Reuben Abati: The Bidoung Challenge
Cameroonians
got their chance of introducing into the syllabus of Comedy and Other
Comic Forms (a subject I taught in my other career), what seemed like a
variant of the domestic nature of humour and wit, when in the last week
and more days, they forced humour out of what seemed like an ordinary
situation and added to the Ice Bucket Challenge and the Mannequin
Challenge, what has become known internationally as the #Bidoung
Challenge or the #CourberDosChallenge.
While we were busy here disgracing the Super Falcons who won the
Golden Trophy at the 10th African Women Cup of Nations Championship
Football Tournament (AWCON), by refusing to pay them their entitlements,
and forcing them to take to the streets to advertise national shame and
disgrace, the Cameroonians who came second in the tournament, were
treated to a Presidential banquet and special romp with the President
and his wife. It was a special occasion in sports whereby a silver medal
was better rewarded than a gold medal and in this instance, an odd
commentary on sovereignty and its priorities.
There are other comparisons in terms of the attitude of the managers
involved. Nigeria’s red-beret wearing Sports Minister, Solomon Dalung, a
graduate of the University of Jos and a lawyer I am told, publicly
confessed that Nigeria did not expect the Super Falcons to win. They got
to the Semi-Finals and they were not expected to win and this was the
reason their allowances were not paid? This same man, may be he should
stop wearing a red beret, would later revise the English Language and
say on tape that the “money that was spended on the Falcons was well
spended”. Gbagaun!
Shame on WAEC! WAEC, you see your shame? How do we justify this kind
of grammatical seppuku by someone who purportedly passed School
Certificate English? Abi, Lobade oh, Abi, Lobatan oh. This same fellow
two months back kept the Nigerian male soccer team stranded in Atlanta
and wondered why they were going to the Olympics. Compare and contrast
him with the Minister of Sports and Physical education in Cameroon. His
name is Pierre Ishmael Bidoung Mkpwatt. His team, the Lionesses of
Cameroon came second in the 10th edition of the AWCON. He got them a
Presidential reception, handshakes and all that. But when it was his
turn to greet the President and his wife, Mkpwatt bent down so low, the
whole of Cameroon erupted in laughter and for weeks, Mkpwatt has been
the butt of trans-national joke. How low should any government official
bend to show loyalty to a President? Mkpwatt’s bend- down-low greeting
went viral on social media, and has since inspired so many memes and
imitations, with goats, cats and humans, ridiculing the Minister.
Mkpwatt was so grateful the team under his watch came second; he was
willing to kiss the floor. Here in Nigeria, our own team has been
subjected to ridiculous humiliation. In Cameroon, they are laughing and
having fun, over their second place prize, here in Nigeria we are
gnashing our teeth over our distinction, and behaving as if it was wrong
for the national team to have won the gold medal. Something is not
right. Cameroonians are not worrying about what was spent for their
country to win the Silver Medal, Nigeria’s Sports Minister is bragging
about “what was spended” to get a gold medal. When we are all spent with
“spended” funds and we are left with a demoralized female soccer team
that has won the AWCON eight record times, then we would probably in the
future realize how we “spended” useful talents that could always lift
the nation’s spirits and foreground our sovereignty in strategic areas
of strength. A silver medal brought Cameroon so much humour and wit; a
gold medal brought Nigeria so much agony, regret and embarrassment. This
is the first sub-text of the Bidoung Challenge in the context of
crucial sovereign questions.
Let us now return to Cameroon. Cameroonians obviously don’t know when
to laugh. Mkpwatt’s offence is that he bent too low while paying
respects to imperial leader, Paul Biya. Respect is something important
to Africans. Mkpwatt probably overdid it. One online-parody showed him
bending 90 degrees at a 30 metres distance remove. By any normal
standards, that is too much of a show of respect. Other memes, google
this, are worse, cats and goats got into the matter with Cameroonians
bending so tragically low and purportedly making fun of Sports Minister
Mkpwatt. What nobody has said is that the man actually being ridiculed
is President Paul Biya. They are ridiculing his 34 years of autocratic
rule. The national objection to autocratic, patriarchal rule through
comedy is a way of saying we have had enough, sir. Why should we all
bend so low to make you so important? Comedy after all as Hugh Walpole
tells us, is “for those who think while tragedy is for those who feel”.
Cameroonians through the Bidoung challenge are saying therefore that
they are tired of the culture of subservience, too many years of
Cameroonians bowing down to one man who doesn’t want to leave. When is
Biya planning to leave? Beyond the comedy, this is the message. He has
been President for more than 30 years. We are all tired of him. We don’t
want him behaving like he is a President for life. Africa’s biggest
problem is the continued existence of sit-tight rulers. Our rulers don’t
believe in democracy. They believe that there will be no country
without them or their sons and very soon, their daughters. Just look at
Gambia, the Republic of Congo, Equitorial Guinea and Gabon. Even the
recently elected leaders behave like monarchs.
In this matter, Nigerians are better off. Nigerians have now reached a
stage in our democratic evolution where they seem to believe that
nobody can steal their mandate. And the way they are all waiting for
2019, it looks like they believe in the sanctity of democracy. But I
will like to defend Cameroon’s Sports Minister, Pierre Mkpwatt. Nobody
outside Cameroon has accused him of speaking out of turn like our red
beret guy who doesn’t know the elementary difference between “spend” and
“spent.” But the Cameroonian Sports Minister’s biggest offence is his
bending “down too low.” In Africa, I beg, that is not a big deal. There
is something in Africa called eye service in the corridors of power.
Mkpwatt is the latest victim of the eye service syndrome in Africa’s
corridors of power. I have seen pictures of the US President Barrack
Obama carrying his own umbrella. Members of his staff call him Barrack.
In Germany, Angela Merkel still cooks for her husband every Sunday, and
she goes to the groceries store to get special delicacies. I am not
making this up. She said so in my presence. In the Western world a
leader is not considered God, he or she is a citizen. The problem we
have in Africa is that the leaders behave like they are monarchs.
Mkpwatt bending so low to greet President Biya was merely succumbing to
an African expectation and tradition; in fact, if he had prostrated, he
would not have been out of place. Abusing and maligning him is
hypocritical. Any other Cameroonian would have bent just as low if not
lower.
And Nigerians need not act superior. Even here, people bend too low
to show loyalty to the reigning President. One prominent figure once
told me that it is survival strategy. Nigerian opportunists bend even
far lower, they prostrate, and they utter all kinds of stupidities to
impress the man of power. Sycophancy is the biggest challenge to power
in Nigeria. There are too many people approaching the man of power
telling him things and seeking to influence him, They would kneel down
if they have to. They will recite the Holy Books if they think that will
help. They will do whatever it takes to have their way. All of this is
never in the interest of the people.
A former privileged government official once told me that he found
himself on one occasion at the Presidential Villa whereby he arrived and
he found everyone kneeling down before the President. He thought it was
odd and he didn’t think he had to kneel down. He stood his ground and
stood up but the President was growling at him and he too was looking
back. At that moment, he suddenly saw a respected national figure, who
slumped onto his knees and started crawling towards the President,
shouting “Rankadede” with clinched and raised fists, as he did so. What
was he supposed to do? He went on his knees! In some government houses,
the Governors sit on thrones. When they stand up, their subordinates
also stand. When they sit, the subordinates also sit. When they go for
lunch, or dinner, no appointee eats anything other than what the
Governor eats. The protocol is that you cannot obey an order of gravity
that positions you higher than the big man. This is precisely the
Biodung Challenge. The Sports Minister had to stay away from and below
the big man. It is worse in Nigeria where people actually kneel down or
prostrate to the man of power or his wife, even when there is no need
for such overt expression of loyalty.
The irony of it all is that the same people who bend down so low may
not recognize the same man of power once he is out of office. The same
Mkpwatt that is bending so low for President Biya may claim tomorrow
that he no longer has his phone number. Unfortunately, Paul Biya plans
to die in office.
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