By Tonnie Iredia
A few years back, the Americans were reported
to have predicted that Nigeria may not survive a likely turmoil in 2015.
The date obviously gives a political undertone to the problem
considering that it coincides with when our next general elections are
due. The significance of the prediction does not lie in the maker as
those who perceive America as omniscience would want the nation to
believe.
After all, France and indeed some of our own
prophets/soothsayers were reported to have also seen ‘visions’ which
corroborated the alarm. The truth is that anyone who has followed the
history of Nigerian elections can easily have such expectations. In the
last one week however, some rather soothing remarks on the subject have
been credited to our President, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan and 2 former Heads
of State-General Yakubu Gowon and former President Ibrahim Babangida
(IBB).
To the positive views of these statesmen, I would love to
say a loud Amen and proceed to wish our nation well. But because wishes
are hardly coterminous with reality, it appears ill-advisable to rely on
wishes. Again, those who think prayers would do the magic have to bear
in mind the common saying that ‘heaven helps those who help themselves.
In
other words, prayers alone may not be sufficient especially if some of
our compatriots as usual, choose to be reckless about how they handle
our numerous centrifugal forces. For instance, we are all aware that the
fabric of solidarity which binds our heterogeneous society together is
not only fragile but tends to stretch to breaking point at the slightest
provocation. Yet, our people, especially the political class, always
put our country through constant threat of dismemberment.
Although
President Jonathan has said several times that it is premature and
distractive to get involved in electioneering until next year, the
nation is already broken into 2 irreconcilable groupings concerning his
role in 2015 elections. And whereas the first group which is a large
portion of the south appears ready to die if the President is not
re-elected, the second group-another large portion of the North seems
ready to bring the world to an end if power does not shift to the North
in 2015.
Unfortunately, the show down is virtually inevitable
because of the lucrative nature of politics and the winner-takes-all
political system that we run. For how long will our nation survive, when
with little or no work, a tiny elite group appropriates so much to
itself while an exceedingly large segment of the population is left
prostrate?
The other day, one political analyst made a rather
uncharitable classification of the nation. He said everyone knows what
it takes to become a judge, a medical doctor, a professor and indeed any
professional practitioner. The politician on the other hand, gets to
fame, according to the analysis, through several question channels such
as illiteracy, fake certificates, thuggery and all forms of duplicity.
The
question as to which of the two groups is better recognised and
remunerated in Nigeria for its contribution to national development does
not arise because the politicians themselves do not quite know how much
they earn. They just expropriate. Why will politics not be a do or die
game and who says Nigeria cannot break on account of politics?
The
powerful Nigerian political class can in earnest do and undo. If the
group or even just one of them organizes a function in our collectively
owned Abuja these days, the only roads that would not be shut on the day
by our eye-service law enforcement agents would be the few leading
straight to the venue of the event. No one works or goes anywhere that
day. How can the Nigerian bureaucracy be efficient or effective when the
system of recruitment has been gravely corrupted?
Interestingly,
we hear only about the scandalous sale of job placements. The other
condemnable dimension of the numerous deficient recruits that are
imposed on institutions by the powerful are taken as the entitlement of
the latter. Indeed, the same powerful occasionally sets up panels to
probe only the jobs that are sold. No one can question the political
class as public policies weaken only the powerless
For instance,
in order to make the apprehension of criminals easy, persons who own
factory fitted ‘tokunbo’ tinted glasses are made to register their cars
officially with the police supposedly at no cost. The people and the
authorities are however aware that the powerless pay no less than N25,
000 per vehicle at the designated centres for the assignment.
As
part of transforming Nigeria, the Immigration Service now officially
renews an international passport at the same cost of acquiring a new
one. It is probably for the same reason that the Federal Road Safety
Commission has decreed that fresh and increased expenditures have to be
borne for the procurement of newly designed vehicle plate numbers.
In
major cities, landlords are passing to their tenants, increases
occasioned by ground rent, tenement rate, facility fee and water rate to
mention a few. In Abuja, parking fees by different collecting agencies
are being imposed on the people although there are no parks. Based on
these issues, which could obviously weaken the weak beyond weakness, it
can be argued that Nigeria may not break physically but in the sub
consciousness of the weak, the break happened mentally years ago. To the
privileged class however, these are non-issues because they happen
elsewhere and are reportedly temporary sacrifices for development.
Last
month, I was at a workshop where some of the speakers blamed the
nation’s woes on the media. According to them, journalists as patriots
ought to be engaged in advocacy journalism by projecting their country
only in good light. During the question and answer session, the key note
speaker declined to respond to my question as to what he considered the
best way for a journalist to report a public event like the process
arranged by our 36 governors to elect a chairman for the Nigerian
Governors Forum. He just said that was politics. I understood him to
mean that whether Nigeria would survive over time depends on politics.
SOURCE: www.vanguardngr.com
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