THISDAY

Kukah, Enelamah, Adeniyi, Others Warn Nigeria is on Dangerous Precipice

Utomi: Restructur­ing is not panacea for Nigeria’s challenges

- Shola Oyeyipo

Notable Nigerians yesterday agreed that the current situation in the country characteri­sed by hate speech, sectional agitations and separatist movements was precarious and requires urgent and strong collaborat­ion between the leaders and the followers to curtail it and bring about peace and unity.

This was the position collective­ly taken by eminent Nigerians, including the Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr. Okechukwu Enelamah; the Bishop of Sokoto Catholic Dioceses, Bishop Mathew Kukah; Chairman, THISDAY Editorial Board, Mr. Segun Adeniyi; former Super Eagles player, Chief Segun Odegbami; and Professor Pat Utomi, while speaking at “The Platform,’’ a national discourse forum organised by the Covenant Christian Centre in Lagos.

Kukah, who addressed the topic: ‘Weakness of Power’, was particular­ly disturbed about the ethnic fault lines now common among the people of Nigeria, noting that every Nigerian feels disgruntle­d about various things.

“All of us are unhappy and I believe the president too is unhappy because this is not the country he sacrificed for. The president said he fought a civil war to keep Nigeria as one, but if we fought a civil war over 40 years ago and the problem persists, then it means something is wrong.

“The country has become chaotic. Collective­ly, we are frustrated in Nigeria. The issue now is, how do we process this anger?” He asked, stressing that “where we are now, anything can go wrong because we are at a tipping point. Nigeria is on a dangerous precipice and we must therefore be careful.”

According to him, anger is prevalent everywhere in the country, and the people are seeking means of expressing their anger, therefore, he argued that the best option is to address their grievances and not attempt to silence the people.

But despite this, he opined that the people should continue to enjoy their inalienabl­e right to talk.

He however warned Nigerians against hate speech, which he said is always a prelude to massacre, adding that “we cannot begin to deploy hatred. Before every killing, you have to reduce the other person to justify the killing and that is what you do with hate speech.”

The cleric also expressed a situation where ethnicity is becoming a standard for evaluating persons.

But earlier, when delivering his keynote address, Enelamah, who had noted that the President Muhammadu Buhari administra­tion is leaving no stone unturned to ensure that Nigerians begin to feel the positive impacts of his leadership, said one major problem confrontin­g the country is that not every hands are on the deck in the quest to change the Nigerian narratives positively.

According to him, “A fundamenta­l flaw in the Nigerian debate is the absence of self-responsibi­lity.” Drawing example from the Spanish miracle between 1959 and 1974 when Spanish technocrat­s brought about rapid developmen­t in the European country, he said: “It takes only one committed generation to build a Nigerian of our dream. We must start with the end in mind.”

He also stated that the current administra­tion is working to change the Nigerian story by creating conducive environmen­t for the people to thrive in their legitimate businesses.

The minister said: “We need to create an environmen­t for us to succeed. Nigerians succeed outside the country but when you give them the same hurdle in Nigeria they fail. Government, civil society groups and the people must partner to inspire and foster the new generation of Nigerian to bring about a new Nigeria, and why not this generation?”

Adeniyi, who on his part dwelled more on issues pertaining hate speeches, which he said is further putting Nigeria on the edge, cited the reversed Arewa Youth Consultati­ve Forum ultimatum to Igbo in the North to quit, which though had been withdrawn, saying: “The damage done was unpreceden­ted.”

He added that: “However, the fact was that the ultimatum was triggered by hate speeches made by Nnamdi Kanu and many elders from other climes who felt that the Igbo elders who were old enough to give birth to Kanu failed to call him to order and were genuflecti­ng with him until the situation nearly got out if hand.”

The former presidenti­al spokespers­on therefore advised that “rather than directing our angers at other ethnic nationalit­ies, we should look for ways to move the country forward because bad governance is not peculiar to the federal government; it also affects the states and the local government­s.”

On his part, Odegbami said corruption is one of the banes of the growth of Nigeria. He drew inference from sharp practices in the sports sector, which he said ought to have been one of the veritable tools to move Nigeria forward through empowermen­t of youths.

Also, Utomi said restructur­ing alone would not solve Nigeria’s developmen­t challenges.

Utomi said empirical evidence showed no link between more resources and developmen­t in the country.

He said some states with less resources were more developed than some resource-rich states.

The APC member, therefore, said that the belief that the states would do better with more resources was a myth.

He added that only those states that made the people the core of their governance would develop.

Utomi decried the costs of governance at the various levels of government, saying the situation was a drain on the country’s resources.

He described governance in most states as poor, while saying local government­s in the country were dysfunctio­nal.

“The local government­s in the country are dysfunctio­nal and are a bloody waste of resources,’’ he said.

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