I want it to be
on record that I congratulated His Royal Highness, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, Emir
of Kano, ex-Central Bank Governor, and ex-bow tie addict. I also want it on
record that at the time of writing this article my soon-to-be-predecessor,
Goodluck Jonathan, has not yet congratulated the new Emir. And if there is any
reason you should be suspicious of Jonathan come 2015 it is that a man who
cannot even fake happiness for his neighbour’s success is a man you should be
afraid of.
Many others
have congratulated the new Emir of Kano. One of the first to do this was the
unofficial Emir of Twitter and ‘certified ruffler of feathers’, Nasir E-lrufai. (I hear Nasir wants to be governor of my state and hasn't even thought to tell me- I will deal with this another time. Today is for another diminutive man.) But while Malam Nasir might be ecstatic about his friend Sanusi’s ascension to
the throne I am not. Please be patient while I explain.
When I become
president I would have to take off my shoes in his palace. If there is one part
of my body I am self-conscious about (apart from my newly acquired beer belly),
it is my feet. Not that my feet smell when I take off my shoes. (Ok, yes my
feet smell, but that is not the point.) I lost all my toe nails growing up so
if you took a picture of just my feet, you could swear they belonged to a
seventy year old man. In fact I used to avoid houses where I knew I would have
to take off my shoes (before I discovered socks, that is).
Sanusi’s
ascension to the throne has put a lot of people out of business. Of these many
people I am most concerned about the person who used to sell him bow ties. One
day the man was supplying dozens of expensive bow ties, and in one act of Kwankwasiyya
rebellion, this bow tie dealer has to find something else to sell. Think also
of the many young professionals and persons who began wearing bow ties because
Sanusi made it fashionable. In fact, as a former critic of bow ties myself I
can say that pre-Emir Sanusi cured me. I used to say that bow ties should only
be worn by waiters and for special dinners. No one can tell the full impact of
Governor Kwankwaso’s act of rebellion on Nigeria’s bow tie economy. And with
the recent rebasing of our economy that made us leapfrog into first place ahead
of people with better electricity, roads, healthcare, schools, wines, and
vuvuzelas, the sudden deletion of bow ties from our national life is a threat.
However the
least Jonathan could have done was send a congratulatory message. He could have
called me to accompany him if he was too ashamed to go. Even a half-hearted
one-liner would have sufficed. Like:
“Well done
Sanusi.”
“Well done my
boy.”
“We can’t
question God.”
“I don’t know
why God is doing this to me but congrats.”
“Your hustle
cannot truncate my hustle, so, enjoy.”
“Enjoy your hot
Emir’s regalia.”
“Good luck
ruling Kano.”
“Good luck.”
I am just
saying this because I don’t want to inherit an irritated emir of the largest
and richest emirate in Nigeria. Jonathan should make peace with Sanusi for the
sake of my presidency. I would do the same for him.
Now to the nagging
issue of the passport of Emir Sanusi. Jonathan can very easily solve this issue
of him not congratulating Sanusi by inviting the new emir to go to the Nigerian
Immigration office for a new international passport in lieu of the one seized
at Kano International Airport in May. Jonathan can say that they want to take a
new photo of him with his turban because it is a shameful thing for anyone to
see the emir’s naked head. This can be done quietly. Or if Jonathan wants to
brag about it, he can invite newsmen and hand over the new passport himself.
Because as president I don’t want to be dragged into issues of the previous
presidency. I will be busy planning the invasion of a small European country.
Speaking of
traditional titles, Stella “armoured cars” Oduah was in Ogbaru in Anambra to
receive the title of Ada Eze Chukwu conferred by the traditional rulers from
Anambra North. I also want to congratulate her. It is not easy to go from being
probed to being crowned. I wish her a long and fruitful reign. May her hustle
never be truncated (again).
Ps. I have
spent the last couple of weeks in Germany and let’s just say citizens will have
to bear with me if in 2015 I ban sausages in Nigeria.
Ps. 2 Over 60
days have passed. The children of North-Eastern Nigeria still get kidnapped. They
still live horrid lives in conditions beyond our imagination, with men who do
not hesitate to kill or rape or maim. Is it too much to ask that our government
stop hinting at knowing the sponsors and actually track down these funders of
terror? Is it too much to ask that someone does something serious and secures
the release of the girls (and boys) held by militants?
I watched part of a CNN special on BH impact around Maiduguri, like ohh shit. What to do, people being kidnapped, killed, sent fleeing, burned, maimed, ... what to do?
ReplyDeleteBeautiful as usual..
ReplyDeleteNyc piece!
Wnt 2 ask by d way... Wy dnt I get ur write-ups in my mail any mre?
Plz do sumthn abt it!
Thnx nd kip d goin goin!
May we not be useless as Sanusi's bow-ties, aameen!
ReplyDeleteBut truly why hasn't our President congratulated the new Emir? This does not portend good christian values. Well maybe there is currently no official to do that for. Doyin Okukpe is busy fighting Oby Ezekwesili to be of any use. It is wise not to use him for this delicate job as he could deploy the gutter languages he has been using against Oby to insult the Emir instead of congratulating him. By the way any man who could not get over being publicly ignored by a woman is not fit for congratulatory assignment. He wont do it well. As for Reuben Abati, I suspect Reuben may not tell the truth[he hardly does these days]. He could actually say the new Emir is 7 feet tall or even congratulate the new Emir's opponent like PDP did the other time. Another bad choice. So we cannot really blame Jonathan. So you cannot really blame Jonathan. Anyway, the bow tie seller should change his business to turban selleing so that his hustle will not be truncated.
ReplyDeleteReally, from the title,i started laughing...
ReplyDeleteThanks for reminding of how my mum would force me to read Cyprian Ekwensi, Chinua Achebe, Soyinka, and Co.