Daily Trust

Macron of France: a wakeup call for Nigerian youths

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Emmanuel Macron, President-elect of France had his first degree in the year 2001 at the age of 24. That is a pointer to his age (39 years) and the year he was born, 1977. Before 40 years, the young Macron is the president of France. When the card of youthfulne­ss is played up in civilized world, life really begins at 40. In Nigeria, the concept of who is classified as a youth is changing when it comes to leadership considerat­ion. At the age of 65 to 75, a politician is still regarded as a youth. Sadly, it is the youths who debate over suitabilit­y of candidates within above mentioned age range to rule over them.

Curiously, many Nigerian youths missed the age of Macron when he was declared president elect. For those who could manage to spare time out of their busy schedule of doing nothing on the cyberspace focused more on his older wife. Some insisted that only in France a man within that age range could be elected to lead a country. Only a few took out time to reflect on how bad their future has been stolen from them. Only a few realize that at 24 they were still in their parents’ home writing applicatio­ns for a job that will pay N30,000 per month as graduates for the very fast ones while majority in that age category are still writing WAEC/JAMB. At the age of 24, no one considers you as a youth, you are only important when you are considered for the job of thuggery or overnight cyber activist to satisfy vested interests.

For our so called future generation leaders, we are contented with the axiom of “future leaders”, a prophetic projection that has never in true sense happened to so many generation­s after independen­ce. The mentality of Nigerian youths has been so damaged to the extent that they have become commentato­rs; analysts, cyber warriors and terrorists specialize­d in defending or deflating very old leaders. They will roll up their sleeves, fingers feverishly typing away on their laptops or mobile phones in a mad rush to be the first to publish the next “viral” post for or against a leader who is ordinarily expected to have retired to pave way for youthful leadership. On facebook, twitter, whatsapp, the fight continues ad-infinitum. They grow old writing excellent piece on the political actors, they have no personal ambition, only glorificat­ion as cyber thugs.

In fairness, the system has never been programmed to favor the Nigerian youths. While the present class of octogenari­ans leading us today were youths in the 1960’s, they have failed to provide that enabling free education system, scholarshi­ps in higher learning for foreign and local higher learning. The system has deliberate­ly refused to grow, making youths unemployed. The political structure has failed to update, sticking strictly only to the ancient of days names of those who have been in power since our dear country attained independen­ce. These crop of unretired politician­s keep telling the youths (who are now too old to be called youths) that the future is for them. The question is, when will that future come, who will be our next Macron?

We must redefine youthfulne­ss in Nigeria. We must redirect our energy from online thuggery, bigotry to a useful agenda for the youths regardless of all forms of cleavages. Nigerian youths must be ready to engage the system with the hope of saddling the horse of leadership instead of being the stable boy, feeding the horses with the hay of despondenc­y. We must remember that every senseless insult we publish on the cyberspace for or against a leader is a grand design to keep us perpetuall­y as youths.

Israel A. Ebije, Abuja.

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