Today, the president will address the nation – like he did last year, and like every leader in his position since 1960 has done annually on the 1st of October – and he will speak in complex, complicated language that will indicate everything and mean nothing to the common Nigerian, from Ajegunle to Damaturu.
He will wish us well. He will tell us to endeavour to live at peace with each other. He will tell us to be unified. He will tell us to be good, law-abiding citizens.
He will not explain why we need to
loan money from China when loot stored away on foreign shores by
Sani Abacha is supposedly being recovered.
He will not mention that in 2017, not one of Nigeria’s four refineries worked at up to even
50% of their capacity at any given time (take into account that Nigeria is the world’s fifth largest
producer of crude oil and that we
import much of our gasoline, despite being a
major exporter of oil).
He will not mention the fact that Nigeria is currently the highest contributor to
maternal mortality in Central and Western Africa; in 2015, our morality ratio was 814 deaths per 100,000 live births.
We will not mention the
10.5 million Nigerian children who are out of school, the highest number in the world, and 60% of which are girls.
He will not mention the dilapidated condition of our educational system; how we churn out more graduates than our job market can absorb.
He will not mention that most of the successful entrepreneurs who have become world-renown did it without the help of government or a banking system with crippling interest rates.
He will not mention a political structure that allows people without the slightest bit of education
rule the masses; or a federal structure that would rather operate from the centre than allow states function independently and flourish
No. He will not mention the power situation. Sorry.
Instead he will read off facts (which, I pray you, double check) about his administration and roads built and bills signed. He will paint a palatable picture; he will mix facts and pseudo-facts all up, place a pretty bow on top and wish you a jolly good day.
You & I
So, this Independence Day, let’s ask ourselves, truly; what exactly are we
celebrating? Because, since our leaders do not care enough to ask the questions and face the issues
that matter, it is left to
you and I, to ask these
tough questions and demand
real answers – Which way, Nigeria?
Happy Independence Day.