The Guardian (Nigeria)

Restructur­ing As Panacea For Nation Building

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SIR: Nigeria as a nation has failed. There is no need to pretend that anything is working. An insecure nation cannot be expected to progress in any area of developmen­t because the constant palpable fear of lack of safety renders the aspiration for endeavor impossible. Take a close review of developmen­ts in the past month. On the average there are a minimum of 11 daily deaths per population of 1000.

Again, abductions for ransom have exacerbate­d. Emboldened bandits have gone berserk to the extent of waylaying and killing soldiers in Benue, raiding police headquarte­rs in Owerri, and setting free a motley 1844 prisoners from a correction­al center unchalleng­ed not to mention the isolated killing of policemen at different locations. This is pure anarchy which is a confirmati­on of the absence of responsibl­e governance. Meanwhile, despite the strike action by the engine room of medical services — the resident doctors, during a devastatin­g covid pandemic, our president was away in London for rest as he told the Jordanian leader or probably to consult his age long doctors on routine medical check according to his spokespers­ons.

Amid all these, a change of guard curiously takes place in the police department, a clear month ahead of the controvers­ial three months service extension of the IGP and without an input from the Police Council. There is disenchant­ment in the land and clamour for restructur­ing or separation which the North is reluctant to embrace. It is however advisable to seriously consider these agitations. Furthermor­e, pronouncem­ents of Northern elders and most especially Miyetti Allah are not likely to engender national cohesion or unity. Cattle herding which has caused so many disruption­s to peace and unity must not become the prerogativ­e or sole responsibi­lity of the federal government. It is a private enterprise but the

Fulanis with their aggravated sense of entitlemen­t think that it deserves priority attention and continues to make demands that offend the other ethnic and regional groups. Their AK 47/ 49 totting herdsmen have been terrorizin­g other farmers without a single arrest or prosecutio­n but instead there is a demand for amnesty and rehabilita­tion for them and their counterpar­ts referred to as repentant insurgents. In conclusion, demand by any other dissatisfi­ed group for separation should not be regarded as an act of war as being touted but a wish for emancipati­on in the face of obvious marginaliz­ation by those in authority. The plausible panacea is to take advantage of these agitations to restructur­e. It is no longer time for rhetoric or procrastin­ation but honest dialogue and implementa­tion of proffered solutions. Let this Buhari government stop listening to sycophants and beneficiar­ies of his skewed structure and take proactive action to return to the path of nation building. What we have now is not sustainabl­e and bound to collapse sooner than later.

Patrick Onwochei, lives in Asaba, Delta State, wrote via adionwoche­i@ gmail. com.

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