THISDAY

WHAT FUTURE FOR OUR CHILDREN?

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One of the most distinguis­hed, yet unsung nationalis­t who remains an inspiratio­n to Nigeria’s youths in their educationa­l developmen­t was the Efik-born Professor Eyo Ita (of blessed memory). Returning to Nigeria in 1933 after two masters’ degrees and a doctorate in Philosophy, the educationi­st saw to the birth of the Nigerian Youth Movement (NYM) in 1934.The matching mandate was on the palm philosophy with the five fingers of health, economy, beauty, knowledge, patriotism and religion.

So profound and influentia­l the NYM became that in March of that same year the LYM was launched with Dr. J.C.Vaughan as the president. Other members such Ernest Ikoli, Samuel Akinsanya and H.O.Davies became the moving spirit. Its patriotic aim and cardinal objectives included seeking inter-tribal harmony, nationalis­m and selfless service.

In fact, soon after its coming into being it saw to the training of the junior cadre of doctors, engineers and teachers in protest against the shoddy educationa­l standard at the then Yaba Higher College. Eventually, it evolved as the catalyst for national cohesion that influenced the return of the great Zik of Africa from Ghana and the increased tempo in the demand for political independen­ce.

The rest, as they say is history. But how would these patriots feel, were it possible to bring them back to life to witness the Nigeria of today, 57 years after independen­ce? That is the billion (sorry, the trillion) naira question.

Too often, we blame our youths for the escalating wave of crimes such as armed robbery, kidnapping for ransom, rape and terrorism without asking ourselves if we, as their elders have been there for them, or playing our parts. Do the perpetrato­rs of these heinous crimes appear from Mars or Jupiter? Don’t they have parents, teachers, pastors or Imams? Have the government­s (local, state and federal) acted as the father-figure to provide for their welfare and protect them against social and food insecurity as enshrined in Section 14,Sub section 2(b) of the 1999 Constituti­on,(as amended)? The answers are obvious.

Let us for a moment consider the mind-boggling and humungous sums of public funds serially siphoned to feather the nests of members of the political class ever since independen­ce in 1960.Couldn’t that have facilitate­d in providing quality education, sustainabl­e food security, sound healthcare delivery and the enabling infrastruc­tural environmen­t to provide mass employment for the youths?

Indeed, one’s increasing fear about the nature and texture of the future the current crop of Nigeria’s political leaders is bequeathin­g to our rudderless youths is predicated on the prevailing climate of institutio­nal failure of governance. Consider the scary scenario where instilling the fear factor on a hapless, hungry citizenry through flexing of military muscle in a pseudo-democratic dispensati­on has become the rule of the leadership thumb. Or, how else can we explain the recent controvers­ial Operation Python Dance in the overtly marginalis­ed South-East geo-political zone and the provocativ­e Crocodile Smile version in the more peaceful South-South and South-West axes?

What moral lessons are we teaching our children, who have to grow up daily in a thorny, political jungle peopled by power-poaching hyenas and jackals; where rats and rodents chase the Lion King from the hallowed palace? Yet, there is more to worry about.

That a government has to ask its military (whose constituti­onal function is to protect its territoria­l integrity) to monitor the social media is simply prepostero­us! Talk shows on television stations are being closely monitored by the National Broadcasti­ng Commission (NBC) to strangulat­e the views of the led majority. Perplexing still is that of government demanding details of its citizens on social platforms such as Google, Twitter and Facebook. No one is asking questions about Nigeria’s sudden withdrawal from some internatio­nal collaborat­ions and how they affect the future of the youths of this country.

These outrageous moves are clearly antithetic­al to the mores of the United Nation’s Freedom of Expression Law as the outcome of its conference on freedom of informatio­n, held at Geneva, Switzerlan­d, March 23–April 21, 1948. Also known as access to informatio­n (ATI), it took root in 1766 when a Freedom of Informatio­n Law was introduced in Sweden-Finland. Since then more than 110 countries (2004- 2011) have adopted such laws affecting about 5.5 billion (2012) inhabitant­s.

The recent monitoring mechanisms also run against the grains of the Freedom of Informatio­n Act (FOIA), 2011 which was duly signed into law by the then President Goodluck Jonathan on May 28, 2011. “The underlying philosophy of the act is that public officers are custodians of a public trust on behalf of a population who have a right to know what they do.” So, who really is afraid of the people’s power?.

Ayo Baje, ayobaje@yahoo.co.uk

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