Bishop Kukah takes a swipe on Nigeria’s democracy

Matthew Kukah, Catholic Bishop of the diocese of Sokoto said Nigeria has yet to accept full democracy as its military background continues to affect effective governance in the democratic dispensation.

Kukah, who said this while speaking as a panelist on electoral reforms during a citizen’s town hall, a program organized by YIAGA Africa on Tuesday June 30, warned that there is greed and the country’s political interest.

He added that the quarrelsome nature of politics, and the way in which the judiciary has now come to undermine people’s wishes, clearly suggest that we have very serious problems.

According to Bishop Kukah, “We are mistaken in assuming that we have had a transition from dictatorship to democracy. We still haven’t. This is why we are showing all kinds of systemic malfunctioning.

“When we talk about political parties, we have assumptions. But the truth of the matter is that in our own case in Nigeria, we have the greed and the political interest.

“Clearly what we have in Nigeria, as we have seen with the occasional malfunctioning of the system midway through the journey, manifested in the quarrelsome nature of the politics and the way the judiciary has now come to undermine the wishes of the people, suggests very clearly that we have very serious issues with party discipline largely because what we call political parties in Nigeria are mere contraptions purely constructed to help to ferry the ambitions of people — a good number of who are really and truly ill-prepared for the discipline that politics and political party formations require.”

The Catholic Bishop went on to recommend two ways of resolving the political problems facing the country.

“The first is for us to pay attention to the future. That is why this conversation is very important; that a new generation of Nigerians with a different view about our country, with a different set of skills and discipline, must begin to see politics in a much more noble form,” he said.

“The second point is for the judiciary itself to begin to think more in focusing on compelling politics and politicians to fine-tune their articles of discipline internally.”

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