami, the attorney
general of the federation, told the Senate president not to politicise the trial.
Titi Dami, a Naij.com contributor, says the Nigerian law
lacks balance and tips the scales to the benefit of whoever is in
charge. So, is Saraki being rightfully prosecuted, or is he politically
repressed?
However removed anyone chooses to be from the eccentricity of
Nigeria’s political system, we eventually all get involved at the end of
the day. From the cabman who drives around the city narrating his
ordeal about how he managed to fuel his car, to the blacksmith who has
to send money to his son in the north, we all eventually find ourselves
discussing politics and governance – all within the horizon and privy of
the information we can gather and digest.
So far, with what I have been able to digest regarding the case of
the Senate president, Bukola Saraki, at the Code of Conduct Tribunal, I
believe that all Nigerians need to put some deep thought into it. At
this time, when everyone sees what the papers are reporting at face
value, I feel the need to comment on this because looking beyond what
the ordinary, and leaving all issues of bitterness and slandering and
jargon about past acts, there is a certain disturbing undertone to the
Senate president’s case.
The public opinion court, which draws its judges and jury from social
and traditional media, has tried to analyze and over-analyze the
ongoing trial of Saraki based on news and stories we read day in-day
out. Some have said that Saraki has questions to answer before the
court, and as such, he should clear his name. However, every Nigerian
out there who has attained puberty would agree with me that there is
something called “the politics of politics,” and Saraki, as a
politician, is currently caught in the middle of a high-stakes game of
this politics of politics.
Politics of politicking is usually beyond what the neither eyes can
meet, nor words can explain. Therefore it is usually an art of the mind,
only understood by those who can discern beyond the common, and grasp
at the hidden insinuations that lie hidden between the lines. Among the
questions begging to be unraveled are: why would the senators and House
of Representative members who are the rightful representatives of the
Nigerian masses keep standing firm in support for the Senate president?
These representatives are in no doubt the ambassadors of all the men
and women across Nigeria, and as seemingly indicting as the CCT case
against Saraki is, they have all maintained one solid ground that the
CCT is persecuting the Senate president rather than prosecuting him.
A handful of senators have even gone as far as issuing statements
stating clearly that they believe that the case against Saraki is
nothing but a political witch-hunt. If those closer to the corridors of
power are saying this is based on the “in-house” information, what
should this signify to the rest of us who think that the “face value
representation” of Saraki’s case at the CCT is as straightforward as it
seems?
Another question to ask is: who stands to benefit from Saraki’s
downfall, and who stands to lose? Is this not another clear case of the
masses being used by a powerful cabal that is hell-bent on using the
media to tilt national issues in their favour?
Correct me if I am wrong, but I think that some guy called Martin
Luther King once said : “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice
everywhere”. In this regard, no matter how good the intentions of our
president might be, we need to remind him that two wrongs can never make
a right.
Most importantly, he is not a god to use the machineries of the state
to decide who is tried and who is left alone. Or who deserves to
preside over the legislature, and who should not. This is a democracy.
Some say that the president’s body language does not support
corruption. I cry folly. Weren’t members of the president’s own cabinet
like Fashola, Amaechi, and Fayemi accused of wrongdoings? Why is the
president shielding some people from investigations, and being selective
in his role as the chief security officer of the Federal Republic of
Nigeria?
We all understand that politics is a game for the lionhearted,
however, this game should not be played at the detriment to Nigeria’s
democratic principles. The law should not be used to favour some and
shield others. The law should also not be used as a weapon against those
one considers enemies, and a safeguard for those one holds close as
friends. The law must be equal to all, all the time. Regardless of who
is being tried, no matter what his alleged sins are.
For this reason, I say: the case against Saraki is politically motivated.
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