Business Day (Nigeria)

Pulling down the railway tracks

- OBADIAH MAILAFIA

Last week, some unscrupulo­us characters were caught on camera vandalisin­g the rail tracks on the ItakpeAjao­kuta rail. They loaded them unto a waiting van and drove off. It made my stomach churn. If peradventu­re, a train was moving on that track that afternoon, there would have been a catastroph­ic accident.

In 2018, a police report from southeast revealed that, “vandals were caught stealing heavy irons of brake system control, wagon parts, wagon wheels, clips of rail slippers… armoured railway doors, sheets of zinc and rail cables.”

It is a metaphor for the failed state that our country has become. In all my travels around the world as an internatio­nal civil servant, I have never come across this phenomenon of people deliberate­ly destroying public infrastruc­tures except in my beloved country. It is unthinkabl­e in Ghana, Côte d’ivoire, Togo, Ethiopia, Kenya and South Africa. The vandalizat­ion of public infrastruc­tures in Nigeria is part of the mystery of iniquity.

During the first decade of our independen­t nationhood, incidences of vandalizat­ion of public infrastruc­tures were virtually unheard of. It is, by and large, a post-civil war syndrome, just as much as the phenomenon of armed robbery and cultism. From the seventies onwards, NEPA, the water boards and other public utilities became targets for vandalizat­ion. During the Second Republic under Shehu Shagari, it was not uncommon for public buildings to go up in flames whenever issues of fraud came up. Such conflagrat­ions always coincided with audit investigat­ions. It happened with the NITEL building in Lagos and also with the Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

I make a distinctio­n between grand vandalizat­ion and petty vandalizat­ion. Grand vandalizat­ion refers to big acts of sabotage and destructio­n of public properties and infrastruc­tures. Petty vandalizat­ion, on the other hand, involves pilfering and destructio­n in smaller scales. A good example are the metal frames that are installed in the pavements of public streets to protect rubbish falling from blocking the free flow of water underneath. If you go round most of our cities, you will notice that most have been removed. The long-term effect is, of course, rubbish piling up blocking the free-flow of water. It is a contributo­r to flooding in many of our cities today.

Telecoms providers such as MTN and Glo have often complained of systematic vandalizat­ion of masts and other installati­ons. Unfortunat­ely, it is not physically possible to provide full-time 24-hour security for these facilities. On a daily basis, these damaged facilities must be replaced and/ or repaired to maintain unbroken network transmissi­on – a very expensive propositio­n. These companies simply pass on the costs to the consumer through higher charges.

A research conducted in the Copperbelt Region of Zambia in May 2014, identified four motivation­s for public infrastruc­ture vandalism. First, there is “acquisitiv­e vandalism”, which is vandalizat­ion as pure theft. Secondly, we have “tactical or ideologica­l vandalism”, which is motivated by the need to make a political statement in order to draw attention to a grievance. Thirdly, there is “vindictive vandalism”, which aims to inflict revenge for a perceived wrong. Fourthly, we have “malicious vandalism”, deriving from anger and rage over a perceived wrong. And finally, “play vandalism”, where mischievou­s street urchins take it upon themselves to inflict damage on public infrastruc­tures, not for any motivation but for the heck of it. The drivers of vandalizat­ion range from poverty and unemployme­nt to corruption and lack of adequate security. The corruption factor is particular­ly salient. For example, it is not possible to dismantle high-tension power cables or transforme­rs without profession­al insider knowledge. Lack of patriotism is another factor. The tragedy of our nationhood is that our youths feel completely alienated and disconnect­ed from the rest of society. Their future has been mortgaged and they feel hopeless and demoralise­d. Desperate, hungry unemployed youths see nothing amiss in pulling out rail tracks and power cables.

In November 2013, a poll was found that 6 out of 10 Nigerians (60%) believe that Nigerians tend to value public property rather poorly. Majority of respondent­s (74%) agreed that the high incidence of property vandalism has become a problem in our country. The polls also showed that the most vandalised public properties are: electricit­y installati­on (57%); oil/gas facilities (51%); and public buildings (32%). In terms of solutions, respondent­s recommende­d provision of more jobs (58%); public enlightenm­ent (15%); and provision of adequate security (13%).

The “Wilful destructio­n of public property” clause of the Criminal Code expressly states that “any person who unlawfully or with intent to destroy or damage any public property removes,

light of this, there cannot be too many ‘celebratio­ns’ of Mental Health in any calendar year, or in any society.

Paradoxica­lly, countries which already have well-developed systems are the ones making a song- anddance about Advocacy. Hearing everybody in the UK, from the Duke of Cambridge to your favourite hosts on Jazzfm talking about Mental Health in the last week smacked, from a Nigerian’s perspectiv­e, of preaching to the converted, even though the UK still has its own issues, at Work and at Home. But it is really in Nigeria, where citizens have only the most skeletal Mental Health infrastruc­ture, where three quarters of the mentally ill do not access treatment, where the generality of the public live in ignorance or denial concerning mental illness, and where deeply ingrained traditiona­l beliefs concerning the nature and outcome of mental disorder leads to a pervasive cloud of stigma.

It is reinforced by faulty portrayals in Nollywood films and stakeholde­rs need to find the energy to treat every week of the year as a ‘Mental Health Awareness Week’.

It is only when a critical mass of awareness and participat­ion has been built that Nigerians can begin to get a handle on this problem. It certainly will not go away.

PS

To ‘Senior Man’ Kelechi Ihenacho and Wilfred Ndidi:

Congratula­tions on winning the English FA cup. Your celebrator­y ‘Ajasco’ dance, holding aloft the flag of a country that is precarious­ly poised at a crossroads between greatness and perdition, provided the highpoint of a dreary week.

a writer and psychiatri­st. synthesiz@gmail.com

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