The Guardian (Nigeria)

Nigeria and her intellectu­al acuity

- By Yahaya Balogun

IN spite of our geopolitic­al tensions, polarizati­on, ethnocentr­ism, mismanagem­ent, hedonism, and penchant for wealth accumulati­on; and our bizarre entity and the state of hopelessne­ss in Nigeria, Nigerians are taking a quantum leap in academics and their profession­al callings. In the Diaspora, we carry our heads so proudly high to the admiration of other nationalit­ies. We are such a blessed nation whose citizens are performing excellentl­y well all over the world. But our structural and fragile entity at home is full of nauseating contradict­ions, and it is also unfortunat­e that the political climes are bedeviled with leadership problems. How Nigerian citizens are changing the sport and intellectu­al world, but wanton in stagnation at home is very concerning! Nigeria is a unique countr y. Yes! In spite of our geopolitic­al tensions, ethnocentr­ism, mismanagem­ent, hedonism, and penchant for wealth accumulati­on; our bizarre entity and the state of hopelessne­ss in Nigeria, Nigerians are taking a quantum leap in academics and their profession­al callings. In the Diaspora, we carry our heads so proudly high to the admiration of other nationalit­ies. W e are such a blessed nation whose citizens are performing excellentl­y well all over the world. But our structural entity is full of contradict­ions, and it is also unfortunat­e that the political climes are bedeviled with leadership problems.

All official and unofficial visits I have made to various institutio­ns such as Health, peniten - tiaries, government­s, and schools et cetera in Arizona, the United States and other States of the Union show that Nigeria is a country with uncommon resources contributi­ng im - mensely to the developmen­t of America and other nations. I am mindfully infatuated with the intellectu­al acuity of Nigerians in the Diaspora. We are seriously endowed with smart and promising cognition. But some ethnic and religious bigots enabled by directionl­ess leaders in politics and religion are the burden of these promising whizkids at home and in the internatio­nal arena. I hope the system is not self-imploded soonest! Nigerians’ achievemen­ts should be very instructiv­e to Nigerian authority. Nigerian profession­als at home and abroad are impregnate­d with good ideas ready for delivery. Check an average Ibo man from the East, he is gifted with unquestion­able entreprene­urship and innovation; check an a verage Hausa man from the North, he is unmatched with agility and sustainabl­e agricultur­al developmen­t; check an a verage Yoruba man from the West, he is nonpareil and wonk in policy formulatio­n, academic and political acumen. We have utterly failed to utilize these nuances to the benefit of all. The polarizati­on and mutual suspicion among various religious and ethnic groups seem unabated. This is the auspicious time to come together to restructur­e the nationhood of Nigeria. Nigerian intellectu­al acuity is resonating in the minds of people across the world. Outside of Nigeria, our children are blazing the trail. Nigeria citizens are promoting either as Valedictor­ian in Elementary schools to High schools. They are making First Class in various prestigiou­s universiti­es in Nigeria and across the globe. From Nigeria to Rusia; from the United Kingdom to Japan and other countries, the citizens of Nigeria are being churned out with incredible and prestigiou­s academic laurels. Statistica­lly , Nigeria has the highest number of university graduates in the United States. We are the most educated nationalit­y in the United States. Without mincing word, three in ever y ten graduates in any institutio­n in the US are quintessen­tial Nigerians. Nigerians are highly educated. When Debo Adegbile was made a nominee by vintage president Barack Obama as his DOJ to civil rights division in 2014, I knew Nigerians’ impacts to socio economic and political structures of the United States are enviable. Nigerian intellectu­al resource is being felt at the highest level of government in the United States and around the world. Sadly, our bane of developmen­t in Nigeria is corruption and bad government. Remove hydra-headed corruption and corrupt leaders from Nigeria entity and its entirety, Nigeria will compete favorably with the United States and the rest of the developed world; and in all areas of human endeavors. We are very resourcefu­l and pragmatic when it comes to academics, sports, entertainm­ent, and entreprene­urship. Nigeria is a hemorrhage­d nation blessed with human capital and intellectu­al acumen. Historical­ly, Nigeria and Singapore are symmetrica­l in historic burdens. Singapore was becoming a pariah state before the coming of Lee Kuan Yew, his country was debilitate­d by protracted corruption. The rebirth of Singapore was engineered by the founding father of Singapore, Lee Kuan Yew. His election to power was similar to the election that brought Buhari to power. Yew closed his eyes to tackle hydra-headed corruption in Singapore. He was ver y revolution­ary in his approach to killing corruption before corruption could kill his country. He created a conducive business environmen­t and jobs in Singapore for Singaporea­n Diaspora to return home. Today, Singapore is one of the most prosperous nations on the face of the earth. It is imperative that Buhari of Nigeria learn a good lesson from Lee Kuan Y ew of Singapore to make Nigeria an enviable nation in the world. It’s doable. Lee Kuan Yew is a prism with which Buhari should look into the future of Nigeria. Meanwhile, I have prescribed one of the doses of leadership which is a benevolent Democracy as practiced in Singapore. A benevolent leader who will come out of the blue to instill the nuances of benevolent democracy.

The leader who will not spare anyone, no matter how highly placed the person might be. Gideon Okar would have done that surgical political procedure to heal Nigeria from the metastatic cancer-killing, obliterati­ng the sense of reasoning of all Nigerians. But the vegetable-dying-evil-man in Minna punctuated Nigerian road to eldorado. Moreover, the current and past achievemen­ts of Nigerians at home and abroad are templates for Buhari’s administra­tion to speedily put all resources and machinery in motion to bring the Nigerian Diaspora back home for nation-building. He is cleaning the A ugean of corruption in Nigeria now. Is he doing it with fairness and equity and justice? Justice must be seen to be dispensed to looters with no sacred cows to reassure the Nigerian Diaspora to return home for national integratio­n and nation-building. Most of us can discern why this writer is an incurable optimist of a great Nigeria. Nigerians are so talented, stunningly smart and resourcefu­l. We stand out and very outstandin­g in all our profession­al callings. Every blessed achievemen­t of Nigerian yonder is an opportunit­y to showcase Nigeria imbued and endowed resources to the stunning world. Our hidden and real story has not yet been told in all its ramificati­ons. We only dibble-dabble in our untold story yearning to be told. From Ekiti to Okene, from Kano to Umuahia; Abakaleke to Imo and to Ojuelegba, our stupendous story of achievemen­ts and challenges are the same. When you remember your roots far away from yonder, you’re subsumed in the ocean of sublimity and grace. But when you remember the existentia­l threat Nigeria has posed to itself in the past, you are quick to remember that Nigeria is a country that is yet to re-invent itself to achieve the laudable goals within its reach. With our great human capital and untapped resources, all hands must be on deck to change our ruinous ways of life, and unleash our greatest potentials; change the course of our ugly history for the progress of Nigeria. All we need now is total reawakenin­g to re-invent in what made us great in the past.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria