On the morning of 16th February 2019 – a day that had been slated for the general elections to hold by INEC for almost four years – Nigerians woke up to the news that the elections had been postponed due to, although not clearly stated in the letter released by INEC Chairman, Professor Mahmood Yakubu, logistics and operational issues.

There are two things we do well as a people; laugh and rage. And oh, did we rage. From politicians – who themselves are privy to the inner workings of Nigeria’s complex terrain the ordinary Nigerian has no wind of – to journalists, to celebrities, to paid social media influencers; the entire nation was agog with disillusionment and anger.
I hope this annoys people enough to come out to vote on the 23rd of February and 9th of march. I hope this postponement lights a fire in their souls and makes them see…more than ever…that we must take our nation back.
— Adesua Etomi-Wellington (@AdesuaEtomiW) February 16, 2019
When INEC officials finish their emergency meeting to discuss toothpaste sharing arrangements and find all of Nigerian twitter cursing them over postponement. #NigeriaDecides2019 pic.twitter.com/Eh75L1gdWi
— Ayo Sogunro (@ayosogunro) February 15, 2019
How could INEC do this to the thousands of Nigerians (both at home and in the diaspora) who had traveled miles to their hometowns to be able to cast their vote?
Why wait until the early hours of the morning when “most decent Nigerians have gone to bed”, to inform the electorate that they will no longer be voting?
How could INEC leave thousands of NYSC corp members they had employed as ad hoc staff stranded at various polling units across the country?
Oh god I've suffered this night. We're all just sitting out here, no accommodation, we haven't even seen any INEC official. No sleep. And we're supposed to function all through tomorrow.
— Kẹ́mi (@kemifalodun) February 15, 2019
Remind again why I decided to participate in this NYSC/INEC kini
And, of course, there was plenty of comedy to go around.
My neighbour fried over 700 puffpuff to sell to voters at d polling unit, the next thing we here is that INEC has postponed the election… Since morning we've been eating puffpuff it's remaining over 600 puffpuff INEC you must pay for the remaining puff puff
— ESAMA OF LAGOS 🇳🇬 (@Esama_of_Lagos) February 16, 2019
Finally came the theories and antithesis about the prominent political parties having a hand in the postponed elections. In these days filled with paid influencers and media aides and youth leaders who have sold their consciences to the highest bidder, it is sometimes difficult to separate the truth from the chaff.
But now what happens?
We rant and rave and still nothing changes. Our people are getting poorer while the rest of the world leaves us behind.
Anger is a valid emotion but emotion alone will not lift Nigerians out of poverty; it will not help us align our potential as a resource-blessed, people-rich, creativity-packed nation to a reality of such.
We laugh so much at the very things that are killing us. We call it a defense mechanism, but often times what it is, simply put, is a prison cell.
We have been saying “Enough is enough” for decades now, but when will it truly be enough?
The power is in the hands of the electorate. I hope that you brave the odds, the setback and betrayal and go to the polls on the 23rd of February. I hope you vote your conscience, because the power to change this dear nation rests with you and I.
Featured image source: Dawn
