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Saturday, 30 September 2017

NIGERIA AT 57!

The pathway ahead of Nigeria remains hard, our ascent steep, and we may not get there as soon as we expect, but I am filled with more hope now than ever before that we will get there and we will reclaim our voices. I do not suggest that today’s celebration of 57 years of independence is done as a fulfillment of our dreams and aspirations.  However, I am certain that it creates a space for us to reflect and make the change we need in our polity. The celebration of today stakes out our chance to reclaim our voice to answer the call for this is our moment and this is our time. It is by default that 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.  In the past power was acquired not because there was 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!  

Today, on this 1st of October 2017 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. That without disintegration progress is impossible.

I also 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 voices 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!

My own dream is of a fully federated Nigeria governed by policies based upon welfarism, premised on programmes, decisions and/or rules evaluated on the basis of their consequences on the governed. Welfarism based on the view that the actions of the rulers have significant consequences that impact on the human beings they serve. Welfarism, which, produces ideas that stem from having a human face. Our Welfarism must personify every structure of government. These structures must be treated with dignity and care because failure on any part will have dire consequences on others and have fatal effect on the governed.

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. 

Today as we saunter in and out of our Churches, relax at home or travel to places and spots of interests, we must dedicate ourselves to the hard grueling task to make the past 57 years worth our while.




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