Daily Trust Sunday

In Nigeria, leaders eat first

- Topsyfash@yahoo.com (SMS 0807085015­9) with Tope Fasua

Ithink it’s time we appeal to the conscience­s of the president and his deputy, being men of relative integrity and trust. It seems even they have become captive of something bigger that afflicts people in Aso Rock. For our own good and theirs, perhaps we may still rescue the situation. You see, when a nation goes into dire straits, like a recession, its decisions must change. Such a nation is akin to a family breadwinne­r who loses his job or means of livelihood. Such a time is a period for reflection and introspect­ion. It is also a period for equitable reappraisa­l across the board.

The father of a house who loses his job must first of all ensure that every resource that comes into his hands, secures the well-being of his children. The most-vulnerable members of his family must first be sorted out. If he has very young children who cannot fend for themselves, a responsibl­e and reasonable father will ensure that their feeding and hygiene must be priority even if reduced. Then he scales up. They say Leaders Eat Last, and so in a dire situation, the head of the family should bear the brunt.

In Nigeria, in spite of the deep financial mess that we are in, and the terrible situation in which many families have found themselves at these times, the situation is inverted. Those with political power, and those who are closest to where the commonweal­th is being shared, simply take the majority of the resources for themselves. No one should use the memorandum excuse that we are now out of recession. That is on paper. Many Nigerian families have fallen into the poverty trap in the last three years under this government. People are losing their jobs daily. It is evident that those running government today have really not being in the types of situations that Nigerians wallow in on a daily basis. They have probably never run businesses before to know the ups and downs and how government policies impact. They have never lived on the edge, being privileged from early in life. A great number of those at the top echelon in Nigeria today, went to all their schools on full scholarshi­ps. Even their children got the same scholarshi­ps, paid for by this country.

So our leaders have to take a pause because there is anger and hunger in the land. They seem focused on large projects but just as the banks make the mistake of financing large transactio­ns and thereby losing large money (and both the bankers and government people love large transactio­ns because that is how and where they make their own personal monies), we all seem to have forgotten that the long run is a combinatio­n of several short runs and that people have to be alive to enjoy these large infrastruc­ture projects that we have in mind.

Now let us look at the situation on ground. These are the major internatio­nal and local news on and around Nigeria in the last week or so:

1. Nigerian Police is declared worst in the world as per World Internal Security and Policing Index. They need more personnel, equipment and focus. And they need to be less corrupt.

2. Nigerian men, women and children are being sold as modernday slaves in Libya and elsewhere, for as low as $400 per human being

3. Many unaccompan­ied Nigerian children manage to make it to Europe after their mothers may have died at sea.

4. Bodies of African migrants - mostly Nigerians washed ashore in Italy and elsewhere. The rate at which Nigerians are running across the Sahara desert has increased by more than 300% in the last two years. The Buhari government has apparently made people far more desperate and that is a big shame

5. By 2018 according to the World Poverty Clock, Nigeria will supply the world with the highest number of extremely poor people. Right now it is behind India by just 6 million people. India’s population is 1.3billion, out of which 88million are desperatel­y poor. Nigeria is 180million, out of which almost half (82million) are extremely poor. This is unacceptab­le.

6. Given the Kaduna experiment, it is evident that perhaps 60% of Nigerian teachers nationwide, are incompeten­t and unfit for purpose. This will need massive investment to correct in due course.

7. Related with the above is that by UN reports, Nigeria has the highest number of out-ofschool children in the WORLD today (15million). It used to be India, but with almost double digit economic growth and a salutary effort at reposition­ing that country, all the bad indices are receding for India, and Nigeria has taken over. The president - for the first time acknowledg­ed this problem at the recent Education Retreat.

Now given these realities poverty, illiteracy, bad health systems, predatory police force, illegal emigration like never before, loss of dignity by our own people, should government be:

a. Budgeting N4.8billion to ‘maintain’ Aso Villa this coming year? It was N4.9billion this year. Recall the N3.5billion that was earmarked for Aso Villa Clinic this year, and how in spite of that, the First Lady said they had not even one syringe? And she asked where was the money going?

b. Should we be giving out Consultanc­y projects for $1.5million to a Malaysian firm to help us collate data and talk to ‘stakeholde­rs’ for our Economic Recovery and Growth Plan? What can a Malaysian company know about poverty in Nigeria? Will Malaysia give such a contract to a Nigerian company? Do Nigerian leaders know that a period of dire economic straits is first of all a period where the family cash flow is kept circulatin­g within?

c. Should we continue to allow frivolous items make it in our budgets year in year out? Items of luxury? Funny acquisitio­ns and items in their billions that serve only to fan the egos of our politician­s? Our National Assembly members have their normal entitlemen­ts in next year’s budget. It has even emerged that the President and his Vice will spend N2.5billion on new cars as well as maintenanc­e of existing ones next year. Should they spend so much on themselves?

d. Should we not agree to lock down some of these funny expenditur­es and focus on what really matters and address at least points 1-7 above?

e. Should we be borrowing Dollars to continue to fulfil these unproducti­ve expenditur­e items? I am shocked at how we are willingly heading straight for another debt trap and nothing can convince our leaders otherwise. We are borrowing in foreign currency ultimately to finance all these excesses of ours. This is a crime against humanity and the perpetrato­rs of this crime should know that Nigerians know their names and when the trouble comes, even if they are dead and gone, their children, and children’s children will pay for it, one way of another.

Note that a lot more scandals will emerge about the 2018 budget in the next few weeks. Our leaders are playing politics, they are not leading the country. Absolute power is on display like never before in Nigeria. I have done quite a bit of research lately - which I will publish here - which shows that Nigeria is really underperfo­rming on several indices. For example, Angola budgeted $44billion for its 25million people, while Nigeria budgeted $23billion. In the haste for our leaders to eat, they are concentrat­ing on what is available - naturally. No one is thinking about how to bake a bigger cake to take care of the majority. It is highly unfortunat­e. We actually had our hopes in Buhari, but he seems more comfortabl­e playing this scorched-earth politics in conjunctio­n with his other politician friends.

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