The
Afenifere Renewal Group would like to commiserate with the family and
associates of the late Senator Uche Chukwumerije.
The late
Senator did well for himself, family, friends, and the Taekwondo sport
community. It appears he also did well for his Abia State and for the Igbo
ethnic nation as a senator and we would like
to commiserate with them for their loss.
However, a
cursory look at the encomiums being poured on the late senator as a nationalist
cum statesman calls for sober reflection because there would be no motivation
to serve one’s fatherland patriotically if people like the late senator
continue to get the tribute deserving only of statesmanship.
The truth
must be told that late Senator Chukwumerije played a significant role in
frustrating the June 12 mandate, for no plausible logic, thereby lending
himself as part of the forces that sought to deny Nigeria a democratic
experience.
Perhaps,
had June 12 stood as the Nigerian people wished it, Nigeria would have started
its nascent democratic experience on the strength of two strong national
political parties and what was achieved in 2015 could have been accomplished
since 1993.
The
anti-June 12 forces denied Nigeria a 20-year worth of democratic progress and
late Senator Chukwumerije was partly responsible for this retrogression. Ironically,
the late senator ate the fruit of the tree of democracy, the seed of which he
fought to uproot; he reaped where he did not sow and profited from the sweat of
other pro-democracy activists.
Against
this backdrop, it is absurd that the Nigerian senate that could not properly
honour the late Black Scorpion, Benjamin Adekunle, with a minute silence is the
one that suspended its session for one day to mourn late Senator Chukwumerije.
This
statement would be misinterpreted, no doubt, in some quarters but the ARG
believes that the society’s collective memory gains nothing from venerating
every dead person, especially those who served in public office, in a way that
discounted their true deeds while alive.
The ARG
means this to be a lesson for leaders who are still alive today to contribute
their quota to human development and leave a legacy that will be remembered
long after they are gone.
Signed
Kunle
Famoriyo
Publicity
Secretary, ARG
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