As we enter into this crucial election
period, to Nigeria, I sound a clarion call, to those who are dissatisfied with
the current status quo I conclude with a series of posers. If there is anybody
out there who still disbelieves that my life is an example of someone who
demonstrates the art of the impossible becoming possible; who still wonders
about the legacies that my ancestors left me; who still questions whether a
small diminutive boy with little academic potential can rise to great heights;
then this article is your answer. Is there is anyone that doubts the potential
of the question called ‘Nigeria’, this is my response. If there is anyone who
asserts that our country will only end in sorrow and tears and blood, today I
challenge that assertion.
It is various Nigerians who reject the myth
of their generation’s apathy who have challenged me to take on the orthodoxy of
current thinking and to ask the hard questions. They have challenged me because
they understand the gravity of our task, which
lies ahead and the futility of doing nothing.
The pathway ahead remains hard, our
ascent steep, and we may not get there with one election, but I am filled with
more hope now than ever before that we will get there and we will reclaim our
voice. I do not in a thousand years suggest that my words conceived in the
depths of my anguish should end on the screen of a computer. I am certain that this election may not bring
about the all the changes others and I seek; but it creates a space for us to
make that change. As the electorate this is our chance to reclaim our voice to
answer the call for this is our moment and this is our time. By default, we
have had bad governments in Nigeria because we have allowed the past and
present rulers to operate on the unending margins of despair and apathy. They
acquired power not because they had a genius about them but because we were
asleep in deep slumber and the coalition of progressives was fractured.
In the past, I have made reference to the
template of President Obama, the improbability of a black man becoming the President
of the United States. I have written about the near impossibility that was
overcome when the first man was sent to the moon. The obstacle that Apartheid
presented and the dismantling of it without a bloodbath, the impregnability of
the Berlin Wall which came tumbling down! I therefore lay down a challenge to
the cynics who claim that Nigeria is an impossible case and that without our
abject surrender to corruption and its accompanying violence we simply do not
have a chance at mounting a challenge to the status quo.
I ask what do we have to lose by trying?
I suggest we lose more in not trying at all. I go further to state today that
by helping the people find their ‘voice’ across the diaspora in Nigeria from
Sokoto to Lagos, Kwara to Taraba, Borno to Imo, Cross River to Kano, we will be
able to proclaim with all certainty and voices soaring above the skies of
Nigeria that our time has come!
I visualise a quality of leadership whose
style is outstanding. Leadership that influences others through inspiration,
generated by a passion and ignited by a genuine and sincere purpose. Not a leader who lords it over the governed
and is only after personal aggrandizement and avarice. The vision is of a new
crop of leadership, which demonstrates the passion and willingness to serve and
serve responsibly.
I suggest that the principle of good
governance is acknowledged as essential for the success of any Nation. Leaders
at the helm of our affairs should play a vital role in serving their causes and
communities through committed passion as well as skills and experience
to the instruments of governance and the governed. The principle of good
governance enhances the provision of long-term vision and protects the
reputation and values of a Nation. To make a difference our politicians need to
have proper procedures and policies in place. The principle of good governance
will ensure the delivery of welfarist promises made through a team that is
accountable, sincere and astute.
For me I know my stand, my search has
ended and ‘I have found my voice’. My
fervent hope is that we all discover what we seek as we tread our own
respective path, proceed to the election booth and are faced with the ballot
box.
No comments:
Post a Comment