Opinion
Still Fledgling At 13
In the next few days, Nigeria’s democracy will clock thirteen years, while the next five months will see Nigeria itself attaining 52. Thirteen years can be regarded as an infinitesimal number, but fifty-two years in the life of a nation can not be dismissed as inconsequential. If Nigeria were to be a woman, and so she is being regarded, she would by now have passed the menopause age, when child bearing becomes impossible, or better still, a throw of a dice.
By this age indicator, Nigeria ought not to be a toddler again walking the streets naked with all its chinless exuberances. It ought to have worn the grey hair of maturity and wisdom, exhorting other nations who are on the path of transgression.
Sadly, Nigeria is only ageing in economy, education and social infrastructure, lacking the grey hair of wisdom and political maturity. Even after 13 years of its democratic experiments, Nigeria is still being tottering on shaky legs, half walking and half crawling in the right direction, just because those who we elected to lead us, and those who forced themselves on our jugular, have continued to pay lip service to the nation’s unity and development.
It is not for nothing that Nigeria has been variously dubbed a contradiction, a mere geographical expression, lacking the status of a nation; a country lacking in clear vision and direction, whose leaders demonstrate abysmal failure and intellectual inadequacies and incapabilities to define a path of greatness for Nigeria.
This is not to cast unfair aspersion on Nigeria and its paddlers. As Brian Browne would say, there is little good to be found in Nigeria. Plentiful morsels of bad and worse describe the stew. The indicators are there to corroborate this point. Hard-dreaded corruption, social-infrastructural decay, educational rot, political intolerance, human rights abuse, religious bigotry, ethnic nepotism, and other unimaginable ills arising from lack of intellectual capital, greed and avarice, ignorance, empty arrogance, pig-headedness have continued to stall the nation’s path to greatness.
In 1960, up till 1970, Nigeria held out the promise of a vibrant and transcendental nation that comes along in the nick of time to rescue its citizens from colonial imperialism. With the calibre of people that were steering the ship of the nation at that time, Nigeria assumed the position of a “Giant of Africa”. Today, however, Nigeria has become a singular disappointment that personifies more of what is wrong with politics and development than what are its solutions.
If you are in doubt, answer the following questions: How many communities in Nigeria have uninterrupted power supply for one week? How many examinations in Nigeria have been organised without a report of malpractices? How many elections have been conducted without cases of political thuggery and manipulations?
How many corrupt politicians and other financial vultures in Nigeria have been put in the docks for wrecking the nation’s economy? How many probe reports of financial misappropriation have seen the light of the day? How many Nigerians have been clutched or bombed to death in the last one and half years that the Boko Haram terrorists have taken siege of the nation?
Questions, endless questions. I can see my fellow compatriots scratching their heads, lost in their search for answers.
All these ills would have been averted, or at worst, reduced to their infinitesimal fraction if the nation’s best, I mean, the nation’s intelligentsia, with a good dose of patriotism, selflessness, courage, good vision and a morsel of radicalism, have been given the chance to preside over our affairs.
The few years of Governors Babatunde Raji Fashola of Lagos State, Adams Oshiomhole of Edo State and our own Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State are living witnesses to the fact that it is neither the oratory skills, nor proclamations of best wishes, but a bolder policy initiative laced with actions, that can rescue the nation from itself, and overcome the holes left by past leadership.
The unfortunate reality is that majority of Nigerians prefer to make an imperfect option between leaders who prescribe a tiny string and proclamations of best wishes for a problem that requires a rope to harness, and the leaders who wears disdain for public opinion like a medallion and who will as well pound the great mass of Nigeria into dust.
The truth is that Nigeria will continue to toddle even in its old age unless Nigeria retraces its step from religious, ethnic, economic and political impunity and embraces a reformist stance of the progressive variety.
Boye Salau
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