By Nick Dazang
Apart from an army of voluble commentators holding successive governments to account and speaking truths to them in the most parliamentary and patrician fashion, Nigeria is blessed with scores of irrepressible elder statesmen.
*TinubuWhenever matters come to a head and Nigeria teeters at the brink of precipice, these statesmen weigh in with their thoughts. They intervene by way of statements or well calibrated pronouncements. Sometimes they do so by authoring scathing epistles. Some of these statesmen, such as Chiefs Gani Fawehinmi and Anthony Enahoro and Dr. Tai Solarin have departed this sinful world.
But an edifying vestige remains,
bearing the mantle, sharing in the pains and challenges buffeting Nigerians.
They give expression to these pains by calling the attention of the powers that
be when they falter or put the country on the path of perdition. In the rank of
this incandescent relic are former Heads of State, Olusegun Obasanjo and
Abdulsalami Abubakar. Others are Chief Edwin Clark, Pa Ayo Adebanjo, General
T.Y. Danjuma(rtd), Cardinal John Onayeikan and Bishop Matthew Hassan Kukah.
Their occasional interventions
are often well thought out and inimitable. They resonate with the Nigerian
people. This is because they come when the people are hurting or despairing and
the country appears rudderless. Consequently, their interventions re-assure the
people. They assuage their anger. The interventions also restrain Nigerians
from spewing their anger and frustrations in the streets. By the same token,
they moderate the excesses of our leaders, who carry on, sometimes, cavalierly
or as if they live in some other planet populated by extra terrestrials.
In the past one week, Generals
T.Y. Danjuma, Abdulsalami Abubakar and Cardinal John Onayeikan have spoken
eloquently to two vexed challenges confronting the country. The first,
heightened insecurity, and which many writers have advised the Bola Tinubu
administration to prioritise, has become a nightmare. It has reduced large
swathes of the country into killing fields. It has also engendered an
unprecedented food insecurity.
Common thugs and mendacious
bandits are having a field day. They go on abducting and killing binges.
One of the vile bandits, Bello Turji, has even cultivated the habit of taunting
the hierarchy of our Armed Forces. He recently dared the military to apprehend
him, if it could, to the chagrin and bewilderment of Nigerians.
Rankled by the heightened
insecurity in the country, General T.Y. Danjuma, at the recent launch of a book,
entitled: Big Boots: Lessons From My Military Service, authored by Major
General Solomon Udounma(rtd), identified insecurity as Nigeria’s premier
challenge.He said that: ”We must end the pandemic, stop the killings that are
going on in our country as soon as possible. Those of you who are still serving
have no excuses.”
One expects our Armed Forces,
and by extension our government, to take this charge seriously; it’s coming
from a gentleman with a commanding and shimmering martial history. We expect our
gallant Armed Forces to bring such minions and menaces as Turji to heel.
Otherwise, his wicked tribe will increase or get emboldened at the expense of
innocent Nigerians.
At different, and recent
occasions, General Abubakar and Cardinal Onayeikan have spoken to the hardship
rampaging the country, leaving in its wake misery, starvation and untimely
deaths. While receiving a delegation of the Campaign for Democracy, CD, in
Minna, General Abubakar had remarked: ”Everybody is crying because of this
hardship and it seems to be getting out of control. People cannot afford three
square meals, the issue of transportation, the hike in fuel price, the hike in
school fees for the children and lack of funds in everybody’s pocket is making
life difficult for everybody.”
Speaking at the sidelines of a concert in Abuja,
Cardinal Onayeikan observed poignantly that: ”There is a limit to what people
can handle. You can’t tell someone to be patient with poverty while we see the
people who are supposed to address our poverty live flamboyantly, building huge
mansions and having fleet of cars without caring how they are fuelled, whereas
the rest of us are queuing to get a few litres of fuel. There’s need to review
some of the policies that are giving rise to the kind of pain and poverty that
we are not familiar with.”
These elder statesmen capture,
succinctly and accurately, the predicament in which Nigerians find themselves
today. There is no gain saying it that Nigeria was in a bad place as at the
time Bola Ahmed Tinubu assumed the presidency. But his advent has worsened
matters. Three of his policies, implemented in one fell swoop, and at the
behest of the IMF/World Bank, namely, the floating of the Naira, the withdrawal
of subsidy on petrol and electricity, have compounded our hardship and trauma.
All costs associated with
transportation and electricity have shot through the roof. Prices of foodstuffs
and building materials, among others, have gone stratospheric. Meanwhile, the
Naira is on a daily free fall. Hundreds of millions who had adopted a curious
eating habit by skipping meals cannot, now, afford a decent meal. School fees,
especially of public schools, have increased beyond the pale in a country that
boasts of one of the highest number of out-of-school children in the world. The
middle class has since been wiped out by poverty and an environment that
suffocates small businesses. Millions of youths roam the streets without jobs.
The infinitesimally small affluent class co-mingles uneasily with hundreds of
millions of the dirt poor.
This sorrowful state of affairs
is pregnant with meanings. Its consequences could be dire for our country.
These should prompt a government, which is responsive and politic, to do a
review of its policies and to ameliorate the suffering of its people. But with
the cockiness, the righteousness and the conviction expressed in his policies
in the President’s recent engagement with Nigerians resident in China, will
this government hearken to the voices of reason? Will the wise counsels of our
elder statesmen fall on deaf ears and thus be reduced to the eerie equivalent
of wailing and loud lamentation in the wilderness? Can this government be savvy
enough to do an introspection, thereby avoiding self-immolation and, by
extrapolation, the destruction of the country?
*Dazang,
a public affairs analyst, wrote from Abuja
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