Forget the rose-scented official statistics, the sweet
words of the establishment. There can be no procedure to tracking Nigeria’s
progress graph more efficiently, more intimately than a gesture as ordinary as
dusting up old copies of newspapers or journals to find just how much of
yesterday’s promises were eventually delivered and the gradient to which
current lamentations in the land bear resonance with the cry of yester-years.
The first likely surprise on that excursion into the
past: Not a few of yesterday’s heroes would have dramatically morphed into
today’s villains, with old crooks now miraculously canonised as saints.
The annual national ritual resumed last Sunday as we
marked another October 1, the 57th actually. Listening to President Muhammadu
Buhari (PMB) making his fourth outing that day as either civilian or military
head of state, perceptive older Nigerians were unlikely to miss the recurring
decimals in all. Always permeating his National Day speeches from 1984 to date
are the themes of the anti-corruption struggle, containing centrifugal forces
and titanic exertion to fix the leaking economy.
One, the noble duel against Boko Haram which has
dominated PMB’s October 1 broadcast in the past three years slightly echoes
what was said about the no less aberrant Maitasene sect in 1984 as military
head of state.
Talk of salvaging the national economy out of recession
last Sunday bears sthe ame cadence with what we heard in 1984 after failed
politicians had reduced “our hospitals to mere consulting centres”. The same
way the anti-corruption rhetoric persistent today had also featured back in
1984 amid a national crackdown on those who looted the exchequer during the
preceding dispensation then.
In a way, it all tells of a nation hopelessly locked in
the frenzy of motion with little or no movement.
Turning the pages of Sunday Concord of
October 5, 1997 last Sunday, I, for instance, could not but shudder at the
striking plangency the points made some donkey years ago by respected
columnist, Mr. Lewis Obi, still bears with the current human condition in
contemporary Nigeria.
With democracy then in retreat under dictator Sani
Abacha, the national mood was perhaps best captured by Obi in the piece
entitled, “37 Years in The Wilderness”, contained in that edition. His grim
observations after listening to the Independence Day broadcast by the then head
of state goes:
“(A)fter the speech, most households in Lagos
went out in search of water. A cholera epidemic is imminent in Lagos unless the
water supply is restored and increased. Most homes in Lagos get two days
electricity a week. Since only the rich – indeed, even the rich can no longer
run their electricity generating sets – only the obscenely rich still has a set
working. The reason is that the Tokunbo generators have had to be overburdened
and the cost of running them is driving their owners mad.”
Sadly, the generation that
drank from efficient, hygienic public taps in the 70s/80s sat by idly and over
the years watched in surrender as the cartel of “pure water” merchants
gradually displaced state water boards across the country and today have proved
to be far more efficient, even carcinogenic, in water supply.
With trillions of naira since expended on power by Abuja in a succession of five administrations and a surfeit of reforms in the past twenty years, the generating set market has, in fact, boomed further with fuel costs completely out of reach of the common man as the nation still largely wallows in pitch darkness.
With trillions of naira since expended on power by Abuja in a succession of five administrations and a surfeit of reforms in the past twenty years, the generating set market has, in fact, boomed further with fuel costs completely out of reach of the common man as the nation still largely wallows in pitch darkness.
Back in the 70s, a federal rolling plan panel led by
Chief Olu Falae had projected the nation’s energy need would be over 10,000
megawatts by 2000. More than 40 years later and with the population almost
tripled, electricity generation is still officially estimated at a
controversial 7,000. Yet, by 1988, official records indicated the 4,000 mark
had already been attained. Even after pouring more than $16 billion into the
energy sector by 2007 (according to the House of Representatives in 2009),
Chief Olusegun Obasanjo only delivered a miserable 3,000 megawatts.
Today, statistics from an international agency, WaterAid
Nigeria, indicate that 40 percent of the population still lacks access to
potable water despite hundreds of billions voted yearly by various levels of
government. In short, ten percent of the world’s thirsty today are in Nigeria.
So pervasive has the sinking of private boreholes become that authorities in many states have since enacted assorted regulations not to lose out in making profit (by way of levies) from the misery of the thirsty populace desperately seeking quick-fixes. Of course, no one seems to bother about the adverse consequence for the environment ultimately.
Sadly, the generation that drank from efficient, hygienic public taps in the 70s/80s sat by idly and over the years watched in surrender as the cartel of “pure water” merchants gradually displaced state water boards across the country and today have proved to be far more efficient, even carcinogenic, in water supply.
So pervasive has the sinking of private boreholes become that authorities in many states have since enacted assorted regulations not to lose out in making profit (by way of levies) from the misery of the thirsty populace desperately seeking quick-fixes. Of course, no one seems to bother about the adverse consequence for the environment ultimately.
Sadly, the generation that drank from efficient, hygienic public taps in the 70s/80s sat by idly and over the years watched in surrender as the cartel of “pure water” merchants gradually displaced state water boards across the country and today have proved to be far more efficient, even carcinogenic, in water supply.
Now, let us fast forward to October 2007. This is what
Chief Chukwuemeka Ezeife, one-time Anambra governor, had to say about the
activities of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) then under
Mallam Nuhu Ribadu:
“As you know, all of us are in support of
anybody or institution that is anti-corruption. The only problem is the right
process to take in fighting corruption. We need to know that selective justice
is injustice. That is the point I want to emphasis. And so far, the EFCC has
been doing selective justice, pursuing people it is asked to pursue. It cannot
claim to be following due process.”
Today, with yesterday’s opposition now in power at PDP’s
expense, what could only be said to have changed is the voice; the complaints
of “selectivity” have not stopped trailing the anti-graft war.
Pity, the more things change in
Nigeria, the more they appear the same.
Then, fast forward to 2017. Ezeife’s reaction to the October 1 broadcast by President Buhari as published byVanguard two days ago (October 2), no doubt turns a darker page on a different issue altogether – national unity/integration: “Buhari … is trying to push the South-East out of Nigeria by marginalising, dehumanising and humiliating them… The young ones (IPOB) couldn’t understand what he was up to and so they reacted as young people.
Then, fast forward to 2017. Ezeife’s reaction to the October 1 broadcast by President Buhari as published byVanguard two days ago (October 2), no doubt turns a darker page on a different issue altogether – national unity/integration: “Buhari … is trying to push the South-East out of Nigeria by marginalising, dehumanising and humiliating them… The young ones (IPOB) couldn’t understand what he was up to and so they reacted as young people.
“We didn’t have these problems under President
Olusegun Obasanjo, Umaru Yar’Adua or Goodluck Jonathan but immediately Buhari
took the oath of office and swore to protect the constitution, he reneged on
such things as federal character. He told us he belongs to everybody and to
nobody but we have seen that he belongs to Katsina.”
At Nigeria’s 47 anniversary, these were the reflections
of Chief Falae as published by Sunday Sun of
September 30, 2007: “At 47, Nigeria has a lot to
grapple with, the insecurity of lives and property, unemployment among the
youths which has turned young ones to prostitutes and armed robbers, unstable
economy which is telling seriously on the downtrodden, the masses and massive
rigging that is pervading our electoral system and other vices of our leaders.
All these are enough to ruin the nation.
“There will not be meaningful development
unless our leaders are ready to change their attitudes and their approach to
governance… Tell me, how you do think the nation will develop when a whole
deputy governor was snatching ballot boxes in the presence of voters? I mean
this nation needs a lot of reforms and sanity, otherwise the nation may not
witness any meaningful development.”
Poor Chief Falae. While uttering those sanctimonious
words in 2007, little did the Akure high chief know that he would find himself
being implicated nine years later in the alleged unsightly receipt of N100
million in Dasukigate.
Ten years ago, Bishop Bolanle Gbonigi, one of the
nation’s surviving moral authorities, had wept at Nigeria’s wasted
opportunities, urging prayers for the country’s salvation. His views as
published by Sunday Sun of September 30,
2007 are that: “Our nation needs serious prayers and God’s
intervention. Our leaders, instead of listening to the cry of the masses and
engage in developmental projects that will alleviate the sufferings of already
downtrodden masses, they were busy looting the nation’s treasury. Therefore, we
need to intensify our prayers so that God can touch the hearts of our leaders.
You can see that at 47, the nation has little to show for it. Our leaders
should have the fear of God in their minds.”
Today, the octogenarian, after a decade of fervent
prayers, seems to be giving up. His comment in the PUNCH three days ago (October 1) is that: “(M)ajority of the politicians join politics not to serve the
people but to serve their pockets. That is why I always say these so-called
politicians lobby for positions in order to get possessions to enrich
themselves. Look at the way they are stealing billions from the treasury and
keeping them in their private accounts in Nigeria and abroad while many
Nigerians are suffering.”
Pity, the more things change in Nigeria, the more they
appear the same.
PMB’s Lexical Inflexibility
Columnists Sam Omatseye and Segun Adeniyi drew attention to the abuse of
language in official quarters the last time. But President Buhari’s
speechwriters appear too immersed in their hubris to accept that a republican
spirit forbids them from addressing the rest of us in a certain fashion.
From “My dear citizens” of August 21, the president only
slightly modified to “My dear Nigerians” to preface his October 1 national
broadcast without mitigating the extant epistolary goof.
Under feudalism, the community grovels at the ruler’s
feet. He is therefore at liberty to treat and address everyone as “my subject”.
He may wish to wave the horsetail with an imperial swagger as well.
But such predisposition is taboo in a republic, let alone
democracy.
Shared patriotism is however implied at the invocation of
“My fellow Nigerians/citizens/compatriots “. That bespeaks a leader viewing
others as fellow stakeholders. Conversely, “My dear citizens/Nigerians” only
suggests an insufferable condescension, being duplicitously affectionate. It
reeks of a conceited aloofness. It is the language of an emperor. An assault on
the civic dignity of Nigerians. Even putschists in the past always started
courteously with “Fellow countrymen and women…” in announcing regime change.
What confounds is not so much the occurrence of this
gaffe at all, but the obvious unwillingness of the presidential speech-writers
to climb down from their high horse after the dust raised by the August 21
episode and attune themselves to the simple syntax of democracy. If we can’t
get PMB to yield on little things like this, what hope is left that he could
ever be sold on more abstract imperatives needed to change Nigeria for the
better.
Louis Odion is
a Fellow of the Nigerian Guild of Editors (FNGE).
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