By Charles Anekwe
We have the worst
quality of life in the world – by a wide margin.
If you have any idea of how people really live in Ghana,
Cameroon, Libya, Botswana,
and other parts of the Third World, you’d be
rioting in the streets calling for a better life. In fact, the average South
African, Zimbabwean or Libyan taxi driver has a much better standard of living
than the typical Nigerian graduate white-collar worker.
I know this because I
am a Nigerian, and I want to escape from this huge prison you call home.
Already, we are silently protesting against cynical politics, spiraling
corruption, economic stagnation and breathtaking levels of crime. We are
disunited than ever although we have more immediate survival issues than unity.