Internationally
renowned publication, Financial Times, has
likened former governor of Lagos State, Bola Tinubu to Machiavelli.
Here is
an excerpt from the FT article, titled Man Who Helped Topple Nigerian
President Displays Svengali Touch:
From his
redoubt on Bourdillon Road in upmarket Lagos, a man popularly known as the
Jagaban cemented his reputation this week as a political Svengali with the role
he played in helping to orchestrate the downfall of Nigeria’s sitting
president, Goodluck Jonathan.
Bola
Ahmed Tinubu, whose name comes from the Jagaban chieftaincy title bestowed on
him by the northern town of Borgu,was from 1999 to 2007 governor of the
nation’s economic engine, the coastal state and mega city of Lagos. The
political godfather now of southwest Nigeria, Mr Tinubu’s unlikely alliance with
Muhammadu Buhari, the austere former military ruler and now
president-elect,made possible the first opposition victory in the country’s
electoral history.
“There
needed to be an alignment for us to be able to stare down the government in
power,” said one of Mr Tinubu’s lieutenants. “There needed to be a catalyst for
that alignment.He was the most prepared for that.” The manner in which that
alignment evolves is now among the big questions Nigerians are asking when
considering the likely character of the incoming administration. Described as
“deeply Machiavellian”and a “master strategist” by one of his party peers, the
Jagaban cannily built a political empire among ethnic Yorubas in Lagos and the
southwest, as formidable, according to allied politicians, as that of Obafemi
Awolowo, who led Nigeria’s second-largest ethnic block at independence.
He did so
over the past 15 or so years, having survived a string of bruising turf wars
with the ruling People’s Democratic party, which was forged from political networks
across Nigeria during the 1998 transition from military rule. PDP barons had
become so adept at oiling the electoral machine that they sometimes boasted the
party would still be in power in 100years.
It was
the merger of the Jagaban’s Action Congress last yearwith the party of the
president-elect — strong in the
north but weak elsewhere—that made it possible for the opposition to challenge and ultimately defeat the PDP.
north but weak elsewhere—that made it possible for the opposition to challenge and ultimately defeat the PDP.
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