Wednesday, June 3, 2026

The Sun Nigeria

Tinubu’s South East ‘City Boys’ and limits of rascality

The Template – Emeka Alex Duru column

Every fleeting system throws up phony characters that, in unrestrained excitement, tend to the extremes. That was the major challenge of the Warrant Chief administration in some parts of Igboland, particularly the South East, between 1891 and 1929. The failure of Indirect Rule in the East, compared with the results in the North and West where there existed structured monarchical systems, had pushed the colonial masters into a certain level of frenzy. They needed locals who would serve as their eyes and voices in the communities on matters of revenue collection and administrative convenience. Foremost historian, Prof Elizabeth Isichei, got it precisely in her well-received 1976 publication, ‘A History of the Igbo People’, that “the patterns of traditional Igbo government were hopelessly unsuited to the needs of the colonial state. Its system of checks and balances, its pursuit of consensus by protracted discussion, its use of religious sanctions and, especially, its small scale, rendered it impracticable.” The Warrant Chief arrangement thus became the clincher for the imperialists.

But in their desperate quest to enforce the system, the British colonialists failed to take into consideration the prevailing customs, traditions and experiences of the Igbo communities that were largely autonomous and independent. They therefore appointed individuals arbitrarily to serve as warrant chiefs, not minding their status or moral standing among the people in their domains. Some of the beneficiaries of the appointment were social misfits, who ordinarily would not command attention at village square assembly. Due to the manner of their appointment, the chiefs never felt any loyalty or responsibility to their own people but to those that gave them relevance and privileges.

The Warrant Chiefs, thus grew rich illicitly and began to exercise authorities that were not originally bestowed on them. The inherent corruption in the system formed part of what led to the famous Women’s Revolt of 1929 in Eastern Nigeria (narrowly referred to Aba Women riot in some instances). The colonial masters had no choice other than to abolish the warrant chieftains the following year. But by then, much harm had been done to the socio-political system of the people.

In similar way, some emergency leaders were thrown up in the East after the 1967-1970 Civil War. These were unprincipled men – collaborators – who latched on their relationship with the rampaging federal forces and sabotaged the efforts of their people in the crisis. In local parlance, they were called “saboteurs”. As reward for their ignominious action, they were enormously empowered through contracts and other shady deals.

If you see them as the local version of the Carpetbagger – the opportunistic or disruptive Northerners who came to the Southern states after the American Civil War and exploited the local populace for their own financial, political, or social gain, you are not far from the truth. Elsewhere in Africa, they existed in quantum. At the height of demand for independence and the campaign against colonialism, some traditional, economic and political elite, who were scared of losing their privileged positions with the exit of the colonial masters, engaged in many underhand activities to sabotage independence struggles in their respective countries. In the French and Belgian colonies, they found comfort in a special class known as the Évolué – a French label to describe a native African or Asian who had “evolved” by becoming Europeanised through education or assimilation and had accepted European values and patterns of behavior.  A distinctive character of an évolué was the ability to break social ties with his group, and appearing to have entered another system of motivations and values.

Celebrated Essayist and author, Chinweizu, describes them as “Comprador Bourgeoisie”, in his work, ‘The West and The Rest of Us’. These were middlemen who exploited their kinsmen while serving foreign capital in both political and economic relations. For them, everything was normal, as long as their interest was protected.

It is against this backdrop that the antics of some social media personalities from South East in the City Boys Movement, the pro-government support group advocating President Tinubu’s reelection, can be understood. The Movement, led by Seyi, Tinubu’s son, is a youth mobilisation platform with involvement of prominent private-sector figures for the President’s second term. Igbo socialites in the group include Emeka Okonkwo (E-Money), Obinna Iyiegbu (Obi Cubana), Pascal Okechukwu, (Cubana Chief Priest), entrepreneur Cletus Uzoezie Oragwa (Zenco) and others. The members have been understandably upbeat and excited for many reasons, including the rare opportunity for handshakes with the President, perceived opportunity to enlarge their business spaces or seek cover for some past deeds that can be exposed by a vicious presidency if they fail to play along. At war times as our elections are increasingly assuming, when all is fair, they are tolerated, especially when they are working for the authorities. They therefore deserve to be allowed to humour and entertain themselves, in assuring the President that they were going to deliver and hand over the South East to him during the election. Infantile as that may sound, it is one of the beauties of democracy – plurality of views and opinions.

But it seems that the guys in the Movement from the Orient, are beginning to assume that they are forces to be reckoned with in the politics of the region. And they are allowing rascality to blur their senses and drive their activities, in the process, veering into topics that are clearly beyond them. They now see themselves as the faces of Igbo leadership. The other day, at a parley with Governor Peter Mbah of Enugu State who recently defected to Tinubu’s All Progressives Congress (APC), Obi Cubana stretched his assumption of importance too far when he claimed: “Our people (the Igbo) lack political knowledge, and our work is mostly to educate (them)”. The anger generated by the loose comments was yet to go down when his sidekick Cubana Chief Priest declared in Owerri, Imo State that: “We the Igbos are the people that were defeated during the war…we do not want to lose again…” Pascal Okechukwu, the Cubana Chief Priest, lacks the capacity and equipment to discuss the war, the victors and the losers. The war ended 56 years ago. Okechukwu was born on April 2, 1981- 45 years ago, with his highest tertiary education at Federal Polytechnic Nekede in Owerri. How far such humble intellectual background equips him to venture into the issues about the war to the point of dismissing the heroic effort of the Igbo in the encounter as that of a defeated people, remains a wonder. And to choose Owerri, a strategic city in the Igbo resistance struggle for the gaffe, indicates the extent delusion and grandeur can drive one lacking in discipline and restraints.

These men of the moment are getting it wrong and need to be called to order. Politics at macro level is different from social media influencing and relevance. It is also not about advertising rootless wealth. When it comes to the South East, the Igbo with its unique republican orientation, the meaning gets clearer. It is a system that interrogates who you are and not celebration of your breezy emergence at the social scene. In Igbo electoral democracy, there is no prescription or compulsion on who to vote for at election time. Just as in the village squares where brothers who rode on same vehicle could disagree in principle and still sleep under same roof without rancour, the people are fluid on electoral matters. Thus, a husband and his wife could approach same polling both and cast their votes for different candidates. It is a matter of choice.

When therefore the City Boys assure the President that they were going to deliver the South East to him, they are merely humouring him. They know that they cannot do so in a free and fair poll. They also lack the roots and the reach among the people. Whet will determine how far Tinubu will go in the zone, is his performance score card to the nation and the region, which, all considered, is abysmally low.

The people and residents of south east justifiably feel they are excluded from the Tinubu government in appointments, policies and programmes. These are the issues the President needs to deal with as the election draws close. Doing so requires strategic partnership with the people who bear the brunt, their real leaders and not with noisy individuals on the flight for fancy.