THISDAY

NIGERIA AND THE MANY UNRESOLVED ISSUES

- Israel Ebije, ebijeo5@gmail.com

It has become a cliché for people around the globe to declare an improved way of approachin­g life every beginning day of the year. It is popularly tagged “new year resolution”. Everybody wants to be a better human being and the new year is always dotted with resolution­s, promises and a long to-do list. The previous year is always a lesson for the new year. The challenges of 2018 are certainly a derivation of how 2017 impacted on people. Some people argue that it is better to enter the new year on a clean slate, allowing elements to decide than to create boundaries with foundation destined to crumble hours after they are built. Most people resolve to change personal lifestyle, so many careless on changing the social, political and economic affairs of their country. They fail to understand that most of their resolution­s may be festooned on the fulcrum of unresolved issues around the corridors of power.

Former President of the United States of America, John F. Kennedy once asserted that “ask not what your country can do for you but what you can do for your country”. Whatever the grains of his submission, wisdom in that quotation is instructiv­e for Nigerians as it regards our reasoning, approach in choosing and maintainin­g leaders. The year 2018 must witness a new psychical dispositio­n where Nigerians must stop expecting meaning out of nothing. One can only demand for good leadership if the person voted has the capacity to deliver. From antecedent­s, Nigerians are known for wailing, languishin­g under a clueless leader, at the end, they will go out there and vote the person back. The year 2018 is another chance for Nigerians to either sail to shore or smash against rocks.

While we make personal commitment­s to ourselves, we must realise that our politician­s will never change from their exponentia­l demand to take from our commonweal­th to feed several generation­s from their loins. They will only make laws at the National Assembly to favour themselves. Their bank accounts in local and foreign financial institutio­ns will continue to grow at the detriment of infrastruc­tural developmen­ts. Our politician­s will remain unresolved in their cluelessne­ss for political benefactor­s to make the most of a corrupt institutio­n. Important service based sectors like the NNPC, electricit­y companies, will remain in the hands of cabals and cartels to manipulate for them to ferry away our commonweal­th.

We must realise that Nigerian politician­s especially under the Buhari administra­tion are resolved to be lazy. Flying under the euphoria of change and amnesia of some Nigerians believing they have something to offer, this group of misfits couldn’t make out time to screen through a simple list of appointees, which does not need rocket science to do. The backlash is on Mr. President who has shown full reverse throttle in cluelessne­ss. It has indeed become so very clear that Buhari approves anything okayed by a few powerful men in his administra­tion, no matter how ridiculous it is. The recent appointmen­t list littered with dead men is one in a series of gaffs. That Buhari was seen as honest does not translate to him being a good leader. It’s like giving an honest man without knowledge of flying an aircraft to pilot a distressed one.

The system will never change from what President Buhari met on ground because most Nigerians are so focused making personal resolution­s instead of strategic, joint arrangemen­t to take bold steps towards changing the corrupt system. We must decide if we are really comfortabl­e with a government so consistent with blackmail, propaganda, blame game and administra­tive cluelessne­ss. The lies are legendary just as the exponentia­l corruption among government officials and political appointees. A molecular example is peddled propaganda that VAT earnings amounts to N2trn, FIRS collected up to N2.3trn, Customs and NPA raised more than a trillion naira. Adding all the repatriate­d funds, there shouldn’t be any reason why only 20% performanc­e of a budget put at N7trn.

The year 2018 must herald real change. Nigerians must be resolved to remove misfits from leadership. This must be done without ethno-religious undertone. Buhari has expended his goodwill. Obviously he is under the control of some forces he cannot move against. Nigerians must also resolve to refuse handouts from corrupt politician­s. It is time to also realise that politician­s feel pressured by executive beggars to steal. Once the begging stops, demands to explain wealth increases, then accountabi­lity sets in. The need to also remove emphasis on ethnic-based support for corrupt leaders must be on top to do list of 2018 and beyond. We seem to hate politician­s from other regions, but we condone “our own” on same corrupt superhighw­ay.

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