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Before You Shred Your Nigerian Passport By Dotun Adekanmbi - Politics (6) - Nairaland

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Re: Before You Shred Your Nigerian Passport By Dotun Adekanmbi by mentored: 5:38pm On Sep 25, 2020
Realboygenius:
“My country, right or wrong; if right, to be kept right; and if wrong, to be set right.”- Carl Schurz

For folks tired of Nigeria, the 2020 Henley Passport Index, which is regarded as “the most rigorous and sophisticated measure of global access,” is another good reason to believe that Nigeria ‘is not worth it.’ According to the report, our passport, which has been ranked as the 97th most powerful in the world, is only good to visit just 46 countries visa-free or obtain visa on arrival or be issued eVisa by destination countries like Afghanistan, Suriname, Antigua and Barbuda, Micronesia, St Kitts and Nevis or even Tuvalu. Never heard of some of these countries? Well, I am not kidding.

By contrast, nationals of Japan, Singapore and South Korea, which placed first, second and third on the index can respectively access 191, 190 and 189 countries visa-free. In Africa, citizens of Seychelles at 29th position can easily enter 151 countries while South Africans can effortlessly access 101 countries by virtue of their country’s 56th placement on the index. If it is any consolation, it needs to be said that although Nigeria’s rating went down by 19 spots between 2010 and 2020, the most by any ranked country, we still fared better than Sudan (102), Somalia (105), Syria (107), Iraq (108) and Afghanistan, which came last at 109th position. Citizens of the latter two countries can only enter 28 and 26 countries respectively without a visa.

But things have not always been this way. Years back, we had reasons to be proud of our nation, even as we passed through difficult times. The bitterness of the Civil War did not keep us down, though the scars are still very much noticeable. Citizens embraced various forms of ‘austerity measures’ particularly in the 1980s and early 1990s when the profligacy of successive military and civilian governments took a heavy toll on the economic health of Nigeria. Our resilience found voice in our belief that ‘e go better’ and ‘Nigeria go survive.’ That hope was rekindled each time our sportsmen and women made Nigeria proud in global and continental sports festivals. We recognised the unifying factor of sports, which helped us to set aside our individual and collective differences. In the field of sports, we never pushed for ethnic quota equilibrium; we never queried religious affiliations and we never bothered about age and allied matters. We simply settled for excellence. And we got results, as exemplified by our winning the 1985 FIFA-Coca-Cola Under-17 World Cup; the 1996 summer Olympics football tournament as well as gold medal in the women’s long jump won by Chioma Ajunwa and, by default, the gold medal in 4 x 400m relay in the 2000 summer Olympics.

Our decline was also as swift as our rise after we began to politicise all aspects of national life. Our value system changed dramatically after citizens saw that the leadership had loosened its belt whilst urging the masses to tighten theirs. Some of our ‘small girls’ began to have ‘big gods’ and several ‘benefit Papa’ whilst the ‘smart boys’ savaged the internet, with ‘Invictus Obi’ and ‘Hushpuppi’ as poster boys. The rest invested their time in watching ‘Big Brother Naija,’ content with letting the old brigade alter the masterplan of their destiny. Where we hitherto pleaded with ‘Andrew’ not to ‘check out’, citizens quickly embraced brain drain. Doctors and other professionals left our shores in droves. Ministers lied to us that we had enough doctors to cope with medical emergencies and it took the outset of the Coronavirus pandemic to burst the bubble. But for COVID-19, only God knows how many more people would have left Nigeria. Or how much of scarce foreign exchange would have been lost to medical tourism. At the heart of these challenges is the absence of purposeful leadership.

Contrary to what many Nigerians tend to believe, our country is not difficult to govern. All that is needed is a partnership of visionary leadership and a followership that is not awed by ephemeral power. Both need to truly ‘pledge to Nigeria,’ not submit to the whims of individuals or political parties. Both need to recognise that public service is a social contract that makes a clear distinction between ‘national’ and ‘self’ interest. Much of the responsibility to enforce the contract, however, reside in us, the people, rather than in the leadership. Time and again, the leadership cartel in Nigeria have remorselessly demonstrated strong belief in the doctrine of taking from the poor to comfort the rich. By the same token, the masses who are the real repository of power need to be guided to vigorously exercise their franchise to demand good governance and accountability. ‘Ask and ye shall be given,’ the good book says.

The viewpoints of the leadership and the followership are, however, not necessarily antithetical as the late Premier of the Northern Region and Sardauna of Sokoto, Alhaji Tafawa Balewa, demonstrated when he echoed similar sentiments, saying: “I’m convinced and I want you to be convinced that the future of this vast country must depend in the main on the efforts of ourselves to help ourselves. This we cannot do if we do not work together in unity.”

In a similar vein, the late elder statesman, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, outlined a simple treatise on the route to purposeful leadership. Said he: “It is only when the minds of men have been properly and rigorously cultivated and garnished that they can be safely entrusted with public affairs with a certainty and assuredness that they will make the best of their unique opportunity and assignment.” The import is that Nigeria does not suffer a dearth of good leaders. But we need to be rid of the rancid air of the political space, which keeps good people away from public service to avoid asphyxiation.

The point in all of this is that if, as individuals, we demonstrate love for Nigeria by being a lot more alive to our civic responsibility, much of what ails Nigeria would be correctly diagnosed and treated. Just the other day, I travelled to Dubai with an Indian professional colleague to attend an all-agencies public relations conference for a blue-chip multinational company. While on the queue to clear immigration and customs, we both noticed that Nigerian travellers received extra- attention from airport officials. My friend whispered to me: “see, we’re brothers. Your passport and my passport, nobody likes them.” How true! Today, with India at number 85 and Nigeria at 97, we remain ‘brothers.’ This makes me sad. And angry. Tell me, who wouldn’t be?

But rather than put my country down, I choose to see the good in Nigeria. Just like a man deeply in love, I will rather find that one good reason to stay in a relationship even when there are hundreds of persuasive reasons to leave. I choose to side with the people who counsel others “not to forget that the first duty of every global citizen is to set right what is wrong in our country.” I love Nigeria. But I will no longer settle for leadership that promotes blind patriotism; I will not allow anyone to “piss down my back and tell me it's raining.” If, as a leader, you must earn my respect, then you must heed the paraphrased immortal words of Chief Awolowo: ‘you must be prepared to grasp the nettle, set a worthy example in probity, unselfishness and self-sacrifice and the people will follow all too readily in your footsteps.’ Makes sense.

Dotun Adekanmbi is a Lagos-based media relations practitioner.



i want military to take over
Re: Before You Shred Your Nigerian Passport By Dotun Adekanmbi by mentored: 5:40pm On Sep 25, 2020
Oritsewhandey:

........
Must Nairaland ALLOW ANOTHER SPAMMED PERSONALITY, just to show their disgust at what the RIGHTEOUSNESS89 posts?

Many of him will rise and post more than the REAL person.

So sickening what this fake person derives in ridiculing another person's image?

Humans are inherently evil in thought though.



its a muslim platform



if you know you know
Re: Before You Shred Your Nigerian Passport By Dotun Adekanmbi by Nobody: 7:46pm On Sep 25, 2020
Iceman296:
Nigeria will still be a great nation, only when the citizens stand up and fight for their country.

Every election, we have the power to elect credible leaders who will have the future of Nigeria in mind. Not recycling old retired and greedy men who don't care about the Country.

I have accepted that this will not happen in my time - perhaps the future generation but definitely not these over-sexed, drug-addicted, non-graduating BBN-loving y0000ts we have today tongue
Re: Before You Shred Your Nigerian Passport By Dotun Adekanmbi by Cromagnon: 2:42am On Sep 26, 2020
emae009:


you can do that on your own
o so you know you're saying rubbish with no proof. OK na continue victimising yourself.
Re: Before You Shred Your Nigerian Passport By Dotun Adekanmbi by emae009(m): 3:09am On Sep 26, 2020
Cromagnon:
o so you know you're saying rubbish with no proof. OK na continue victimising yourself.

how did you get victimising myself from my right top. The FG controls the natural resources, the police, every power generated in the country is fed into the national grid, the Land and water bill got rejected, etc. What I meant was that it was too much for that to be concentrated in the center in a diverse nation like us. As you know most states depend solely on the Federal allocation if you take that away it will make the state government more responsible to think for itself. it will in some way make only people that have great idea and strategy on how to run the government to compete as there won't be free money to be collected on the month basis.
Re: Before You Shred Your Nigerian Passport By Dotun Adekanmbi by maasoap(m): 11:18am On Sep 26, 2020
emae009:


No system of government will end corruption, this will only make the State government more countable.
Like this below:
https://paradisenews.ng/55963/breaking-news-ayade-appoints-18-sas-on-religious-matters

Right now a lot of states base their plan on allocation from the FG. If that is taken away, the state government will now have to look internally to generate money which will make them think outside the box and thus bringing about progressive development.

Some states won't need to do anything at all to generate income, perhaps you're from one of those states. Don't pretend. Their wastefulness will only escalate. While some states that are not economically viable will struggle to do the least.

This in some way will make those people with great ideas and strategies to run for government and not just anybody with financial backing

I don't see how resources control encourages people with ideas and strategies run for posts and not people with financial backing, the correlation is there at all
Re: Before You Shred Your Nigerian Passport By Dotun Adekanmbi by emae009(m): 11:53am On Sep 26, 2020
maasoap:

Like this below:
https://paradisenews.ng/55963/breaking-news-ayade-appoints-18-sas-on-religious-matters



Some states won't need to do anything at all to generate income, perhaps you're from one of those states. Don't pretend. Their wastefulness will only escalate. While some states that are not economically viable will struggle to do the least.



I don't see how resources control encourages people with ideas and strategies run for posts and not people with financial backing, the correlation is there at all

Guess you're one of those that thinks oil is everything. That's why Nigeria is still oil dependent even after so many years of independence. Japan doesn't have any oil but they are striving or are they not economically viable, when China had a vision for world domination what did they do, they didn't export oil, instead they supported their local economy, lower the cost of Labour so much that multinationals from all over the world moved production to China.
Las Vegas is just a desert but it has more money than Nigeria which is a country. that's what thinking outside the box can do. Nigeria for example, instead of banning the importation of rice, the government should have increased the taxation of those import then use the money to subsidize the local produce that way the wealthy can still keep paying high amount for the foreign rice while the not so wealthy can get the local one for cheap.
Europe, Asia and America are subsidizing the price of electric cars so that people are more inclined to buy electric instead of combustion engines. Here the locally produced cars are as costly as the foreign ones. if the government makes the cost of the local cars cheap and the foreign one costlier, which one will a lot of people be willing to buy?
Oil is not everything. Saudi Arabia with the best octane rating of oil doesn't have a better economy than China that buys oil.
Re: Before You Shred Your Nigerian Passport By Dotun Adekanmbi by Cromagnon: 6:03am On Dec 28, 2020
emae009:


how did you get victimising myself from my right top.
Cos all you do is play victim
Instead of seeking solution or implementing

The FG controls the natural resources
Who controls the FG,spirits?

, the police,
So?

every power generated in the country is fed into the national grid,
Lies
A lot is generated privately(from dangotes 54mw Obajana plant to the 600w i-pass-my-neighbour gen we all have)
the Land and water bill got rejected,
These can be loopholed like the police above

etc. What I meant was that it was too much for that to be concentrated in the center in a diverse nation like us.
We voted for it
Time to lie on the bed we laid or relay it
Our choice
But I'm sure you're comfortable in Canada so.......

As you know most states depend solely on the Federal allocation
Incorrect
Most STATE GOVTS CHOOSE to be Dependent
if you take that away it will make the state government more responsible to think for itself.
WRONG
They will simply extort the cowardly citizenry as the strong are won't to prey on the weak in nature

it will in some way make only people that have great idea and strategy on how to run the government to compete as there won't be free money to be collected on the month basis.
It's the govt

Even in Somalia there is always free money to collect in taxes from the timid
Re: Before You Shred Your Nigerian Passport By Dotun Adekanmbi by Cromagnon: 6:04am On Dec 28, 2020
emae009:


you can do that on your own
Why you run
Scared I will expose your laziness

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