MONDAY MIDNITE-1897

MONDAY MIDNITE-1897
From the campaign for the return of Benin's looted artifacts by British invaders in 1897 to the no-holds-barred condemnation of Nigeria's corrupt past and present leaders in tracks like PISSY PISSY, AZZHOLEZ ROCK and BRING BACK THE MONEY, this 1897 album is loaded with thought-provoking and inspiration songs. A click on the image will direct you to an online store where you can purchase the album or songs from the album.

Saturday, May 26, 2012

13 years of Democracy: Looted hopes from leaders steering Nigeria to its end



Stories by Chioma Gabriel, Taye Obateru, Luka Biniyat, John Bulus, John Bosco Agbakwuru, Ayo Onikoyi
The morning of 29th May, 1999 was like the first day in a new recreated Nigeria after 29 years military tyranny.
Drumming, singing, dancing and jubilation filled the Eagle Square, Abuja as Nigerians awaited the handover of power from a  military regime to a new legitimately elected democratic government under the leadership of  President Olusegun Obasanjo that morning.
It was same in all the 36 federating states of Africa’s most populous country – celebrating a future full of hopes for improved wellbeing of everyone.
Vice President Namadi Sambo with Other Heads of State, at the Global African Disapora Summit in Johannesburg South Africa on Friday (24/5/12). NAN Photo
The inaugural speech of President Obasanjo even re-enforced this faith the more, as Nigerians at the Eagles Square and millions more who  werewatching  live on TV or listening  over the radio allowed tears of joy to drip freely when they thought of the past and what the new “messiah” was promising.
“Nigeria is wonderfully endowed by the Almighty with human and other resources” Obasanjo reminded all.
“ It does no credit either to us or the entire black race if we fail in managing our resources for quick improvement in the quality of life of our people.
“Instead of progress and development, which we  are entitled to expect from those who governed us, we experienced in  the last decade and a half,  particularly in the last regime but one, persistent deterioration in the quality of our governance, leading  to instability and the weakening of all public institutions ”, he said
“Good men  were shunned and kept away from government while those who should be  kept away were drawn near. Relations between men and women who had  been friends for many decades, and between communities that had lived  together in peace for many generations became very bitter because of  the actions or inactions of government.
“The citizens developed distrust in government, and because promises made for the improvement  of the conditions of the people were not kept, all statements by  government were met with cynicism”, he pointed out.
“Government officials became progressively indifferent to propriety of  conduct and showed little commitment to promoting the general welfare  of the people and the public good.
“ Government and all its agencies  became thoroughly corrupt and reckless. Members of the public had to  bribe their way through in ministries and parastatals to get  attention and one government agency had to bribe another government  agency to obtain the release of their statutory allocation of funds.
“The impact of official corruption is so rampant and has earned  Nigeria a very bad image at home and abroad. Besides, it has distorted and retrogressed development”.
Of course, he promised to reverse all, in a rare oration that pulled down the wary stand of pessimists.
Looking back these 13 years of democracy, those past leaders  that Obasanjo so disparaged, would be completely right if they asked for an unreserved apology from  Obasanjo, who left Nigerians arguably, worse than he met them .Virtually everything Obasanjo said has remained the same, and has even gone worse in some instances.
The tragedy of 13 years of Nigerian democracy is even more vexing when looked through Nigeria’s earning for this duration.
According to analysts, the country has  grossed in  far more income between 1999 and 2010 than the prior 35 years before 1999. It has been estimated that  Nigeria’s GDP had jumped  from  $90 billion  in 1998 to about $350 billion in 2009 alone, about 300% and on an absolute value.
Yet on Human Development Index, Nigeria remains among the most impoverished  nations on earth, with an estimated 79 million of its 150 million  populace living below the poverty level.
The North Western part of Nigeria, according to recent UNESCO rating, has the lowest literary   level in the world.
Nigeria spent not less that $16 billion (N2.5 trillion)  to improve on the 3,500 Mw of power that civil rule inherited from autocratic military rule.  It is doubtful if Nigeria produces Imw  above that figure today.
Yes, some roads, boreholes, hospitals and some schools may have been built, but on the aggregate that  falls extremely far  from expectation.
The story of Nigeria in the past 13 years is the story of corruption finding a cosy, ripe breeding ground. Never in the history of Nigeria had civil servants, politicians and even men and women in uniform stolen so brazenly.
With a judicial system that is a caricature of itself, all the billions spent on creating laws and institutions that should fight corruption, lay waste.
Since the Nigerian civil war, Nigeria has never been on the brink of collapse and disintegration like now.
After all these earnings, we have won fewer laurels in sports than for the same period under military rule.
Our image abroad has gotten worse as Nigerians make the bulk of thieves and drug criminals in foreign prisons.
There is hardly anything to cheer in the past 13 years of our democracy.
It has been the story of looted hopes by Nigerian leaders at all tiers of government, as Nigeria totters on the brink of disintegration.
Read more on 13 years of Democracy

13 years of Democracy: Looted hopes from leaders steering Nigeria to its end

No comments:

Post a Comment