THISDAY

UN’s Commitment to a United Nigeria

- Kene Obiezu, keneobiezu@gmail.com

The strength that comes from unity and the safety that comes in number have always played stirring roles in the experience­s people have of each other and the world they inhabit. Because people have played witness to the power produced when people pool together, the importance of working together, of speaking with one voice is imprinted in the human psyche. This imprint is made more imperative by the need to belong, the need not to be left out.

The United Nations, an umbrella body of 193 Member States was formed as a response to the devastatio­ns of the Second World War. The staggering scale of human suffering and destructio­n of infrastruc­ture wrought as the war raged spoke an irresistib­le language to a world that until then had largely held in disdain the idea of working together.

Since its inception, the interventi­ons of the United Nations in world affairs have proven crucial not just in nipping potentiall­y cataclysmi­c conflicts in the bud before they arise, but in building a world that is at once peaceful and prosperous.

It speaks to the significan­t appeal of the United Nations and its telling trajectory in softly shaping world affairs that even otherwise renegade countries ruled by dictators do everything they can to belong to the body.

The United Nations Secretary-General Mr. Antonio Guterres recently took in his first official visit to Nigeria for a period of two days. Among other things, the visit afforded the Secretary General the opportunit­y to meet with the families of the victims of terrorism as well as evaluate the impact of climate change on vulnerable communitie­s and assess progress made, as well as the challenges to the COVID-19 recovery.

Among other things, he reiterated the commitment of the United Nations to support Nigeria in building a country that is peaceful and prosperous. While paying tribute to the victims of the August 26 2011 terrorist attack on the UN House in Abuja that left 23 UN employees and civilians dead and 16 injured, the UN Chief crucially asked that the perpetrato­rs of terrorism in the country should be brought to justice even as the United

Nations was adopting a victim-centered approach to tackling terrorism in the country.

While the UN chief toured Nigeria, there were calls for him from some quarters to move beyond government`s rhetoric and see for himself just how bad things are in a country that has been on the precipice for far too long. These calls served to amplify the disconnect many Nigerians feel from their government, and especially the distrust.

This is especially a problem because in the human experience, the bad always travels faster and farther than the good such that it becomes very easy to lose sight of the fact that there are always two sides to any coin. In the context of governance, even when they are truly miraculous achievemen­ts in a couple of areas as is the case with the present administra­tion, it is the rotten eggs that make the news. With distrust swirling like a cyclone in Nigeria, the crucial partnershi­p between the government and the governed in building a strong nation has simply refused to work.

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