The Best Liar will Win the Next Election - Etcetera
Where is Ebelechukwu?’
‘Mummy I am here.’
‘Where have you
been since morning ehn? And where are your sandals? Haven’t I warned you
several times not to be walking about bare footed? Or you want to tell
me you don’t have shoes again? Bring yourself here in front of me where I
can see you properly.
Ebelechukwu, I am going to ask you a question and I am going to ask you
just once. If you know what is good for you, you better not tell me any
of your usual lies. Are you listening to me Ebelechukwu?
‘Yes mummy.’
‘Good, where is
the beans I left in that black small pot in the kitchen? Before you
answer me Ebelechukwu, remember I have warned you not to lie to me. If
you try it, you will see what I will do to you. Ngwa, answer me, who ate
the beans I left in the kitchen?’
‘Mummy, I ate the beans.’
‘Why,
Ebelechukwu? Who told you to eat it? How many times have I warned you
not to eat anything that doesn’t belong to you in this house, ehn? I
kept that beans so that your little sister would have something to eat
when she returns from school. You are becoming very fond of this. Go and
bring me my cane. I will flog some sense into that head of yours
today.’
‘Mummy, I am sorry naa. It is not my fault.’
‘It is not your
fault? What do you mean it is not your fault? Whose fault is it
Ebelechukwu? Open that your mouth and talk to me now or you will see my
red eye today.’
‘Mummy, please
naa, I didn’t mean to eat the beans. It was when I got back from school
and sat down on that broken chair near the kitchen door and was about
removing my sandals, that I heard a voice calling my name from inside
the kitchen. I was very afraid because I was the only one at home at
that time. And when I finally entered the kitchen, I noticed that the
voice was coming out of the black small pot on the old stove. Mummy I
was afraid to touch the pot, so I used the turning stick to remove the
cover. As I looked inside, the beans was calling my name and begging me
to eat it. So I obeyed.’
‘My beans was calling your name Ebelechukwu? And you obeyed and sat down and ate everything? Did you use garri?’
‘Yes mummy.’
‘Oh you even had
time to soak garri with it? So Ebelechukwu, at my age you expect me to
believe this nonsense you are saying? How come the beans didn’t talk to
me all the time I was cooking it? How come the remaining beans in the
bag have not spoken to anybody in this house since we bought it? You
have become so special that you can hear the voice of beans ehn?’
‘Mummy, I am not lying, the beans begged me to eat it and I was very hungry at the time.’
‘This child, you
will not kill me before my time. I am tired of your case. I will wait
for your daddy to come back from work to hear this latest story of
yours. Common, get out of here before I break that your coconut head.’
Ebelechukwu must
be the most ridiculous liar since dinosaurs and homo habilis. But his
story of talking beans is no different from the stories we will be
hearing from politicians as we are being ushered into another political
campaign season. Like Ebelechukwu’s mum, some of the political campaign
lies have left a lot of us quite confused and shocked. We have often
heard politicians use ridiculous lines like, “I had no intention of
running for this election but the people have begged me to run and who
am I to say no to the wishes of my people?”
Politicians lie
so much that they can’t even tell when they are lying. They lie about
one another, they lie about themselves, they lie about issues they know
intimately, and they lie about issues they barely understand. When you
meet a politician, he’d tell you a lie within 15 seconds of shaking your
hand, and if he’s going to meet your mother, he’ll invent a special set
of lies for her. Nigerians have become used to politicians lying that
they receive honours for lying more frequently and more brazenly.
But let us also
understand that politicians lie not because they are wicked (though some
are) but because they have learned that political markets rarely reward
honest campaigners. The winner of the 1993 presidential election
centered his campaign on how he was once a poor man who hawked firewood
on the streets. It worked brilliantly and got him a landslide victory.
That may never be seen in the country again.
It wasn’t
surprising when the preacher cum politician claimed to have been asked
by God to contest in 2003 and 2007. Evidently, the ‘God sent’ tag didn’t
go down well with a vast majority of the public.
In politics,
lying is part of the job requirement, a necessary evil. Just four years
ago, the president’s story of having no shoes can be said to be the
masterstroke that got him elected. With just that line of “I once had no
shoes,” he shattered every dream his opponents had of taking up
residence at the presidential villa. If I was one of the candidates of
the 2011 presidential election, after hearing the president’s
jaw-dropping punch line, I would have sacked my campaign manager for
failing to think up something better or equally unbelievable.
From the various
campaign slogans I have heard in the past few weeks, it is
embarrassingly obvious that the campaign managers these days are
downright lazy or dumb. Everything from their campaign themes to music
and press releases reeks of the same template used since the 1983
elections. It is a letdown for those of us who find all the political
mumbo-jumbos of an election year hilarious.
But maybe we
should chill a bit for it is still early into the campaign season. And
even so, this campaign season has already seen two presidential hopefuls
unleashed some rib-cracking lines such as, “My nomination and
expression of interest forms were purchased for me by Nigerian market
women and students” and “I took a loan from the bank to purchase my
forms.”
All we have to
do now is watch as the lines roll in until February when it will be left
for INEC to determine whether the winner would be a bigger liar than
the loser.
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