Opinion
Leaving A Banner Without Stains
Late Professor E. D. Anosike of the University of Port Harcourt, once said that “the most significant index of underdevelopment of a nation is the minds of the citizens themselves”. One would add that the most significant indicator of the mindset of the citizens of any nation includes the works of their hands. The nature and results of the works which people leave behind for posterity constitute the most significant interpreters of the quality of the souls of those who were involved in such works.
The fact that many works and the results arising from them rarely bear the signature and true identity of their performers, does not mean that people are not connected with what they do, or leave behind, even when done secretly. A significant indicator of the quality of souls inhabiting a nation at any particular era, is the ability to recognize the truth that humans are the architects of their own fate or destinies, individually and collectively. With the conviction arising from such recognition, noble souls shun shameful deeds, even when nobody is watching.
A major indicator of souls that are of ignoble nature is the absence or diminution of the feeling of shame when performing deeds of ignoble nature. An individual with such blunted feeling of shame would also have a conscience that is blunted, while engaged in ignoble deeds. With the human conscience there is no darkness but it can be blunted and darkened by individuals through personal choices or weakness. No one is immune from temptations but anyone can fall or stand.
There is truth in the saying that a nation gets the kind of leaders which it deserves. Similarly the kind and quality of leadership which a nation has, often indicate the level of development, maturity and collective mindset of the citizens. Leadership quality indicates what is known as mean-average, in statistics. There are citizens far above and below the mean-average, but the centre can hold better if there is no one-sided lop-sidedness. The more that the collective consciousness of the citizens improves the more that improved leadership quality would emerge.
Different qualities and generations of leaders will come and go, leaving behind different legacies and institutions which constitute the “banner” of a nation. What determines the banners that a nation installs or inherits is the quality of the nation’s institutions. With reliable, just, transparent and corruption-free national institutions, individual leaders and performers cannot stain the national banner without first staining and disqualifying themselves. And ideal national banner goes with an ideal national ideology which inspires the pride and patriotism of the citizens.
A nation can hardly evolve an ideology serving as a rallying point of the citizens’ pride and loyalty, if there are gaps that undermine mutual confidence and loyalty. Gaps which create such absence of a rallying point are issues that a responsible leadership should strive to resolve with honesty. Such gaps include institutions which citizens have no confidence in. Institutions which inspire division and distrust, rather than confidence, can accommodate only such leaders who harbour some hidden agenda.
Absence of a rallying point or ideology among Nigerians makes it possible for the emergence of a formidable power-structure which discounts the citizens themselves. Thus a political system which serves, maintains and panders to a power-structure whereby the people do not count, what results would be hard to manage. Loyalty to a power-structure and individual patrons of such structure, undermine national cohesion and unity. Consequently, human survival instinct would predispose people to owe loyalty to strong men and patrons of the ruthless power-structure, rather than to a national ideology.
The fact that highly-placed political figures in the country are being associated with frauds and acts of shamelessness, obviously dampens the pride and loyalty of a majority of Nigerian citizens. The man in the street may be poor, stupid and gullible, but human beings have a tendency to be influenced by what they see, hear and experience every day. There are endless tales and allegations of frauds and embezzlement of public funds running to billions of naira, in a country where the majority are hungry, jobless, frustrated and living in pathetic conditions.
With regards to the NDDC saga, the whole truth may never be told or known. But, speculations among the citizens of the oil-producing communities are quite many and damaging. Nigerian power holders will quickly deny any allegation of an indirect “war indemnity” on the southern part of the nation since after the Nigerian Civil War in 1970. Politicians of the oil producing states would deny complicity in any alleged deliberate scheme to short-change the people of the Niger Delta zone.
Wheelers and dealers in the Nigerian power game would deny any alleged deliberate plot to make Nigeria ungovernable, in pursuance of some possible hidden agenda. Gullible and short-sighted Nigerians would deny any alleged plot to Islamise or Fulanise Nigeria, with a possible aim of installing Sharia legal and political system in the country. A lone and courageous voice that raised the issue of Boko Haram “freedom fighters” being sponsored and shielded by some politicians, would be intimidated and asked to withdraw such allegations. Even a similar warning by American intelligence apparatus can be regarded as an “idle talk” or speculation.
Corrupt practices have taken various clever guises including brazen efforts to short-change segments of the society through state policies. From a gift of N150 billion to cattle breeders, spending of billions of naira daily to feed school children, to distribution of palliative measures to cushion the effects of COVID-19 Pandemic, there are glaring evidence of mendacity and selectiveness. To give unmerited advantage to some people, while others are intimated and cowed by N5 million fine for hate speech, are visible examples of a faulty political economy.
Nations are run with a view to bequeath an ideal future to coming generations. Managing differences and challenges justly and effectively are the hallmark of good politics. No matter what is done or said to the contrary, time unfolds what human cunning hides. Nigerians expect transparency!
Dr Amirize is a retired lecturer from the Rivers State University, Port Harcourt.
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