Nigeria Needs Strong Social Movements

In.Nigeria Needs Strong Social Movements

Voting, votes and honest election results are not enough to prevent elected officials from misbehaving or misgoverning once they get into office. Constitutional checks and balances are not usually sufficient to check and balance the activities of those in power abuses of power as malfeasance, misfeasance and nonfeasance. Such abuses are hard to detect by the everyday citizens. Moreover, those in government have no incentive to report them. Those who independently report such incidences quickly become “enemies of the state”. Therefore, other powerful pressures and institutions need subject those in power to govern well. If they can. Yet, such forces  must emerge from the citizens themselves or a significant number of them. Nigeria is no exception.

Dynamic social movements often sound grandiose, the stuff of prominent men, and are in shrouds of countless assumptions and myths. A social movement is simply a civic tendency of expectation among ordinary citizens. They can further translate it into organised groups capable of realising their goals through indirect but mostly direct action. Nigeria has sufficiently experienced social movements. The Independence movement (from colonial-rule). And the Pro-democracy movement (against military-rule) of the 1950s and 1990s, respectively, which were successful. The logic of those movements was consistent pressure. That is why they worked. However, there have been no tangible social movements to marshal against utterly “bad democratic-rule” in Nigeria. Despite democracy’s ascension for 19 years. That is an opportunity good active citizens perennially miss, but for how much longer?

Unemployed graduates and skilled workers. Women who want to work and do business without sexual molestation. Nigerians without access to good medical and health care. Those without electricity, water and sanitation. Those who see their children starving to death or face hunger daily. Youths who want to take part in electoral politics. These are all potential social movements or roots for the genesis of them. The opportunities for the establishment and mobilisation of strong social movements that can bend the will of the government in Nigeria have no paucity. There would also be no shortage of constant pressure from the aforementioned groups and more.

On another level, we have the market women’s movement, students’ movements, the Niger Delta militant movement, the get-rich-quick movement, the social media movement. All have had their impacts on the political, economic and social life of Nigeria. However, none has had any significant impact on the governance of Nigeria since they serve the interests of individual actors, rather than the society at large, except for student movements. We emphasise that NGOs (non-governmental organisations) are not social movements or evidence of such.

The auxiliary politics of effective civil disobedience has to become a customarily embodied practice in Nigeria if a change is desired. But can only be achieved on the back of significant and focused social movements. The Nigerian Labour Congress appears to have been thoroughly co-opted, compromised and corrupted. It is time for other dynamic organisations to emerge that will carry the torch of civil disobedience effectively in Nigeria. They may exist but the people may have not realised the value of their existence or their coordinators may have to work a little harder. We will leave the feasibility and practicality of civil disobedience to a later publication.

Some will emphatically argue that civil disobedience as strikes, occupations, boycotts, protests marches, media blitzes, transport blockages, etc. do not work in Nigeria. Groups that are too small to have the effect of a proper social movement have usually carried such actions out. Furthermore, the mono-linear efforts of an increasingly undermined Nigerian Labour Congress (internally and externally) had not mustered the capabilities of a social movement worthy of the title. Nevertheless, the time is now ripe with abundant opportunities for the emergence of new dynamic social movements in Nigeria to save it from those who misgovern her.

Non-violent civil disobedience, if successful, with competence prevents the need for violent disobedience. This is a desirable aspect of social movements; peace-in-action. Look at recent events. President Muhammadu Buhari enforced a strong hand against already aggrieved groups [in defying the wisdom of democracy is government by discussion]. It has resulted in violent civil disobedience in many parts of Nigeria.

Niger Delta Avengers (NDA) blew up oil-exporting infrastructure in the Niger Delta to get their message to Buhari since he vowed he would not “discuss” (but deal ruthlessly) with them unlike his predecessor, President Yar’Adua had done to secure peace. In later negotiations between the NDA and the Buhari administration, the had government yield. Boko Haram made itself clear that the Buhari government. He cannot be brutal with them, then expect the hostage girls of Bring Back Our Girls notoriety or fame cannot be released for free. A ransom had to be paid to release some girls and over a hundred more new girls were again recently. More ransoms to be paid.

Non-violent civil disobedience forces or encourages discussion and negotiation between the government and the agitators, representing social movements. If sufficient people power surges constantly and consistently. However, if a government is inflexible enough or so insensitive as to allow the precipitation of violent civil disobedience, it has lost. The government then has no choice but to go into heavy military action. Or to undertake the negotiation it first avoided in the aftermath. As the NDA and Boko Haram cases demonstrate, it is very costly for the state to use arms to suppress disobedience.

Social movements may be the only hope Nigeria has to with thoroughness salvage its democracy. Do you beg to differ?

 

Grimot Nane

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