“Except in the eyes of the extremely
naive and incurable swindlers in the corridors of power, this country
has already collapsed; only that the horror of its probable
disintegration would be difficult to face”
—Godwin Onyeacholem
Nothing proves the assertion that
the edifice called Nigeria has effectively collapsed and is in need of
an urgent and fundamental renovation than the recent laments of our
rulers, past and present. These laments would have been laughable if not
that they are tragic. Unfortunately, the laments also show that we
can’t rely on these rulers in any attempt to reclaim Nigeria.
In late July, a former head of state,
Gen. Yakubu Gowon, was quoted as saying, “An enduring way to tackle
Nigeria’s problems is to reorder the polity”. Gowon spoke during the
first session of the 11th Synod of the Anglican Diocese of Owo, held at
Saint Andrew’s Anglican Church, Uso in the Owo Local Council Area of
Ondo State. “What is happening in our country today calls for sober
reflection, as we entreat God on behalf of our nation,” he said.
Since Gowon’s spiritual panacea, we have
heard from the usual suspects: Olusegun Obasanjo, Ibrahim Badamosi
Babangida (IBB) and, of course, President Goodluck Jonathan. Obasanjo it
was who declared that if Nigerians were yet to find a leader worthy of
commendation after 53 years of independence, “We are jinxed and cursed;
we should all go to hell.”
IBB in his characteristic bluster
promised us, during his 72nd birthday soiree, that there was no way
Bottom of Form this cracked house would implode. And the reason? Just
because Babangida said so. In a chat with the unquestioning horde called
journalists who go on pilgrimage every August to his Minna country
home, IBB allayed fears of the dismemberment of the country, noting that
such a prediction “will make Nigeria to emerge stronger and more united
come 2015”.
The military strategist that he is, IBB
assured us that the current security challenge in the country is not
even sufficient to cause Nigeria’s disintegration. “We are only crying
wolf when there is no cause for it,” he noted. “Folks, forget about
disintegration in 2015. I can’t see it happening. A country that will
disintegrate, you will know it. It is not something that happens in one
or two months. The disintegration of Nigeria is just out of question”.
“People say all sorts of things to
instill fear in others. If the majority of the people believe in the
unity of the country, then why do they worry about someone saying it
will disintegrate? I know it wouldn’t. People are just crying wolf.
“Nigeria is one of the amazing countries
we have in the world. If you live outside Nigeria and you hear and
listen about the happenings in the country, you will think the world is
coming to an end, only for you to come to the country and see the
people, they are happy, laughing, attending football matches and doing
other things. That is Nigeria for you.”
I wish I could share IBB’s optimism. It
is either IBB lives in a country different from that which the majority
of Nigerians inhabit or he is patently mischievous. We would like to
hear from IBB why he thinks Nigerians are happy. Is it because of the
peace they enjoy, the quality education for their children, the good
roads, or the constant power supply?
My take is that the majority of
Nigerians do not really give a damn about the disintegration debate
because to them the country started disintegrating the very moment it
became a sovereign nation, when our rulers had the opportunity to build a
united and prosperous nation but they were so mired in their clannish
and thieving ways to worry about that.
It was the same clannishness and
thieving ways that IBB and those who came after him imbibed. That is why
more than five decades after independence we are still debating unity
rather than how to sustain a functional educational system, manufacture
our own cars or feed ourselves.
For many Nigerians who can’t get decent
medical care; the millions for whom our hospitals are nothing but mere
consulting clinics, the same excuse IBB and his cohorts told us was the
reason they seized power many years ago, this country has collapsed.
IBB and his ilk should stop terrorising
us about national unity. In the words of Odumegwu Ojukwu, “There is
nothing exclusive in the term unity; unity for Nigeria holds out the
best chance for progress when that unity is a unity of purpose rather
than the present hollow approach to unity for sake of unity. For unity
to be meaningful, it has to be creative, not the unity of Jonah in the
whale but the unity of holy matrimony. The first can only lead to
defecation, the second to procreation”.
Isn’t it ironic that those for whom to
keep Nigeria one was a task that must be done looked away or acquiesced
to the handing over of a part of Nigeria, Bakassi, to Cameroon. That
singular act has changed the geo-political map of Nigeria.
Our rulers, Obasanjo and IBB in particular, remind one of the devils in Ngugi’s Devil on the Cross
who commit murder then don their robes of pity and go to wipe the tears
from the faces of orphans and widows; who steal food from people’s
store at midnight, then at dawn, visit the victims wearing robes of
charity and offering them calabash filled with the grain they had
stolen; who seize men’s wealth, dress in robes of friendship and
instruct the people to join in the pursuit of the villain who has robbed
them.
You can’t build a nation with this
calibre of rulers. That 53 years after independence, we do not have a
leader worthy of commendation is partly why our country is in the sorry
state it is in today. And if there is a place worse than hell, that is
where our ruling class – one of the most wicked, bankrupt, conceited,
indolent and unproductive elite in the world – belongs.
In this era, when all those who brought
us to this sad end are seeking relevance, it is important to situate the
crisis in Nigeria. For those who are genuinely concerned about the
unity of the country, it is instructive to note that nation building is
serious business. The feeling has been that each time the country finds
itself on the brink, our crooked ruling class, in order to protect its
interest, would come together and pull it back. Unfortunately, the
balance of terror currently makes that position untenable.
Today, we have a ruling party, the
Peoples Democratic Party, whose implosion is imminent because of its
insufferable worthlessness. We have a weakened presidency that is
gradually losing control, partly due to crass incompetence and partly
because of the position of its leading characters in the power equation
in Nigeria. We are confronted with mindless violence and discontent that
question the very foundation of the country. These are not issues to be
resolved by rhetoric or wishful thinking.
For all the distaste we have for the
present government, it must be highlighted that this crisis is not and
cannot be about Goodluck Ebele Jonathan; it is also not about 2015 and
who occupies Aso Rock.
In the eternal words of Chinua Achebe,
“(Nigeria) is an example of a country that has fallen down; it has
collapsed. This house has fallen”.
It is left for the inhabitants to rebuild it or erect a new one.
Tweet Follow @punshcomempower
50% off Hosting for your Website at GoDaddy.com!
It's a BIG Deal! $5.99* .COM from GoDaddy.com!
It's a BIG Deal! $5.99* .COM from GoDaddy.com!
Host a site without stress on namecheap eApps|YOUR APP HOSTING PROVIDER
Submit your Website
Free webmaster resources including SEO Tools, Computer Glossary, Templates Sign up to BIGTIMEBUX today!

0 comments:
Post a Comment