Timbergate saga: "The long winding road to no
where!"
Raymond Dele Awoonor-Gordon
19 December 2012
Let’s end the game of wits.
We all know that politicians when whipped into mob
frenzy can take banality to frightening heights. But
the government creating a siege mentality - an 'us
versus them' culture and an over-hyped monument to
deadliness with mediocre performance, is nothing but
a desperate addiction to the approval of
nincompoops.
It is as ferocious and effective as a liquidised
Rottweiler.
President Koroma and vice president
Sumana |
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The questions were asked, but despite a
detailed, elaborately crafted and
official reaction, the answers were not
supplied. Government’s belated and
frenzied response to the Timbergate
drama, through its recent press
conference and public statement
therefore amounts to nothing but
political exhibitionism, full of strobe
light and noise, signifying nothing.
After a staggering inertia and
complacency that saw as much action as
that of a blind eunuch, those leading us
have come out looking like grinning
laboratory rats, wondering about the
growing drumbeat of disbelief in the
national polity, and trying to whip
everyone back into line with what
amounts to a dismissive yawn and
criminal impunity. |
No matter the political leanings of any commentator
or the cast of the Timbergate comedy, as those in
the corridors of power are want to believe or make
out, it must be said that the central issue as far
as I am concerned, is that the people of the
Republic of Sierra Leone are for once voicing
concerns and opinions about an issue, and wanting
answers from those that they elected to guide their
moral, political and social conscience.
They are not asking for the moon. They are not
challenging our servant-masters even though they
have a right to. They have not accused anybody, and
even if they did, they have a right to and it is the
responsibility of that person(s) to clear his or her
name.
If the government sees itself as being on trial, it
needs to do a soul search and realise that there
must be reason for the disappearance of the initial
goodwill; and the earlier it does this the better
for all of us.
Therefore, if the government thinks that it has
carefully negotiated its way through the twists and
turns of the fickle relationship with the generality
of the people in the aftermath of the Timbergate
drama, I’m sorry to say: "It ain’t seen nothing
yet." Because there are indeed more questions than
answers.
Why now? Was the long silence meant to give time for
the grand stage of deception to be set? Is the
statement and submissions for the benefit of the
international co-conspirators in the rape of Sierra
Leone?
Can we therefore have the one for local consumption
please? Who, apart from those in power believe or
think American interest in the saga is for the sake
of Sierra Leone alone?
If nothing unwholesome has occurred, how come
humdrum key elements who used to strut around town
like colossi have suddenly done a vanishing act just
like GK (remember him) and decided it was time for
their Christmas holiday?
The recent hogwash release from one of the
conspirators is even more baffling than anything
done up till now.
So far what we are seeing is the trend of exposed
culprits brazenly and confidently turning on their
accusers in the rays of official endorsement and the
collaboration of executive agencies; with slanderous
fabrications and a muddying of the waters to obscure
clear vision and to sap the resolve of interested
parties.
From the moment it adopted the see-no-evil;
hear-no-evil and talk-no-evil stance, the government
created a pathetic matinee that left a mixture of
revulsion and bafflement.
We need to tell ourselves the brutal truth, if there
is to be a modicum of change in our society and how
we as a people are treated by our modern day
'colonialists'.
Trying to educate us about what they have done about
the forest and how proud the rest of the world is
with that achievement - basically misses the point
of why they were forced out of their velvet
armchairs to share the reasons for their gaiety with
us.
Can’t those in power just man up, and not only read
the mood of the people but also talk sense for a
change? Because the pantomime simply points to
taking the entire citizenry for a bunch of suckers
who’ll continue to buy into a well-choreographed and
orchestrated tune, while national looting continues
to be baptised at the alter of greedy, powerful
toes.
Sierra Leoneans are not talking about what measures
have been put in place, but about the unwholesome
practices alleged to be going on now, and which no
doubt will continue long after the remains of
Timbergate has been laid to rest and we have
departed the graveside.
The continued outcry from the public and the world
of sane people is evidence of the increasing
disillusion with the state of affairs in the nation,
and the high level of perceived corruption by
politicians who have made a mess of running the
country.
Governance can be fraught with difficulties and
critical decisions; but when arrogance gets in bed
with absolute power, the result is the monstrosity
playing itself out in our political theatre at the
moment.
In my opinion, never before have there been such an
abyss between the political class and the citizenry,
over a fundamental issue of probity, integrity and
accountability.
Wringing their hands and sprouting gobbledygook,
after, rather than before external forces waded into
our internal affairs, smacks and hints of diabolical
behaviour from those in authority.
It only confirms the consensus that we, the
generality of the people, do not matter and that our
leaders know where their bread is buttered. That
they are more interested in what the outside world
thinks of them than whatever image we have of them.
How sad.
But let all of us remember this treatment next time
we hear yet another politician preach that the
current plight of the country has nothing to do with
them.
No one is fooled or hoodwinked by massaged figures
and submissions that promote the very essence of
government, but which are being propped up as
extra-ordinary service to the development of the
entire mankind, least of which is the people of
Sierra Leone.
This monstrous scandal has festered this long
without a reaction, due to our leaders who continue
to take us for fools and tell us in plain language
that they are not accountable to us. That, their
realities - not ours.
Having suddenly found themselves on the horns of a
dilemma, a section of our political strata, cheered
on by some faceless and shameless knuckle-draggers,
are popping out like a new strain of an old virus
ravaging the body.
I must confess that I am actually surprised that the
present administration after its initial declaration
of commitment to change is managing to destroy the
credibility of its worthy and avowed claim in a
spasm of puerile extremism and nervousness.
In the midst of the associated drama, hysteria and
political claptrap that has left the nation’s media
being used by politicians and vested interests to
conduct by proxy, the arguments and battles that
they do not know how to handle, patriots who truly
want a new socio-economic and political Sierra Leone
should please stop tittering at the back of the
class.
Such lovers of Sierra Leone and its future need to
start walking among the casualties of the fight for
a complete overhaul of our society and the system;
which appears to have taken away the power of the
masses and stuffed the mouths of the media.
The molten fury being spewed out by the combined
spin machinery of a desperate clique is fuelled by a
burning desire for the retention of the status quo
and desperation to keep the tenets of their secret
society, rather than the national interest or the
promotion of a new political behaviour and the
cleansing of the system.
To some of us, the continued deception of commitment
to a change in governance has become an annoying
itch that we should be desperate to scratch away.
Let the government tell us that the political point
scoring and the absolute and total disregard for the
people over whom they exercise genuine control and
power - which should have been left to rot and
fester in the darkest recesses of our sad and
twisted past, is now being legitimised and promoted
as a cause for its own selfish protection.
Plunged into the eye of the storm by the unlikely
source of opposition, those in power have suddenly
realised that they are like the emperor that is
wearing no new clothes, let alone a suit of
invincible armour
Different regime - a familiar sense of déjà vu. But
sometimes it takes one magical moment, one act of
bravery, one occasion, to change everything.
The seemingly irreversible gloom of moral decline
that is like darkness enveloping the nation needs to
change at our dictate and not at the pleasure of
those who lord it over us or who see such concession
as a token of governance.
Months of hyped-up rubbish about the great extent to
which the government has gone to sanitise our
society, is gradually drifting away like an oil
slick in the deep water horizon disaster, to reveal
a sustained cancerous abuse of power at the very
heart of government.
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Everyone, including our politicians,
knows that corruption is the lifeblood
of our political class. They roast in
its heat like a pig on a spit. So, the
onus is gradually turning to President
Koroma to show he’s not a busted flush.
His government’s handling of the entire
saga has fuelled conspiracy theories and
left him stuck between the devil and the
deep blue sea. His administration is now
damned if the characters in the
blockbuster are found guilty and will
cynically be sniffed at if they are not.
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Theories that he’s been trying to get rid of his
deputy will be strengthened, if by some stretch of
imagination, investigations find him guilty; and if
he is cleared, those who are half expecting nothing
different will shout from the rooftop: "We told you
so."
All because President Koroma is too busy being held
hostage by those he thinks hold his political
future. Let him realise that it is the people of
Sierra Leone and not the sectional and political
tribalists who control enclaves where the people are
in perpetual servitude and poverty.
I am sure the President will know that these are
tough times when the real life political nightmares
facing his government are gloomier than the wet and
rainy day up the mountain areas, where he went
hoodwinking the people a few months ago, with
promises he has yet to keep.
Blimmey - don’t Sierra Leoneans and not the greedy
foreigners who have already cornered all our wealth,
deserve anything better than they are getting right
now from our leaders? Who matters most to our
leaders?
If I were thinking of asking Father Christmas for a
present this season of peace on earth and goodwill
to all men, it will be this: "Please give us leaders
without party tricks - but with Sierra Leone burning
in their hearts and a glorious future for the nation
in their mind."
"Oh Little Town of Sierra Leone, in ruins thy
conscience lie(s)….." Sing along everybody!
Compliments of the season to every reader!
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