Let
me begin by sharing this story of a teacher who got lost in a rural area, and
please don’t ask me in which country because I don’t know. While still
wandering, the teacher saw a farm and went there, hoping he would find someone
from whom he could seek direction. Fortunately, he found a farmer but as they
were exchanging pleasantries, he noticed a cow with a wooden leg and he became
curious. “How did that cow get a wooden leg?” the teacher asked the farmer.
“Well”,
replied the farmer, “that is a very special cow. One night not too long ago we
had a fire in the barn. That cow set up a great lowing that woke everyone, and
by the time we got there it had herded out of the barn not onlythe other cows
but indeed all the animalsin the farm and saved every one of them.”
“And
that was when the cow hurt its leg?” asked the amazed teacher.
“Oh
no” responded the farmer. “The cow was fine after that even though a few days
later, I was in the woods when a bear attacked me. As it would happen, that cow
was nearby and it came running to chase off the bear. That is one experience I
will never forget because that cow saved my life for sure.”
“So
the bear injured the leg of the cow?” asked the teacher.
“Oh
no”, came the prompt reply from the farmer. “The cow came away from that
encounter without a scratch. Unfortunately, a week after that incident, my son
was working on the farm when the tractor turned over into aditch with a large
pool of water and he was knocked unconscious. Well, that cow dove into the
ditch and pulled my son out before hecould drown.”
Nodding
his head, the teacher said: “Now I get it. That was how the cow hurt its leg
while rescuing your son…”
“Oh,
no,” the farmer interjected.
By
this time the teacher had become very impatient: “So how exactly did the cow
get the wooden leg?” he asked.
“Well”,
looking in the direction of the cow, the farmer shook his head and
muttered,”You should put yourself in my position. A cow like that, you don’t
want to eat it all at once.”
Pastor
Poju, distinguished ladies and gentlemen, if we will be honest, that
unfortunate cow has so much in common with Nigeria, which has over the years
become a victim of serial abuse, including by thoseto whom she has given so
much. As I reflected on that story in the past few days, I came to the
conclusion that just like that cow, Nigeria is no more than a meal ticket to
many of her elites. What is even more unfortunate is that the people who speak
ill of her the most, especially in a season like this, are those who have
benefited immensely from the opportunities presented to them by this supposedly
useless country.
Some
of these people were, at various times,governors, ministers, lawmakers, special
advisers etc. Many were also in the private sector where they made so much
money under a system that demanded little or no accountability of them. Also in
this categoryare some of our compatriotswho now live abroad, including with
their immediate families, thanks tothe fortunes they or their parents made in
this same country.
Let
me make a confession here: Iowe a lot to Nigeria. That someone like me, given
my background, could attend a university like Ife as at the time I did was
because the state made education at that level to be tuition free. And whether
they admit it or not, there are hundreds of thousands like me who are where
they are today on account of Nigeria: the education they got, the wealth they
have accumulated and the influence they still peddle. Unfortunately, it is from
this same collection that you find those who continually trouble our country.
On
6th June this year,some old men under the aegis of Coalition ofArewa Youths
gave all the Igbo people living in the North till yesterday, 1st Octoberto
vacate the region. Even though the quit
notice was eventually withdrawn,the damage that ultimatum did to our national
psyche would take many years to heal. But then, the action of this group was
also a response to the uncontrolled verbal aggression by MrNnamdiKanu, leader
of the so-called Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB).
Egged
on by the mob, comprising mostly okada riders with online support from several
of his kinsmen in the Diaspora, Kanu was allowed to take hate speech to an
unprecedented level, even by the standards of our country. Even when he
waspresented a golden opportunity to champion the genuine grievances of his
people with civility, following an ill-advised treason trial that catapulted
him into national limelight and prominence, Kanu could not rise beyond the
mediocrity of the adulation of some street urchins. He felt that by making
incendiary statements to offend, insult, intimidate and threaten people from
other ethnicgroups, he was helping whatever his cause was. At the end, he made
a strategic miscalculation.
However,
while I do not know why Kanubelieves spreading hate and violence would help his
cause, the Arewa youth counter-response was also very much unfortunate because
the inference was that because Kanu is Igbo, all Igbo people must suffer the
consequences of his action. But one must thank the governor of Borno State and
Chair of the Northern Governors Forum, AlhajiKashimShettima as well as Governor
NasirelRufaiof Kaduna State for their prompt interventions.
Unfortunately,
the message that was lost on the authorities in Abuja is that you cannot build
an inclusive society when you react to national security threats in a manner
that suggests some people are above the law;although many people across the
country also felt let down that some otherwise respected senior citizens from
the South-east who ought to have called Kanu to order were practically
genuflecting before someone young enough to be their grandson!
Meanwhile,
what many of our young people, as well as the politicians in their sixties and
seventies who do not want to grow up, forget or are ignorant about, is that
north or south, we need one another. That then explains why all thecurrent
agitations and perturbations are a distraction from the real issue which is
that Nigeria is not working for majority of its citizens. And we see the
evidence everywhere.
For
sure, the state of affairsin our country today is enough to make people really
angry. But if such anger is not properly channeled, it can be dangerous. For
instance, I am angry about how clumsy and inefficient public institutions have
become in Nigeria. I am angry about the way public officials, at all levels,
betray a lack of creativity even in dealing with simple matters. I am angry
when a teenager tells me that their school bribed invigilators to look away so
that their teachers could tell them the answers while sitting for a crucial
national examination. I am angry by the latest statistics from the United
Nations Children Fund (UNICEF) that in our country about 90,000 children are
expected to die of hunger over the next 12 months.
I
am angry about the foregoing and much more because I believe we can do better
as a nation. But I cannot because of such anger lash at the next person or
another group of Nigerians who do not speak the same language or worship the
same God with me.Therefore,my charge this morning to our young men and women
is: If you must be angry as Nigerians, direct it not to the tribe, ethnicity,
religion, race, gender or even the sexual orientation of fellow citizens.
Direct it at the greed and the perversion that make some people deny others
their decent and fair opportunities in life. Direct it at the ignorance
andbigotry of a vast majority who submit themselves as ready tools for those
who conspire to hold our nation down. And let us begin to figure out a way to defeat
these people and problems
Distinguished
ladies and gentlemen, the challenge of the moment is to create an environment
with less suspicion and more equitable distribution of power and resources
among the critical stakeholders in our country. This country is full of promise
and presents enormous opportunities. Even while it is true that the system is
creaking beneath all of us and we must fix it, those who couch the narratives
in ethnic or religious arguments miss the point and they are actually the
problem. This is not a North-South debate neither is about dismemberment for
many of us. What we are saying is that the current situation where money is
sent from Abuja to Badagry or Birnin-Kebbi is antithetical to good governance.
Nothing
can be more revealing of how wasteful our federal structure has become than a
recent revelation by the Minister of Health, Prof Isaac Adewole who said: “I
was in Zamfara State. At the Federal Medical Centre in Zamfara, there are about
120 doctors but the state has 23 (doctors) as at the last count to manage 24 hospitals.
And, yet, the federal hospital has about 120.”The pertinent question is: How
did the federal government engage such a large number of medical personnel who
are practically idle and for just one medical centre? The answer is simple: It
is largely because of its heavy wallet. Yet, you find this sort of waste
replicated in several sectors.
Therefore,
we must find a way to make government more efficient and effective. How to make
this happen is where the disagreement lies. But we are gradually coming to a
consensus that it is the dysfunction at the centre that is creating the current
bad blood, frustration, anger, suspicion and unhealthy competition among the
various groups in the country.
Anybody
who has read the report of the Presidential Committee on the Restructuring and
Rationalisation of the Federal Government Paratastals, Commissions and Agencies
cannot but understand the waste we call government in Nigeria.Chaired by former
Head of Service, Mr Steve Oronsaye, the committee was established in August
2011 by the former President, DrGoodluck Jonathan with the report submitted to
him in April 2012, although he ended up doing nothing with the recommendations.
It
is instructive that the committee identified 541 federal government agencies,
50 of which have no enabling laws! There are also 55 agencies that are not
under the supervision of any ministry and many of them, according to the
Oronsaye committee,“receive more budgetary allocations for personnel than they
require because that component of their budget is usually inflated”. These
agencies include National Agency for Population Programmes and Development;
Population Activities Fund; Population Fund Activities Agency and Population
Research Fund.
Yes,
those are federal agencies in Nigeria!
I
need to state here that bad governance is not peculiar to the federal
government because the situation is actually worse in the states and as for
local governments, let us not even go there given what governors have done to
that tier of government.
As
things stand in Nigeria today, accountability diminishes as you move from the
centre to the other units: states and local governments. For instance, no
president in Nigeria can get away with half of what governors do, almost as of
right, in their states where there are neither checks nor balances. The
speakers of the state houses of assembly are more or less errand boys of the
governors and they serve and are removed at their pleasure.The logical result
is that the promise of good governance embedded in the theory of
decentralization that many Nigerians now clamour for, will still be delivered
in the breach if there is no change in the behavior of the political actors.
Distinguished
ladies and gentlemen, I am well aware that we do not have a perfect country but
regardless of how our collective resources have been badly managed over the
years, there is great gain for us to be positive in the way we relate to the
country we all call our own. The pertinent question at this point is: What
exactly do we mean by Nigeria?
In
our context, the answer may be quite complex but one thing is certain, it
should not be about geography or tongues or faith. For me, Nigeria is not the
violent man who would demonise and threaten fellow citizens just because they
speak a language different from his. Nigeria is not the angry man in a video
who would ask his fellow men to go and poison the waters in a section of the
country oblivious to the Yoruba saying that when you throw a stone in the
market place, you cannot determine who would be hit by it. Nigeria is not the
Baba the boys who would issue a dangerous quit-order on innocent citizens in
their area of domicile. Nigeria is not the public official who would steal the
money meant for some of the most vulnerable of our citizens, knowing he has the
back of those who should hold him to account. Nigeria is not the politician who
spends his productive hours every day spewing hate and bigotry on social media
platforms just because he has a personal score to settle with the president.
Distinguished
ladies and gentlemen, if I am sounding like a motivational speaker this
morning, I think you should blame my pastor, EvaristusAzodoh. A retired colonel
of the Nigerian army and a medical practitioner, Azodoh is always leading us to
pray for Nigeria and never to speak ill of her. It is strange because I know a
little bit about his family background which suggests he has every reason to be
bitter about Nigeria. But he is not. From 6.30am yesterday, Pastor Azodoh led
us through a 90-minuite prayer session for Nigeria and President
MuhammaduBuhari.
Building
a nation, especially from our kind of diversity, according to Pastor Azodoh, is
a process that may not necessarily produce quick results but with a leadership
that deploys fairness in the distribution of opportunities and citizens who see
the value of shared aspirations in an atmosphere devoid of acrimony, it is not
beyond us. And in the course of the prayer session, Pastor Azodoh stopped and
asked that we all sing the national anthem. He likened Nigeria to a big family
where there would be quarrels, squabbles, even injustice; but he also added
that, whatever the challenges, we must always remember that families stay
together.
To
buttress his point, Pastor Azodoh told the story of what happened in 1981 when,
as a medical student, he participated in the West African Universities Games
hosted by Cote D’Ivoire in Yamoussoukro. In the course of the competition,
according to Pastor Azodoh, a Nigerian student was molested and the contingents
from our country said the competition would not continue unless the then
President of Cote D’Ivoire, the late Félix Houphouët-Boigny, personally came
down to apologise to them. “Ministers from the government of Cote D’Ivoire came
to plead with us but we insisted only an apology from their president would
do”, said Pastor Azodoh, “I felt very proud to be a Nigerian.”
Eventually,
it took the intervention of the Nigerian ambassador to Cote D’Ivoire for the
contingents from our country to stop the demonstration that had held up the
competition for two days. Now, what those students demonstrated was not only
our power as a nation but also the power of our unity. They were fighting over
an injustice done to a single Nigerian. We need such solidarity today. And
despite our challenges, we are already seeing glimpses in that direction.
For
me, Nigeria is that young man in Samson Itodo who is working day and night to
create a pathway for change, by ensuring that a country where the demographics
tilt heavily in favour of young people cannot continue with a policy founded on
the erroneous notion that the Wisdom of Solomon had anything to do with age of
Methuselah. Nigeria is that young lady in Lagos, Temie Giwa-Tubosun, who took
it upon herself to ensure that those who need blood donation across the country
are well served and on time with her LifeBank organisation. Through her effort,
the lives of hundreds of our citizens are being saved. Nigeria is my beautiful
sister, Ibidunni Ighodalo who, despite her own disappointments, decides to put
smiles on the faces of other aspiring mothers by deploying her personal
resources to pay for their In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) treatment Nigeria is Kechi
Okwuchi, who proudly draped herself in the green white green flag to mark the
57th independence of our country in the United States where she is making many
of us proud. This is a young lady who could be said to have been let down by
Nigeria at a most difficult period in her life, even when lucky to be alive,
unlike her friends and classmates caught in the same plane crash. But she is still
proud of being a Nigerian.
Nigeria
is Aisha Waziri Umar who is planting libraries in those parts of the north-east
devastated by Boko Haram. It is her way of fighting back against the misguided
zealots who see education as a sacrilege to be destroyed along with the future
of millions of innocent children. Nigeria is Oronto Douglas who, diagnosed with
Cancer in 2008, invested the last seven years of his life setting up and
nurturing a school for orphaned children in his native Okoroba in Bayelsa
State.
The
examples are just too many of change agents who are taking up spaces to make a
difference in our world. But the message is simple:Our drive and commitment to
making Nigeria great should be anchored on the fact that we also have a role to
play and numbers don’t matter. What matters is the resolve that we will be part
of that positive change.
Let
me illustrate that point as I try to conclude my intervention this morning with
the Biblical account of the 12 spies as recorded in the Book of Numbers Chapter
13.
The
people of Israel had been set free from their captivity and servitude in Egypt.
They wandered through the wilderness during which a number of them died. On
reaching Mt Sinai, they were given the laws to govern their affairs and the
templates they needed for worship. With national census concluded, they inched
towards the border of Canaan, ready to enter the land that had been promised
their fathers.Suggestions however came from the leadership that a search party be
sent to look at the inhabitants and how good the land really was. 12 gentlemen
were selected, one from every tribe, and they were sent as spies.
For
40 days, they explored the length and breadth of the land and returned with
sufficient proof. About the goodness of the land, there was no deviation in all
the reports.However, while ten of the 12 spies concurred that the land was
indeed good, they added a misleading bit: “We are not able to go up against the
people, for they are stronger than us…it is a land that devours its
inhabitants, and all the people whom we saw in it are men of great stature…We
seemed like grasshoppers in our own eyes, and we looked the same to them.”
One
can argue that the ten spies possessed critical spirit and there is nothing wrong
with positive criticism. But they went further not only to dampen the morale of
the people but also to incite them against the leadership. Having lost their
self-worth, like many Nigerians have done today, the ten spies likened
themselves to grasshoppers and added that they were seen as grasshoppers, even
by the Canaanites. How could they have known that?
We
have many of such people in Nigeria today. The negative men and women who tell
you that nothing can change; that our country is doomed. Meanwhile, Caleb and
Joshua saw possibilities and with that, they also gave hope to the people that
victory was attainable. Unfortunately, their report could not convince the
people and their voices were drowned. As a consequence, Israel wandered
additional 38 years in the wilderness with an entire generation wiped out
completely.
What
the foregoing means is that we should not continue to listen to the naysayers
in our midst who do not mean well for our country. Whatever may be the
differences in opinions, there is more that unites us as Nigerians than there
is to divide. While some of the current agitations are not bad in themselves
since they reflect the broad diversities of our country and the different
experiences that must be on the table to make us great, we must also recognize
that it takes so little to set a house on fire. Any fool can do that.
Meanwhile, it takes efforts, perseverance and sacrifice to build. That does not
come easy.
Admittedly,
ours is a fragile polity but the social and economic bonds that unite us are
strong and hard to dissolve. Yet the task of conscious nation building has
hardly been done. The rights of citizenship are still shackled by boundaries of
state of origin and ethnicity. The excessive hangovers of prolonged military
rule are still with us in the form of impulsive arbitrariness. Our government still
finds it easy to call in military force to quell elementary civil unrest.We are
yet to teach our citizens from infancy the values of group living and how to
compete as individuals without resorting to primordial hate when we cannot
prevail.
However,
despite all these, the real challenge is that of creating enough wealth to
cater for the need of our huge population. If we remain a poor country with an
external reserve that is less than the cash holding of Facebook alone, our
competitions might get more bloody and our future more speculative and
tentative.Our task therefore is to make Nigeria a land of equal opportunity for
all, a nation whose unity is not decreed as non-negotiable but is guaranteed by
the practical incentives it offers for all to want to stay in and perfect the
union.
As
I stated earlier, the enemy is not the other who speaks a different language or
worships a different God. The enemy, unfortunately, is that person with
predatory behavior who has benefitted the most from our country, but who like
the farmer in the story with which I started this intervention, only rewards
Nigeria’s love with eating her up in bits, to the detriment of the majority of
our people. This tiny group, which is present in every region and religion, has
maintained its hold by setting the majority against themselves. We need to
rescue our country from their destructive grip.
Therefore,
recognising that we may not always agree on the details of how to perfect our
union, it becomes problematic the moment any argument is framed in a way that
makes the incumbent think it is an attempt to distract him from governance or
to get power through the back-door. But history also shows that leaders who
improve their society are not those who divide along the voting pattern in the
elections that brought them to power but those who can bring diverse citizens
together to work for the common good.
Pastor
Poju, distinguished ladies and gentlemen, as I take my seat, on a day such as
this, my charge to all Nigerians is simple:We should see ourselves as allies in
a struggle for a better country that is bigger than any, and yet needs all of
us working together.
Thank
you very much for listening and good morning.
Excerpt of Adeniyi’s presentation at Platform, a
Covenant Christian Center programme, on October 2, 2017
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