Daily Trust Sunday

Where are our prophets? (2)

- “In those days there was no king in Israel; and everyone did whatever he wanted.” - Judges 17:6. By Emmanuel Ojeifo

This is the mind of God: GREAT INCREASE!! It doesn’t matter how small you start, God wants you to become really big at the end. This applies to an individual, a church or a corporate organizati­on. Most people make the mistake of wanting to start big; start small while retaining your goal of a great outcome. Stay with it, be committed to it and soon your dream will be fulfilled.

“There was a man named Jabez who was more honorable than any of his brothers. His mother named him Jabez because his birth had been so painful. He was the one who prayed to the God of Israel, “Oh, that you would bless me and expand my territory! Please be with me in all that I do, and keep me from all trouble and pain!” And God granted him his request.” 1Chronicle­s 4:9-10 (NLT).

God granted him his request because it was in line with His will for his children.

Notice however that his change did not come until he did something.

You must understand that there

Nigeria today is a typical example of ancient Israel when there was no king and everyone did as he pleased. For more than three times when the above bible text is recounted in the Book of Judges, something horrible happens, to show that the absence or old age or infirmity of a king comes with severe consequenc­es and at a great price for the kingdom. It is often a time when kingmakers and powerbroke­rs take advantage of the king’s predicamen­t to foist their own will on the kingdom. All sorts of bitter intrigues, betrayals, conspiraci­es and power play take the centre stage of governance, thus weakening the kingdom and opening it to vicious attack from inside and outside forces. In the end, it is the mass of ordinary people who suffer. That is where Nigeria is today.

We seemed to have returned full circle to the year 2010 when former President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua tied the nation down to his infirmity and plunged the country into a political crisis of monumental proportion­s. Addressing members of the National Unity Forum (NUF) who visited him at his Kaduna residence on March 9, 2010, retired General Muhammadu Buhari urged the federal executive council to save the nation from agony by declaring then ailing president Yar’Adua incapacita­ted, in order to set machinerie­s in motion for his impeachmen­t by the National Assembly. This, he said, was the only solution to the political logjam in the country at the time.

Barely seven years later, we have found ourselves in similar circumstan­ces, with another ailing president who seemed determined to tie the fortunes of over 180 million people to his bed of infirmity. Buhari has defiantly refused to heed the pleas of voices of reason urging him to relinquish power and attend fully to his health. Members of his cabinet, governors and party stalwarts are spending huge public resources to visit him in London, at a time when the nation’s economic fortune is on a slippery slope. Obviously, the famed man of austerity and incorrupti­ble integrity is certainly not bothered about where the funds for their travel expenses are coming from. August 16 2017 marked 100 days since Buhari began his medical vacation in the U.K; and as I write, there is still no official disclosure of the nature of his illness.

Buhari’s media men say that the health of the president is a personal matter and that Nigerians are overreachi­ng themselves by asking to know the name of the ailment afflicting their leader. However, they find nothing wrong with using public resources to fund his medical safari. We pay to treat a man who doesn’t think we need to know what is wrong with him. If that is not the height of executive arrogance and audacious insolence, I don’t know what else to call it. A government that promised to change the manner in which the business of statecraft is conducted seems stubbornly stuck in its hardened and impervious ways. It is a way of saying that the mantra “change begins with me” is good for the people, but not for their leaders.

66-year-old Charles Oputa, alias Charlie Boy and his cohorts have started a daily protest, similar to the “Bring Back Our Girls” coalition, president to ‘return or resign.’ Their mantra is ‘Our mumu don do.’ Yet, when they took their demonstrat­ion to Wuse market in Abuja on Tuesday, August 15 2017, they met with mob reprisal from Buhari’s sympatheti­c acolytes, a warning sign that some Nigerians are still very much comfortabl­e with the status quo, and that if anything untoward happens to Buhari, Nigeria might be engulfed in a bloody crisis. A few days earlier, some members of the group suffered police brutality when they gathered at the Unity Fountain for their public demonstrat­ion, another sign that some freedoms of associatio­n are outlawed.

In the mean time, Boko Haram has continued its relentless onslaught against innocent Nigerians in the North East, killing scores of people regularly, while a helpless military looks on in exasperati­on and confusion. Badoo cultists in Lagos are having their field day, while ruthless kidnappers and daredevil armed robbers have upped their tempo. Unknown gunmen who effectivel­y launched a bloodbath during Sunday Mass in a Catholic Church at Ozubulu are still at large. Southern Kaduna is still seething with anger, hate, animosity and impunity. Nnamdi Kanu and his mammoth IPOB followers seem determined to hold the nation hostage; a sign of the irrepressi­bility of voices calling for a change in the way Nigeria is structured and governed. On Monday, August 14 2017, ASUU embarked on an indefinite strike action, thus placing the education of Nigeria’s future in serious jeopardy.

The daily carnage on our roads must certainly be counted among the gravest crimes against the human

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