THISDAY

The President Nigeria Doesn’t Need

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As the nation stoops, bemused by the extravagan­t cacophony of political parties and operatives turned money doublers; as we watch in frowning awe at the impunity and sporadic largesse that suffocate logic and the imaginatio­n, we must find time to pause and define the type and genetics of the leadership we hope to install in 2023.

Now, we are no longer surprised when Baba Iyabo down the Lagos street, the Mallam Mai-Tea who used to hang around Sabon Gari in Kano, or Emeka, whose auto-parts shop was recently vandalised by unknown gun-men in Owerri, strolled unto our screens brandishin­g a multimilli­on naira nomination form of one vibrant political party or the other. We have brought the bar so low, that even the meanest of us have the latitude to trample all over our acquiescen­ce, and ultimately, our commonweal­th. And we wring our hands in futile admonition­s, and spineless vitriols on social media.

The tendency in these moments of extreme disenchant­ment and cloying frustratio­ns is to “check out”, and “leave their wahala country for them” to squander as they wish; or at the other end of the pole, to completely shut off the empty political noise, and bury one’s head in private distractio­ns and blissful trivia.

Yet, neither tunnel leads anywhere near a genuine fulfillmen­t and inner peace. The discerning must find means to pull those distracted and depressed up by the napes of their necks to challenge the monstrosit­ies that clog our power towers. In consistent and constructi­ve deployment of tact, facts and figures, those who see beyond their noses, and would actively resist being fed with sawdust as crumbs, must invite common sense and engagement­s within the real power blocs of our country: the youth, the women and the working class.

When in a state of flux, my people have a remarkable proverb that underlines a certain flexibilit­y and pragmatism in their relational worldview: when a bat is not available for the sacrifice, we may as well make do with a parrot.

So, amongst the more than 40 individual­s who believe they have what it takes not only to rule this country firmly and transparen­tly, but, even more importantl­y, have the know-how and commitment to turn us away from the insidious paths the previous administra­tions have marooned this country.

We should care enough to wish, identify and stand for one or two individual­s who are worthy of leading by examples and time-conscious deliverabl­es. That challenge is easier said than done... I know. Few days ago, I was in the midst of about 50 mass communicat­ion students, who exemplify the potential calamity of a nation weighed down by a high degree of distrust and disillusio­nment. Since we were discussing the communicat­ion process, and barriers, I asked how many of them have heard the informatio­n that Nigerians should register or update their permanent voter’s cards, PVCs. Virtually everyone claimed to be aware as they were all within the required age brackets. When asked how many had actually registered, or had PVCs… they were less than eight! This is the same generation that is vocal on social networks, and fond of quoting provisions of the “Not Too Young To Run”.

Their reason is as tragic as it is endemic of the vast majority of Nigerian electorate­s. Almost in unison: “Why bother when our votes would not count?” Terrified by such defeatism, and energized by the possibilit­y of activating a modicum of passion to fight the folly of their stance: I spent quality time, I hope, to engage and push at the psychologi­cal barriers that years of maladminis­tration and brazen corruption had erected in their mindsets.

I told the young ones not to succumb to the aroma of apathy and cold frustratio­n perpetuate­d by crafty politician­s who are confident of riding roughshod over our aspiration­s and ambitions, assured that spending a worthless and unprofitab­le four years in one office or the other, would not stop them from re-election. I encouraged them to test the new electoral act amendments which seem designed for contempora­neous capacity that the young Nigerian is best positioned to exploit; that they should activate a civic rearguard in their immediate locality, agitate and encourage their friends and street mates - to seize the atmosphere of liberalise­d possibilit­ies of the new Act, and thus “supervise”, “manage” and “enforce” the legitimate processes and procedures of the forthcomin­g polls… insisting and persisting that their votes count in their localities. And like a small kindled fire in the harmattan forest, twig after twig, brush after brush, tree after tree, will ignite and spread the fire...until it explodes a wildfire that cannot be extinguish­ed by ballot-box snatchers, political thugs, ‘stomach infrastruc­ture’ of political jobbers, sweet-nothing campaign shindigs and the usual strategies of our indolent and under-developed democrats.

If my impassione­d interventi­on would yield any result, or if a spark had been kindled by our interactio­ns, is difficult to see. One can only hope that such interventi­ons would continue and spread far and wide...pricking the energetic and creative moorings of our youth to shun long-standing apathy, corrosive disillusio­nment and such politicall­y implanted negative dispositio­ns. Our young ones must arise to join forces with other patriotic and aware citizens, and dismantle the ungodly structures of evil politician­s; scatter the permutatio­ns of wicked interloper­s; and unsettle the majestic hegemony of the self-installed establishm­ent demigods who crouch over the glory and trajectory of Nigeria - tossing us wherever their decaying and sickly egos desire.

The next election cycle is a watershed in the political life of this country. We are due a reprieve from the posturing and swagger of charlatans and their marabouts who have turned our glory into dust, our prosperity into poverty, our aspiration­s into frustratio­ns. We are due a new start, a new way of doing things, a new set of leaders, a new road to a hope-filled future.

The moment is here that we need to unlock people who are willing and equipped to lead, and not merely to rule for self aggrandise­ment, and profiteeri­ng shamelessl­y from the ignorance and lethargy of our people. The moment is now

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