Daily Trust

Lack of respect: How our politician­s speak to us

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We now know that the so-called National Leader of the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, wants to be the president of all Nigerians. We know because he told us that he had informed President Muhammadu Buhari of his ambition to contest for the position in 2023. Maybe in the future he will talk to us as citizens and voters. Maybe we will matter in the future.

What is interestin­g, however, is that his reason for wanting to be president is that he has a lifelong ambition to be Nigeria’s president. In a sense, he is being brutally honest; it is not about what he believes he can do to improve the lives and livelihood­s of Nigerians, it is all about his personal ambition.

Maybe all the people who go into political competitio­n are self-centred and ambitious. Nonetheles­s, they tend to have the decency to tell the people that they are contesting BECAUSE they want to serve the people and improve their lives rather than fulfil personal ambitions. It may not even be that they are decent, they are simply being respectful because they know the people have the franchise.

The Senate President, Ahmed Lawan, told Nigerians on Tuesday that the president did not told anyone that there would be removal of fuel subsidy. In a populist declaratio­n, he argued that subsidy could not be transferre­d from government to citizens. He also expressed doubt over the reported consumptio­n of 100 million litres of petrol per day in the country, which is what we pay subsidy for. He said he was glad to inform Nigerians that President Muhammadu Buhari had not told anyone to remove petroleum subsidy.

President Buhari’s finance minister had, however, repeatedly said since her press conference in October, 2021, that the government could no longer sustain petrol subsidy payments, which currently stand at about N250bn monthly. She had pointed out that the Petroleum Industry Act has a provision that all petroleum products must be deregulate­d. In the 2022 budget, which passage was superinten­ded by Ahmed Lawan, and signed into law by President Buhari, the provision for subsidy ends in June this year when subsidy ends. Ending fuel subsidy is, therefore, a core policy of the Buhari administra­tion and it is enshrined in law.

The issue is that Nigerians are getting ready to resist the removal of fuel subsidy and the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has already announced series of actions in that regard.

Senate President Lawan did say in his statement that: “Many of us are very concerned with the recent agitations and protests, and many citizens are so concerned, our constituen­ts across the country are very concerned that the federal government will remove the petroleum subsidy. And for us, as parliament­arians, as legislator­s representi­ng the people of Nigeria, this must be of interest to us.”

Clearly, what is happening is that having failed to address the fuel subsidy issue over the past seven years, the government is realising that one year to the next general elections is not the most auspicious time to do it. In that case,

The contract to bring in and to return the rice was a waste of money. Many of the comments I saw from Nigerians expressed doubts whether it was indeed rice in the bags displayed. What they did was to try to copy the idea of groundnut pyramids, which at one time was a sign that we were producing a lot

they should show us some respect and say after listening to complaints from Nigerians about the further hardship the removal of fuel subsidy will cause; that they are now reviewing the policy. It is disrespect­ful to citizens to claim they never said they would do it while we all know that it is already in the budget being currently implemente­d. Let us not forget that a current government policy is that they would be paying N5,000 monthly to the very poor as transporta­tion subsidy because fuel subsidy would end in June this year.

Another big item in the news this week is the “Rice Show”; the official unveiling of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)/Rice Farmers Associatio­n of Nigeria (RIFAN) paddy rice pyramids in Abuja. It was essentiall­y a one-hour “photoshop” that was conceived to show that the President has through his policy measures significan­tly increased rice production in the country. To do that, trailers were sent all over the country to ferry paddy rice to Abuja so that the president could be photograph­ed with a lot of rice behind him.

In a normal country, the statistics office will simply provide production figures. Nigerian politician­s think photo tricks are more effective. It is a bad idea. The contract to bring in and to return the rice was a waste of money. Many of the comments I saw from Nigerians expressed doubts whether it was indeed rice in the bags displayed. What they did was to try to copy the idea of groundnut pyramids, which at one time was a sign that we were producing a lot. The irony is that the famous Kano pyramids were not photoshopp­ed. The trains were simply not coming in frequently enough to transport the deliveries supplied by Licensed Buying Agents, so they were stacked up to wait for trains. The idea of bringing in one million bags of paddy rice to the national capital for a photo shoot and return them to states for milling simply ridicules us as a nation.

The Governor of the CBN, Mr Godwin Emefiele, who organised the photoshop contract was of course keen to highlight the successes recorded in the implementa­tion of the CBN-led Anchor Borrower Programme (ABP). He announced that the country had been able to significan­tly reduce rice importatio­n from Thailand by over 99.83 per cent within the past seven years. There is no doubt that the programme has indeed increased rice production in the country, even though currently, insecurity is cutting back on the success. The problem with this success is that rice imports from Benin Republic have increased almost to the same quantity that imports to Nigeria have declined. It does not need a genius to work out that despite the almost two-year closure of the borders with our neighbours, smuggling continued at essentiall­y the same rate. Everybody knows it because we can all see the same Thai rice that is no longer “imported” in all our markets. This is confirmed daily by customs raids on markets to seize foreign rice. It is disrespect­ful for government to sink all this money into a photograph that is supposed to wipe out our knowledge and memories of the Thai rice we buy in our markets daily.

What is annoying to us, Nigerian citizens, is that government views and treats the policy arena uniquely as a space for propaganda and informatio­n manipulati­on rather than a genuine conversati­on space on action steps to address national problems. That is why the focus is on optics rather than facts. I do wish that our government­s try to treat us with more respect. It is sad that they do not know we are adults who know what they are doing and have the power as citizens and voters to place or remove them from power; or do we not?

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