THISDAY

AWARDS AS THEATRE OF ESCAPE

Nigeria needs a courageous leader with cosmopolit­an values, writes

- GEORGE OKONFUA Okunfua, a retired Director of Occupation­al Safety and Health, Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment writes from Benin, Edo State

Only the management of the Sun Newspapers knows the reasons this year’s award was brought forward to share a border with the deadline for the purchase of the Expression of Interest and Nomination Forms of political parties for the 2023 general elections. If it is a mere coincidenc­e, it hangs D WDOH RQ WKH QDWLRQ WKDW LV LQ D ÁX[ 6R PDQ\ things are happening but the upbeat in political activities is relatively drowning the swell of the inclement weather hanging over the horizon. The masses are doom scrolled already and are beginning to be desensitiz­ed to the horrors of everyday killings and kidnapping­s. No doubt, The Sun has establishe­d a huge integrity over its awards and this year’s is no different. But at this material time, the event additional­ly offers an aside to the heavily burdened national consciousn­ess, as top politician­s, presidenti­al hopefuls among them, line up for trophies. David Umahi, Bala Mohammed, Hope Uzodimma, Sanwo-Olu, Rotimi Amaechi, Chris Ngige, Ahmed Lawan, Musa Kwankwazo, and others. Who knows? One of them may end up leading the nation out of its present woes. Saturday, May 7th, 2022 will therefore be a theatre of escape from the monotony of relentless tragedies for many wearied Nigerians, who will be glued to the live broadcast. If the national grid decides to collapse that day and increase the pressure on the black market, that powers I-pass-myneighbou­r in many homes, the social media LV WKHUH WR ÀOO WKH JDS

The motto of the Sun newspaper is “the Voice of the Nation” and it has indeed played that role. How wonderful if one of the persons walking up the dais, will be the one to restore voice to the voiceless that constitute the national majority. The publisher of Sun, Senator Orji Kalu lest I forget, is also a presidenti­al aspirant. Memories fade so fast. On October 1, 2002 independen­ce anniversar­y live programme on the then must-watch Kaakaki morning show, on African Independen­t Television(AIT) Zikist and foremost nationalis­t, M.C.K. Ajuluchukw­u said Orji Kalu was the only Governor in the South East that had the vision of the late Premiere of the Eastern Region, M.I. Okpara. Orji is not receiving the Sun award. It will be immoral, hence this angle to my piece ends here but not without adding that the New Telegraph which he also publishes has a motto “sanctity of truth,” that provides the seminal line to the rest of this piece.

Truth telling is Nigeria’s major problem. The land is replete with deceitful leaders, paying lip service to nation-building. Hypocrisy, truth’s bitter enemy is the bane of Nigeria. Even though politics is an algorithm of complex calculatio­ns, a game, how long shall the nation be bound to pretenses and still hope for the good of the greatest number? Nations that are incapable of truth can’t learn from the past while social bonds in composite diversity like ours, are broken, setting the people against themselves. This is where we are in Nigeria, hobbled by FHQWULIXJD­O FRQFHUQV WKDW À[ WKH QDWLRQ RQ WKH book end. We need a different leader; one who can confront the realities and free the nation from the disintegra­tive shackles of ages, fueling economic doldrums. Nigeria needs a courageous leader, with cosmopolit­an values, unyielding to provincial considerat­ions. She needs a leader who can provide for the nation, a deep mine of H[SHULHQFH WR FKHFNPDWH FRXQWOHVV ÁDZV that hem progress. Then, the uncommon patriotism, strong belief that Nigeria can work for all her people. We need someone not bugged down by the narrowness of expertise or competence in one area but a generalist who must have a fair knowledge of every sector- a jack of all trade if you like; the reason being that Nigeria is yet to develop strong institutio­ns.

Of all in the presidenti­al race, none comes closer to this revolution­ary examples than Senator Chris Ngige and I will explain starting with courage and patriotism.

There is no better way to express strong support for fatherland than exemplify such like Ngige has done with his three children who graduated from Nigeria public schools with sons and daughters of the poor. Ngige knew the value of the Executive Order three & five on backward integratio­n of human resources long before the government he serves ever muted it. It is this same patriotism, imbued with courage that saw him defeat the moral foes of democracy, liberate and lay a new foundation for Anambra State. Even though this choice on the side of the people would later make him lose his seat as governor, he didn’t mind. The same patriotism made Ngige rise beyond the corrosive politics of ethnicity to ensure that the headship of the five parastatal­s in his ministry is evenly shared among geographic­al zones, contrary to what obtains in most ministries. Like Zik, whose disciplesh­ip he confesses, he is a firm believer in one Nigeria, hence has not disguised strong disapprova­l for the violent trend of agitation in his South East zone. As Governor many years ago, he effectivel­y dialogued and doused the resurgent MASSOB, even reforming part of its ranks into the formidable Anambra Vigilante Group, through a law enacted by the State Assembly. The same act of courage and honest leadership would save the nation, thousands of jobs when Ngige stopped the unilateral redundancy declared by banks and financial institutio­ns in 2016. Courageous­ly too, he engaged the oil majors and equally saved jobs in thousands.

This same virtue forced him break the linear cesspool of corruption in Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund, and moved it from an agency that could not pay salaries in 2016/2017 to one that could save over N18b as of December 2021. Such is also behind that quality advisory he made available to the President, ensuring that government did not downsize its workforce despite two regimes of recession.

Ngige is known for creating new ways. He changed his ministry from mere dispute resolution centre without capital vote, to one creating new skills centres, rehabilita­ting old ones, and using its new position in the ILO Governing body, where it was absent for a decade, to influence expertise in jobs creation, skills acquisitio­n and labour laws, that would have ordinarily taken the nation millions of dollars in human capital training. Quietly also, he is shifting national emphasis from white collar jobs to the abundant opportunit­ies in blue collar world. He did set such new way in Anambra when he initiated the return of 56 schools to the missions in 2006, halted the general strike that kept doctors, teachers and students at home for eight and 12 months respective­ly, issued an Executive Order through which salaries and pensions were placed on first line charge and built a phenomenal road network that has defied elements for close to two decades.

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