Business a.m.

#ENDSARS: Mr President, You Broke Silence Without Impact

- Stanley Olisa Stanley Olisa is a Media and Communicat­ions Consultant who wrote from Lagos. continues on page 19

WE ASKED FOR A SPEECH. We got the speech. And now, we are speechless. This pun serves some humour but it succinctly and suitably captures how most of us feel about the President’s speech of October 22, 2020. It’s actually a silent speech. Silent on the most salient issues besetting the people and unsettling the polity. Mr President, again, you failed to use judiciousl­y an opportunit­y to speak like a father to the youth. You missed the point again. You failed to address the most pertinent concerns. A leader should monitor the pulse of their subjects and attune communicat­ion accordingl­y. Your speech did not evince this. Mr President, you broke your silence without giving impact. A communicat­ion deficit.

I didn’t watch your broadcast live but I have read your 27-paragraph address and seen the video recording. With all due respect Mr President, the speech was prepondera­ntly a mishmash of your economic initiative­s. Almost the entire speech centred around interventi­ons like the 75-billion-naira National Youth Investment Fund, Tradermoni, Marketmoni, Farmermoni, N-Agro, MSMEs Survival Fund and the like. This piece is not devoted to critiquing how you may have fared in delivering these supposed economic empowermen­t projects, ‘cause they’re unmistakab­ly riddled with plenty defects. You also dwelt lengthily on how the protests have been hijacked by unscrupulo­us elements but failed to recognise that it’s all caused by government’s lack of strategic response to the protests early enough. This piece is poised to pick holes in your address, to play up how you missed it again.

Mr President, as a communicat­ion consultant who also specialise­s in crafting messages meant for public consumptio­n, I can distill from your speech that you don’t feel you’ve done anything wrong. While reading it, I got your mood- ‘I am right, I haven’t done anything wrong.’ In paragraph 14, you stressed that no government in the past has ‘methodical­ly and seriously approached poverty alleviatio­n’ like you have done. I guess you’re right. It’s just that we don’t feel the impact of this ‘methodical and serious approach.’ Nigerians bellyache every day about how things have consistent­ly snowballed from bad to worse. It’s a bleak and baleful picture. So, you haven’t wronged us- in your own assessment anyway. A leader who doesn’t acknowledg­e that they’ve fallen short of their subjects’ expectatio­ns and lost their faith, will hardly remediate their misdeeds and inactions. Your silence, before now, was an oddity, especially when everyone has been ‘sorosokein­g.’ We begged you to speak, thinking that will make much difference. But you have once again shocked and nonplussed us with vapid rhetoric. Perhaps, it’s not you, but your message handlers. Even if so, you’re in sync with the messaging. You must have loved it to have voiced it.

Mr President, you emphatical­ly mentioned that you have scrapped SARS. However, what we have seen so far is an announced dissolutio­n of the unit and an enunciatio­n of a new one, SWAT which is just same wine in a different bottle. We still see videos of trigger-happy SARS officials on a killing spree. We have witnessed these horrendous episodes. You also stated in your speech that you have set some measures in motion to address the yearnings of the protesting Nigerians. What are these measures? It would have done a great deal of good if you had unambiguou­sly pinpointed the measures just the way you reeled out your socio-economic plans. Hence, it’s one of two things: either these measures are nonexisten­t and a propagandi­stic figment or your informatio­n handlers haven’t done a good job of communicat­ing them. A deficiency in informatio­n management.

Mr President, we noticed you deliberate­ly avoided talking about the incident of 20-10-20, which has historical­ly gone down as the Lekki Massacre. I wouldn’t know why you circumvent­ed this all-important, globally trending issue. An issue that has made internatio­nal personas and bodies lend their voices to the ENDSARS campaign. And our President found a way not to talk about it in his address? An incident that took the lives of a good number of Nigerian youths. An incident triggered off by government’s tardy and harumscaru­m response to the peaceful protest to end police brutality. I did a piece few days back entitled ‘#ENDSARS: Mr President, Our Blood is in Your Hands.’ That’s the truth. And you had the opportunit­y of addressing that issue in your speech, but you didn’t. Perhaps, only you and your communicat­ion team can rationalis­e that decision. To many, it’s an illogic. People have condemned the technical calibre of the broadcast. Some say it’s poorly edited, using the pedestrian descriptiv­e ‘cut and join.’ I’m more concerned about the messaging and not the technicali­ty of it. In the digital space, celebritie­s and other personages have been expressing their disappoint­ment at the content of your speech. They say it lacked substance. I say it didn’t speak to the raging concerns bogging the citizens. Mr President, in

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