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e, the people are most grateful to God, the powers
that be and everyone that contributed to the success of the just concluded elections
in Nigeria. My reserve of hope had slowly ebbed over the years that I wondered
if the beauty of change would be witnessed in my time. I thought the usual win
or die; sit-tight syndrome would manifest itself again.
Whilst I would not add
my voice to the cacophony by others’ clamoring for a Nobel Prize for Mr. President for taking the honorable path, I
would be gracious in commending him. Yes, absolute power corrupts absolutely
and if you’ve ever been in a position of power, you’d appreciate the will it
must have taken to concede defeat. I am by no means any fan of his, but in this
I say Well Done Jonathan!
For years, I had sat by;
sometimes vocal, many other times silently, in my small corner wondering where
it all went wrong with Nigeria. Being a child of the 80s, I grew up learning to
run at the sound of gun shots, carrying all shades of green leaves to indicate
your non-partisanship and neutrality during riots, screaming Up-NEPA every time
our room became dimly-lit by the inglorious thing called electricity. I had a
beautiful education, but I learnt that handouts were the safest way to
guarantee success; I learnt that N50.00 is ticket to drive on roads designated
as ONE-WAY; I understood it was the norm to throw all sort of stuff on the road
and pee on anyone’s fence. As I grew older, the moral shock around me
increased. The corruption net had been specially designed to catch the really
small fish and let the big ones loose. Then I heard that CORRUPTION was/is not
what we thought it was, but MERE STEALING. The list has grown endless that
sometimes, I wonder is the ordinary Nigerian knows the right way of doing
things. If you happen to be my kind of person, you are a moral extremist.
You can imagine my
dismay that this is how the number one citizen felt on the very issue which I
believe threatens the fabric of Nigeria’s sustenance. The famous Yam and Goat
analogy.
We resolved to vote this
man out, and vote we did. The Tahir Squares, Libyas and other like incidents
around the world had shown to us that the wind of change was blowing. It was
only a matter of time before it arrived at the shores of Nigeria. It came
eventually and we welcomed the whirlwind with ready thumbs through the ballot
box.
I am writing to the
incoming administration because I feel we are at a point when the ordinary
Nigerian actually has a voice and can be heard.
Dear Buhari, the
converted democrat and the Erudite Osinbajo, the list below is for your
attention:
1. We do not want promises, we want action. I have
read the APC agenda, I am educated enough to know that lofty goals without
proper planning remain wishes.
2. Power is the bedrock of every civilization,
please fix this and watch Nigeria grow. I do not have a magic wand and no one
does, but this problem needs to be solved to encourage industrialization of
Nigeria.
3. They say there are no jobs. Nigerians have
proven to be industrious, please provide enabling environment and deal
thoroughly with all cases of injustice. Encourage small industries and
individual through business friendly policies and investments.
4. The world thinks we are a one-commodity economy.
I disagree, we are blessed with numerous resources including the most important
– HUMAN CAPITAL. Harness them productively. P-P-P is and remains a brilliant but
poorly implemented strategy. Revise the strategy and broaden the scope across
all sectors to explore opportunities that have remain untapped.
5. We are 200 million people strong. There are not
enough houses for upcoming families. I don’t think its rocket science why: when
you expect low income earners to buy supposedly low-cost government housing at
N5million and above. Lagos added a meager 10,000 housing units in 8 years
according to recent statistics. Look for cost effective ways of delivering
housing to the common man. Embrace technologies that produce materials at lower
prices. It’s being done in China and other countries
6. I read daily that we are Africa’s largest
economy. The poverty indices do not justify this tag, more people are hungry
than are fed. Invest wisely in agriculture and infrastructure that will support
development. We don’t want operation feed the nation; we just want our farmers
to be able to meet demands at profitable but affordable prices. A hungry man
does no one any good.
7. I cannot vouch for the quality of education. I
mean this honestly and not to spite anyone. Revamp our educational
institutions. We can compete with the best in the world if we have the right
education. Nigerians from the east to the north are brilliant and only need the
appropriate foundations and environment to thrive and prove their mettle.
8. Please encourage our elected leaders to use our
local hospitals. The needy do not wish to die alone in the shacks we have today.
Perhaps, if a few of the elected officials died there for lack of oxygen or
light during a surgery, they will take health seriously and improve the sector.
Our doctors need to be retrained and encouraged. The ethics of their profession
do not justify all the strikes we contend with.
9. Transportation needs no introduction. Work
assiduously to re-invent the railway system and diversify means of
transportation nationwide e.g. waterways, cable-cars etc. Also, make the
airspace safer for us, our airports need serious facelift, they are like bus
terminals.
10. Hmm, what shall I say about the Force (Army,
Police and Navy)? They have become uniformed terrorists at whose sight, the
ordinary man should fear. Give them a re-orientation, teach them that their job
is to protect and not harass us. They are not above the law and should also
live within its dictates. They also should be rewarded and armed properly as is
required of the risks they carry us.
11. The Judiciary remains the last hope of the
commoner. You say you are a converted democrat “abi”? help to uphold the
integrity of the hallowed chambers by punishing those who seek to pervert
justice.
12. PLEASE WORK ON
CORRECTING THE MENTAL MAKE-UP OF NIGERIANS.
There is a reason the
last point is in bold types. I am not shouting at you; rather it is to draw
your attention to the fact that it is the very reason Nigeria is where it is
today. All the impunity, corruption, moral decay and lack of progress we
complain about are because we have come to believe that WRONG is RIGHT while RIGHT is FOOLISHNESS. Please let people know that corruption is not
mere STEALING and that we were not Just Kidding when we voted for Change.
In my list, I did not
mention corruption, I voted for you knowing you are an anti-corruption
crusader. Now that you have won, my expectations have only scaled up in accordance
with the exigencies of the times. If I wanted a corruption fight only, I would
advocate for you to be in charge of EFCC, but I want more from you, I want a
man who has the will, the desire, the plans and people to tackle Nigeria’s
myriad of issues. A man who has made 4 attempts as you have surely must have
something to offer.
I also know that you are
advanced in years, and some people would have me believe you are a geriatric
who suffers a similar condition to their mothers’. I don’t mind at all, I was
taught to respect elders and drink from their fountain of knowledge. I pray
that God will grant you the grace to carry out the duties of your office
responsibility and with a conscience that will not condemn you.
Please note that, if you
fail, 4 years is no longer eternity and we have endured worse. We, the
Beautyful ones are just waiting in the wings to offer the TRUE CHANGE Nigeria
wants.
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