The beginning.....
Cane rats popularly known as grass cutters are strictly herbivores
and primarily nocturnal. The grass cutter prefers eating stalks to
eating leaves, and after devouring the stalks, it excretes right on the
spot.
This rodent is practically a nightmare to cassava farmers.
The emergence of Goodluck Ebele Jonathan as the president of Nigeria at
first was interesting, just as some religious zealots have attributed
his announced victory at the last poll to the hand of God, without
perceiving it frantically as the hand of some electoral Maradonas, or
even the pollex of the enduringNigerian masses.
I still remember vividly, like yesterday, how Nigerians
trooped out en
masse to vote him, although for me, it was my first time of voting and I
was anxious too. I saw teeming youths were eager to make a change
through their votes; obviously they were tired of the seemingly
unending poverty, stagnant status quo and suffocating corruption
prevalent in the land. We so much gasped for the much professed fresh
air and hoped to ride on the wing of a once shoeless boy whose feet had
like ours, toiled on the degraded soil in the creek. He came out by his
own volition and the collision of the powerbrokers.
Nigerians perceived a grass cutter in him; a grass cutter that could
cut the stalk of unemployment, poverty, insecurity, corruption, and
underdevelopment. A fearless grass cutter that could cut the stalk of
insecurity nocturnally, arrest underdevelopment diurnally and bravely
throw excreta at the faces of the ruthless cabal that had caused us so
much pain, the cabals that made our roads death traps, our schools
worthless and our hospitals unhealthy.
Since Nigeria started exporting crude oil in commercial quantity, she
has made about 55 trillion naira, yet her citizens live in penury.
Proceeds from the black gold have been cornered by the few in
government and their cronies. The blessing of the black gold has rather
become a curse to the Niger Deltans, a visual impairment of the people
and degradation of their soil consequent upon gas flaring and
oil spillage respectively.
They witnessed the slow poisoning of the waters of their community
and the destruction of vegetation and agricultural land by oil spills
which occur at oil companies’ greedy explorations. But since the
inception
of the oil industry in Nigeria, more than forty years ago, there has
been no concerned and effective effort on the part of the government,
let alone the oil operators, to control environmental problems
associated
with the industry.It is visible to the blind and audible to the deaf
that Nigeria is besieged with plethora of problems. According to the
World Health Organisation (WHO), Nigeria ranks 191 out of 192 countries
in the world with un-safe roads bearing 162 deaths per 100,000
populations from road traffic accidents.
Lagos/Ibadan expressway and Benin/Ore road are familiar death spots
on Nigerian roads. Every day, we cry blood as parents bury their
children and sisters; their brothers. We shout to be heard, soon we
slump into complacency, and shrug our shoulders to the admittance of the
mantra; ‘that live goes on’. But not anymore for that boy whose mother
died because the light went off during caesarean operation; not anymore
for that girl whose father died in an automobile accident as a result of
the poor state of our roads; not anymore for that woman with eight
children whose husband died in a managed-to-fly faulty plane that
crashed; not anymore for those three innocent children that a plane
crashing on their roof made them
orphan; not anymore for the family of the Dana, Bellview, Sosoliso
plane crash victims; not anymore for those families in Niger, Jos, Kano,
Bornu, Kaduna, whose relatives have been slain by Boko Haram and
never anymore for you and me.
Nigeria has the second highest rate of maternal death in the world
where one in every eight woman dies because things are not in place that
should be in place. Don’t pray that the next victim of maternal
death will not be your sister or your wife, but act, for most of it is
avoidable. It pinches to watch our sisters, wives and mothers slip into
death; they are our unsung heroes.
This government is only interested in widening the gap between them
and us; we said all animals are equal, but they said some are more equal
than the others. We made them custodian of our commonwealth but they
starved us of it, they steal with pride and with impunity.
The amalgamation of 1914 appears to be a mere amalgam of water and oil,
especially as succeeding rulers make things work as if it is only the
turn of a region to marginalize the others. Our legislature is a
consortium of overpaid epicurean senators. Our rulers come up with new
probes every day, but at the end, they only bark but they don’t bite.
What happened to the power sector probe, the Siemens probe, Malabu oil
bloc scam? They have all been buried in the cemetery at Aso rock. Now,
helpless Nigerians are only waiting for the subsidy probe to be laid in
state.
The educational sector is bedeviled by darkest at this very dawn of the
21st century by demons from the forest of corruption, mismanagement and
misappropriation of funds.The state of insecurity and violence
imprinting on the psyche of Nigerians is a portrayal of the government
security apparatus
incapability of guaranteeing the safety and security of its citizenry.
Unarguably, the most secure place in Nigeria is the Aso rock.Otherwise,
the life of every average Nigerians is characterized by
fears of the known.
Ironically, Nigerians though are the most religious people on earth,
the once happiest people on earth but the most corrupt people – what a
contrast!
I ask myself, how do we salvage Nigeria from Nigerians, how do we
help her, must we watch with a tearful eyes as she is been raped to
death by her own? Leadership involves a leader effortlessly conveying
his people with aship from where they are to where they ought to be,
from underdevelopment to development and from retrogression to
progression. Nigeria still needs a grass cutter that will be able to cut
the stalk
of concentration of power at the central level and adopt the Swiss
model of government whereby power is decentralized, and each region is
given autonomy.
I write this piece not as incitation for us to do away with our
brothers but a call for us to embrace regional system of government to
fast track development. This will enable the people of each region to
pull themselves by their bootstraps from where they are to where they
ought to be. The situation though has deteriorated, but we can rise to
it. A living dog is better than a dead lion. This task lies in our
Nigerian Mikhail Gorbachev, the president.
When we came out en masse to elect him, weoffered him a promissory
note that he will be accountable for in due time and asked him to sail
us to El Dorado – now is the time!
He must live up to be the warrior and cut this diseased cord called Nigeria quickly.
-Mubarak Onyibe-Akenzua
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mudafuckazzz!!! Jackazzz!!!
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