By Sonnie Ekwowusi
We can no longer leave the fate of our country and our lives in the hands of political misfits who don’t have the foggiest idea that political leadership basically entails improving the welfare of the people. Almost everyone you meet these days in Nigeria says it, and, I dare join today in saying it: now is our chance to recover our stolen common wealth from the thieving imbeciles.
To this effect, many Nigerian voters across the different divides (the Nigerian young inclusive) have, unlike in the past, irrevocably resolved to vote for a presidential candidate of their choice who will build a new Nigeria, all things being equal, on February 25, 2023. The current Muhammadu Buhari government is a waterless cloud, carried along by the winds; a fruitless tree in late autumn, depraved, dead and uprooted; a wild wave of the sea casting up the form of its suffocating smell; a wandering and wicked crescent for whom the nether gloom of darkness has been reserved for ever.
For nearly eight years the Buhari government has brought an unspeakable monumental ruin to Nigeria and Nigerian families. For instance, the incapacity of Buhari to defend and maintain Nigeria’s territorial sovereignty as well as secure the borders of Nigeria from internal and external violation in consonant with sections 1 (2) and 2(1) of the 1999 Constitution. Buhari, no doubt, has gone down the anal of Nigerian political history, if not the Guinness Book of Record) as the worst political leader in Nigeria.
His inability, pursuant to Section 14 (2) (b) of the 1999 Constitution, to protect lives and property of the citizenry and to suppress internal insurrection, banditry, secession threats, murder, anarchy, tension, fear, suspicion and disorderliness has enthroned the reign of anarchy. Nobody seems to be in charge of Nigeria at the moment. The Hobbesian bellum omnium contra omnes (war of all against all) characterised by barbaric bloodletting, communal bloody feuds, kidnaps, banditries, gun-running and so forth now reigns supreme in different parts of Nigeria. Uncertainty, confusion, fear and apprehension rule the lives of many in Nigeria. We now live in a free-for-all country where nobody seems to be in charge of anything or anybody.
We go to bed and wake up itching
to hear the sad news of another bloodletting abduction or kidnapping. In 2017,
Nigeria was ranked as the third most-terrorised country in the world. In the
same 2017 Nigeria Police was ranked as the worst Police in the world. In the
same 2017 Nigeria was ranked by the World Health Organization (WHO) as a
country with the third highest infant mortality rate in the world. In the same
2017 Northern Nigeria was ranked as the worst region in the world with the
highest number of illiterates.
On July 25, 2018, the BBC reported that “Nigeria has the largest number of out-of-school children, totaling 13 million, in the world.” In the 2018 Global Rankings of “Commitment to Reducing Inequality Index” of the OXFAM and Development Finance International (DFI), Nigeria was ranked 157 out of 157 countries. In the same 2018, Nigeria overtook India as the country with the highest number of under-five deaths in the world. In the same 2018 Nigeria was ranked as one of the most dangerous places in the world to give birth to and the fourth country in the world with the worst maternal mortality death rate.
In the same 2018 Nigeria was ranked among the worst malaria hit countries in
the world. In the same year, 2018, Nigeria was ranked by the World Bank among
the seven worst countries on the World Bank Human Capital Index. In the 2018
Global Hunger Index (GHI), Nigeria was ranked as the 103rd hungriest country in
the world out of 119 qualifying countries. In the same 2018, Nigeria was ranked
among the worst malaria hit countries in the world. In the same 2018 Nigerian
was ranked by the World Bank among the seven worst countries on the World Bank
Human Capital Index.
In 2018, the African Development Bank (AfDB) revealed that the World Poverty Clock named Nigeria as the poverty capital of the world. According to Mr. Constant Tchona, a representative of OXFAM in Nigeria: “The number of people that live below extreme poverty as at April 2018 was 91,501,377 thus reaffirming that Nigeria is the poverty capital of the world. As if that was not bad enough, six months later, the number jumped to 94, 470, 533 people meaning that 2,969, 158 Nigerians have been added into Nigeria’s extreme poverty rate.
The latest is that the National Bureau Statistics (NBS)
has revealed that no fewer than 133 Nigerians, representing 63 per cent of the
Nigerian population, are currently living in multi-dimensional abject poverty.
At the moment the Naira currency is having its worst free fall. For the first
time in our political history we have now become a suicidal country. In 2018
Nigeria was ranked as a suicide-prone country. Today Nigeria is ranked the
fifth in the world among countries whose citizens are most prone to commit
suicide. A bag of rice now sells for N36,000, the salary of many
Nigerians.
What is most nauseating is that, amid these calamities, Buhari keeps gallivanting from pillar to post beating his chest in the euphoria of triumph and telling those who care to listen to him: “I am not a failure. I am a good man. I will not leave office a failure”. Is this not laughable? A President who had already failed is giving himself a pass mark and saying that he is not a failure. Anyway, two things, in my view, are deductible from Buhari’s gloating. First: Buhari forgets the time-test aphorism credited to Sheikh Uthman Dan Fodio that conscience is an open wound and only truth can heal it.
Pricked by the pangs of his conscience, Buhari has been placating his
conscience and telling all who care to listen that he is not a failure. He
forgets that only truth and justice can heal his wound: Second: Mr. President
is not in touch with reality otherwise he cannot be giving himself a pass mark
when in actual fact he is a failure. Enslaved by his gratified lusts and sheer
fatuity, Buhari has refused to read the mene, mene, tekel, upharsin emblazoned
on the walls of Aso Villa Presidential Building, Abuja. He can’t understand
that his eight-year stewardship has come to a pathetic and ruinous end. He
seems not to understand that about 99 per cent of Nigerians had already judged
him a failure and that there is nothing he can do to reverse their judgment
against him.
Consequently, the February 25 presidential election is a golden opportunity to break away from our iniquitous past. To those regretting and sorrowing for committing a mortal sin in 2015 or 2019 by voting for Buhari, I say, February 25, 2023 is the day of salvation. It is the acceptable time. Therefore, they should make amends and atone for the sin which they committed in 2015 or 2019 by voting for candour, content, charism, competence and character in 2023. From the outset I knew that Buhari would make a disaster President.
So, I did not vote
for him in 2015. Neither did I vote for him in 2019. Anyway, old things have
passed away. Let us make amendments today that grace may abound. We
are the children of the light, not of darkness. Light has nothing in common
with darkness. All things are possible to those who believe. We can break away
from the ruinous status quo. The Kenyans did it this year by electing William
Ruto, 55, who ran for President for the first time. In fact, Ruto fell out with
political godfather Uhuru Kenyatta. As a result, Kenyatta backed Mr. Raila
Amolo Odinga to succeed him in office. But Ruto came from behind and won the
election.
We need a new President who will foster the beliefs and aspirations of the Nigerian people. We need a brand new President who believes in the pre-eminence of the individual citizen and his rights-with the government his servant, not his master or oppressor. As I have constantly argued, if the Nigerian democracy must yield the so-called democratic dividends, it must have a national character, a national character that defines democracy and establishes the parameters and moral high ground in which democracy should operate in order to promote the wellbeing of the people.
Devoid of character, politics and political activities in Nigeria, in the words
of Federic Bastiat, French political economist and philosopher are
legalised plunder. Either we choose the path of liberating principles and vote
for character in 2023 in order to advance the truths and ideals which will strengthen
our democracy or choose the path of perfidy and infamy.
*Ekwowusi is a commentator on public issues
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