In the midst of all the altercation and even violence preceding the February 2015 general elections, it is reassuring that there are top politicians who believe that politics is a sport and its practitioners must behave like sportsmen. This means that politicians recognize that all of them cannot win elections at the same time. After all, not all participants in the Olympic Games return home with medals. Sometimes you win and sometimes you lose. The late South African legend, Nelson Mandela, once solemnly asked a top Nigerian diplomat in Pretoria why elections in Nigeria had all the features of a war, namely, physical violence, deaths, crude propaganda, hatred, mass migration of citizens, etc. The diplomat was, for once, short of words.
Against this background, the nation appreciates the recent meeting between Governor Babatunde Fashola of Lagos State and Chekwas Okorie, founder of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) and its first national chairman who is now leading the United Progressive Party (UPP) following his ouster from APGA. According to various media reports, Okorie was in Lagos to address the large Igbo community in the state with regard to the forthcoming general elections. Though two of them belong to different political parties, Okorie felt it was appropriate to pay a courtesy call on the governor. Fashola quickly accepted to meet the UPP chieftain. And they both met on Monday, November 24 at the governor’s office.
The meeting was most civil. Okorie, the UPP leader, made it clear that though the headquarters of his party is in Abuja, it is primarily an Igbo party. It has long decided to zone its presidential ticket to the Igbo-speaking community, just the way he did in 2003 and 2007 when he was the APGA national chairman at the party’s inception. Okorie informed Fashola that since the ruling PDP had already chosen Goodluck Jonathan, who is from the South-south, as the presidential candidate, and the main opposition party, All Progressives Congress (APC), was most likely to field a northerner in the presidential race, it was only appropriate that the UPP looked eastwards for its own candidate so as to balance the geopolitical equation in Nigeria.
The Okorie argument is reminiscent of what the Great Zik of Africa did in the late 1970s when the then ruling military government of Olusegun Obasanjo lifted the ban on party politics. The biggest political party, National Party of Nigeria (NPN), said it was zoning its presidential candidate to the north while the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) had decided that its chairman, Obafemi Awolowo, would fly its presidential flag. In the Nigerian People’s Party (NPP), there was a fierce fight between those who wanted Waziri Ibrahim from Borno State to be its presidential candidate and those who wanted another person. The People’s Redemption Party (PRP) had decided on Aminu Kano. Interestingly, all the parties had announced that their running mates would be Igbo. This was eight years after the civil war, so no Igbo had the courage to run for the presidency.
It was against this background that Nnamdi Azikiwe, who had earlier announced his retirement from politics, had a change of mind and sought the presidential ticket of the NPP, with the support of his great old allies like Adeniran Ogunsanya, Olu Akinfosile, Michael Ogun and Matthew Mbu, among others. Zik knew very well that he was not going to win, as he did not have time to campaign in a number
of states. His involvement in the race derived from the fact that he was the only Nigerian of Igbo extraction who could easily obtain the presidential ticket of a major party because of his stature. Therefore, his participation was to give his Igbo people who led in the struggle for Nigeria’s independence but lost the Biafran war a sense of “upliftment from psychological defeatism to psychological glorification”, as the late K. O. Mbadiwe would put it.
Okorie’s UPP is out to end the second fiddle status some Igbo want to play in Nigerian politics following Biafra’s loss. In doing it, Okorie does not fail to acknowledge those who have chosen to work with the Igbo as equal members of the Nigerian family. Fashola easily stands out in this respect. For instance, Ben Akabueze, the commissioner for planning and development, is the oldest member of the Lagos State cabinet and one of the most productive and powerful. When in July 2013, a market in Apapa dominated almost 100 percent by the Igbo got burnt, Fashola decided to reconstruct it immediately with Lagos State government resources. When some misguided naval ratings working for Rear Admiral Harry Arogundede beat up a female banker named Uzoma Okere in Lagos, it was Fashola who led the protest and even directed the state Ministry of Justice to sue the admiral; the Lagos High Court was to award N100m damages against the admiral. That Ngozi Nwosu from Imo State, a famous artiste afflicted by debilitating diseases, is strong today is due to Fashola. There are so many other instances like naming one of the biggest housing estates in the state after Emeka Anyaoku, just the way he named the commentary box of Teslim Balogun Stadium after the inimitable Ernest Okonkwo.
The point: Chekwas Okorie is following in the footsteps of Azikiwe in identifying, articulating and espousing Igbo interests in a far-sighted manner. Like Zik, Okorie recognizes that Igbo interests are best served when we make friends with as many people as possible and work with them harmoniously in the bigger Nigerian family. Every leader is duty-bound to create goodwill and social capital for his people.
IFEANYI J. OGUNJIOFOR
Ogunjiofor is a medical consultant in Awka, Anambra State.

