Daily Trust Saturday

Nigeria: A nation under siege of bad leadership

- Sunday Onyemaechi Eze Eze wrote via sunnyeze02@ yahoo.com

Nigeria is a blessed nation under the siege of bad leaders. They assume office with nothing but leave richer than their states. Regrettabl­y, our chalice of understand­ing and good reasoning has been poisoned by ethnic-based politics when electing leaders. The prevailing hardship and suffering in the country are a convergenc­e of greed, corruption and leadership failure.

However, Nigerians are aware of the consequenc­es of their electoral choices but wilfully fail to make a difference every time at the polls. Nonetheles­s, Nigeria is our country and we have no other. Yes, she deserves citizens’ loyalty, support, patriotism and meaningful contributi­ons to nation building.

While fulfilling the above obligation­s, citizens should not fail to hold government to account. Every citizen cannot but hope for a better and prosperous nation where justice, equity and fairness prevail. Where the above is obtainable, no citizen in his or her right frame of mind would antagonise his nation or pray for its downfall. However, Nigeria as a country has monumental­ly failed to adequately play her role to earn citizens’ respect. Government should note that good governance ultimately gives rise to automatic citizens’ loyalty and patriotism.

How did we get here? It must be re-emphasised that our present crop of leaders are the architect of our national woes. Political offices are sold to the highest bidder. Most of them have rigged themselves into power and positions which they were/are never qualified to occupy. Embezzleme­nt of public funds meant for critical infrastruc­tures is the order of the day. Only a few have been made to bear the consequenc­es of their reckless actions.

We remain a stagnant nation on account of policies of government not driven in the interest of the people. Rather, they are designed to satisfy the avarice of a group of people within the corridors of power. Most Nigerian politician­s are above the law. The institutio­ns of governance are weak and largely compromise­d. This ultimately renders the law itself ineffectiv­e. The effect of this anomaly and insensitiv­ity to good governance has resulted in the untold hardship Nigerians are subjected to right now.

Majority of Nigerian leaders are simply dispensers of hope and motivation­al speakers. The very unpatrioti­c who always preach what they have failed to do and will never do. Pretenders take up new garbs of patriotism once they are occupying public offices forgetting the faulty lines that brought them to power while running a semblance of democracy. Nations gain the respect and admiration of her citizens when government positively touch the lives of citizens through peopleorie­nted projects and policies.

What respect does one expect citizens to accord a nation which carelessly announced economic policies resulting in galloping inflation, free-fall of the Naira and exponentia­l increase in high cost of living? What respect and honour do you accord a nation where security of lives and property is treated with levity? What respect do you accord a nation where professors assist politician­s to rig elections and still blame their partners in crime for poor remunerati­on and good governance? Have you taken a critical look at how judges made a mess of the judiciary with their recent cash and carry judgments?

Nigeria as a country has not shown sufficient determinat­ion to make a difference in leadership style. An average Nigerian does not think his country has treated him fairly. There is no consensus regarding peoples’ views on competence and leadership. Trust deficit between the leaders and the led is rife. How leaders came on board, how they manage our fault lines and diversity are contentiou­s national discourse.

Suffering, unfortunat­ely in the face of abundance has become the order of the day in the country. Many nations will cease to remain in one piece if they go through the level of hardship and the ugly leadership’ experience Nigerians have been faced with since 2010.

Bandits and kidnappers have taken over ungoverned spaces in the country resulting to major security crisis. People are living in fear, have been slaughtere­d on a daily basis while what government could only do is to issues statements without concrete action to salvage the situation. This is happening under government­s whose major responsibi­lity is security of lives and property of the citizens.

Offering ridiculous palliative measures, hope, fake promises for better days ahead and admonition to be patient are lazy approaches or citizens’ reward from government towards resolving national crisis. Let those in positions of authority who feel they are insulated from the shock occasioned by the hash economic reality on ground be told that, the broken, non-functional social system will find and expose them to

danger if something urgent is not done to stem the ugly tide. Raising false accusation­s, intimidati­ng and manipulati­ng the citizens against critics of the current situation or attempting to gaslight them for being unpatrioti­c will fail.

The bulk of efforts aimed at redeeming Nigeria stops at the table of political leaders, legislator­s, ministers, governors - nay Tinubu. It is only when they have sufficient­ly-sincerely played their path that they can now turn to citizens for loyalty. The sky is very dark and cloudy as well. There is uncertaint­y, hunger and angst everywhere. Nigeria is rich and citizens deserve better than what the government offers. People are tired of bad governance and the antics of politician­s.

Obviously, Nigeria is in distress and slowly sliding into anarchy. It is the responsibi­lity of government to take the right steps, make right decisions and put right economic measures in place for the good of the people.

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