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Fuel Subsidy Removal: Time To “occupy” Nigeria? - Politics - Nairaland

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Fuel Subsidy Removal: Time To “occupy” Nigeria? by arsenefc: 11:33am On Oct 23, 2011



A seismic social convulsion is sweeping across the advanced capitalist nations of the world right now. It’s called the “Occupy” movement, which started with the “Occupy Wall Street” protest in New York. As I write this column, the protest continues to gather momentum and spread to not only other American cities (there was a hugely successful “Occupy Atlanta” protest here) but also to other major Western capitals and cities.

At the last count, nearly 100 countries in the world have caught the “occupy” bug. It’s a spontaneous grassroots rebellion against asphyxiating elite tyranny, greed, and other capitalist excesses.

But there is nowhere in the world that this protest is needed more urgently than in Nigeria where a clueless, thieving, conscienceless, and parasitic elite class is about to commit suicide through its wrongheaded plan to “remove fuel subsidies,” which is nothing more than an unimaginative, well-worn code for increasing fuel prices and deepening the misery of an already traumatized citizenry.

One of the slogans of the “Occupy Wall Street” protesters is, “We are the 99 percent”— in reference to the obscene income disparity in America where more than 40 percent of the wealth generated by the economy goes to the top 1 percent of the country’s population. But the income inequality in America pales miserably in comparison with the outrageously unconscionable pauperization of large swaths of the Nigerian population by a cruelly insensitive and rapacious ruling class. Nigeria’s problem isn’t merely one of income inequality; it’s more the sobering reality of the perpetually savage violation of the masses of the people by a criminally privileged elite few in order to subsidize their vain, epicurean indulgences.

[size=15pt]Nowhere is this insensitivity more evident than in the perennial blackmail of the masses by successive governments through removal of so-called fuel subsidies. For as long as I can remember, every Nigerian government has “deregulated” and “removed fuel subsidy” to generate income for “national infrastructural development.”  When the late General Sani Abacha hiked fuel prices in the mid-1990s, for instance, we were told that the last subsidy had been removed. To “cushion the effect” of this drastic action, the Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF) was established and entrusted with the responsibility of renewing Nigeria’s decaying infrastructure and health care.[/size]

After that “subsidy removal,” a lot of Nigerians were relieved not because they were anesthetized by the PTF palliative but by what they thought was their freedom from the permanent government blackmail that told them they were undeserving beneficiaries of government’s expensive benevolence through fuel subsidies. But the freedom lasted for only a short while. [size=18pt]Olusegun Obasanjo came and rehabilitated the old blackmail strategy: he said government was collapsing under the ponderous weight of its magnanimity toward the masses through fuel subsidies. He therefore increased fuel prices more times than any president or head of state in Nigeria’s entire history.[/size]

The last time he increased fuel prices, he assured Nigerians that the last abiding subsidy had been removed once and for all. The oil industry was now truly and totally deregulated. Government would no longer intervene in determining fuel prices. In the new “deregulated” milieu, the wise, invisible but self-regulating dynamic of demand and supply would determine fuel prices. Even though Nigerians were being fooled for the umpteenth time, they, in their legendary docility, put up with the government’s lies and came to peace with the unjustified increases in fuel prices.

Now, the Goodluck Jonathan administration is deploying the same old, hackneyed, duplicitous, and mind-numbingly familiar arguments to increase fuel prices. But I think this time around the government is pushing its luck a little too far—never mind that the name of the president is “good luck.” As the English say, even a worm will turn, meaning even the meekest and most docile person will fight back if you push him so hard that he has nowhere else to escape to.

Goodluck Jonathan--may not be lucky this time

The government is about to push the masses of Nigerians to a cul-de-sac. When that happens the masses would be faced with only two options: fight back fiercely and doggedly or submit to incremental but sure death. If it is true that self-preservation is the first law of nature, I expect a sustained, single-minded, and uncompromising battle in the coming months. The time may have finally come when the fault-lines of ethnicity and religion that have historically divided Nigerians will no longer matter.




[size=18pt]But the Nigerian people should never wait until next year when the government increases fuel prices before they strike. The “Occupy Nigeria” movement should start right away! And here is why.
[/size]
While over 80 percent of Nigerians live below the breadline, our legislators at both houses of the National Assembly earn more money than any elected official in the whole world, including Barack Obama, president of the world’s most prosperous nation. Our president and his numberless coterie of useless minions pillage the national treasury daily in the name of maintaining government. Our ministers are the most expensive public officials in the world.

Now, because a numerically insignificant portion of the population that are “privileged” to work for government asked for a miserly 18,000 naira ($114) a month minimum wage, the government wants to push every Nigerian who falls outside the orbit of institutionalized stealing otherwise known as government to the brink, to the very edge of existence. The same government that is complaining of the unbearable burden of “subsidizing” fuel prizes for the masses of Nigeria has depleted our foreign reserve by $3.5 billion in 2011 alone to subsidize the unconscionably lavish opulence of its members.

[size=20pt]In all of this, perhaps the biggest scandal is that among oil-producing countries in the world, Nigerians pay about the most for petrol[/size]. While Nigerians currently pay about $1.64 for fuel per gallon, Venezuelans pay only 18 cents per gallon (meaning a bottle of water is cheaper than a gallon of petrol in the country!), Iranians pay just 37 cents per gallon, war-ravaged Libyans 54 cents, Saudi Arabians 48 cents, Qataris 72 cents, Bahrainis 78 cents, Turkmens (citizens of Turkmenistan) 72 cents, Kuwaitis 87 cents, Omanis $1.17, Yemenis $1.32, etc. Only citizens of the United Arab Emirates pay slightly higher than us for petrol at $1.78 per gallon.

The standard of living in all of these countries is, of course, light-years higher than Nigeria’s. They have better social safety nets for their poor.

I read that that government wants to raise the fuel price to 141 naira per litter at the very minimum, which adds up $3.6 per gallon! That would mean that petrol would be cheaper in America and some European countries that don’t export oil than in Nigeria! I currently pay a little over $3 per gallon in Atlanta for quality fuel that actually burns a LOT slower than the fuel I use when I’m in Nigeria. (Nigerian importers always import the lowest possible quality of fuel to the country).

Remember, too, that the federal minimum wage in the United States is $7.25 per hour. That adds up to $1,160 per month, which is equivalent to 184,000 naira per month. In the state of Washington, the minimum wage per hour is $8.67.

So by next year, a low-grade clerk with an 18,000 naira monthly salary in Nigeria will be paying more for fuel than an American laborer who receives the equivalent of 184,000 per month. And the low-grade clerk is a citizen of the world’s 8th largest exporter of oil. Where is the justice in that? Why the heck should we have cream and our faces are dry?

If Nigerians don’t wake up now and occupy Aso Rock, the National Assembly, the Federal Secretariat, the Central Bank, governor’s offices all over the federation, etc they will be “occupied.” And this “occupation” will be more suffocating than it has ever been. The choice before Nigerians is one between death and life. I hope Nigerians choose life!

http://saharareporters.com/article/fuel-subsidy-removal-time-%E2%80%9Coccupy%E2%80%9D-nigeria-farooq-kperogi
Re: Fuel Subsidy Removal: Time To “occupy” Nigeria? by phuckNL: 11:39am On Oct 23, 2011
arsenefc:






A seismic social convulsion is sweeping across the advanced capitalist nations of the world right now. It’s called the “Occupy” movement, which started with the “Occupy Wall Street” protest in New York. As I write this column, the protest continues to gather momentum and spread to not only other American cities (there was a hugely successful “Occupy Atlanta” protest here) but also to other major Western capitals and cities.

At the last count, nearly 100 countries in the world have caught the “occupy” bug. It’s a spontaneous grassroots rebellion against asphyxiating elite tyranny, greed, and other capitalist excesses.

But there is nowhere in the world that this protest is needed more urgently than in Nigeria where a clueless, thieving, conscienceless, and parasitic elite class is about to commit suicide through its wrongheaded plan to “remove fuel subsidies,” which is nothing more than an unimaginative, well-worn code for increasing fuel prices and deepening the misery of an already traumatized citizenry.

One of the slogans of the “Occupy Wall Street” protesters is, “We are the 99 percent”— in reference to the obscene income disparity in America where more than 40 percent of the wealth generated by the economy goes to the top 1 percent of the country’s population. But the income inequality in America pales miserably in comparison with the outrageously unconscionable pauperization of large swaths of the Nigerian population by a cruelly insensitive and rapacious ruling class. Nigeria’s problem isn’t merely one of income inequality; it’s more the sobering reality of the perpetually savage violation of the masses of the people by a criminally privileged elite few in order to subsidize their vain, epicurean indulgences.

Nowhere is this insensitivity more evident than in the perennial blackmail of the masses by successive governments through removal of so-called fuel subsidies. For as long as I can remember, every Nigerian government has “deregulated” and “removed fuel subsidy” to generate income for “national infrastructural development.” When the late General Sani Abacha hiked fuel prices in the mid-1990s, for instance, we were told that the last subsidy had been removed. To “cushion the effect” of this drastic action, the Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF) was established and entrusted with the responsibility of renewing Nigeria’s decaying infrastructure and health car.

After that “subsidy removal,” a lot of Nigerians were relieved not because they were anesthetized by the PTF palliative but by what they thought was their freedom from the permanent government blackmail that told them they were undeserving beneficiaries of government’s expensive benevolence through fuel subsidies. But the freedom lasted for only a short while. Olusegun Obasanjo came and rehabilitated the old blackmail strategy: he said government was collapsing under the ponderous weight of its magnanimity toward the masses through fuel subsidies. He therefore increased fuel prices more times than any president or head of state in Nigeria’s entire history.

The last time he increased fuel prices, he assured Nigerians that the last abiding subsidy had been removed once and for all. The oil industry was now truly and totally deregulated. Government would no longer intervene in determining fuel prices. In the new “deregulated” milieu, the wise, invisible but self-regulating dynamic of demand and supply would determine fuel prices. Even though Nigerians were being fooled for the umpteenth time, they, in their legendary docility, put up with the government’s lies and came to peace with the unjustified increases in fuel prices.

Now, the Goodluck Jonathan administration is deploying the same old, hackneyed, duplicitous, and mind-numbingly familiar arguments to increase fuel prices. But I think this time around the government is pushing its luck a little too far—never mind that the name of the president is “good luck.” As the English say, even a worm will turn, meaning even the meekest and most docile person will fight back if you push him so hard that he has nowhere else to escape to.

Goodluck Jonathan--may not be lucky this time

The government is about to push the masses of Nigerians to a cul-de-sac. When that happens the masses would be faced with only two options: fight back fiercely and doggedly or submit to incremental but sure death. If it is true that self-preservation is the first law of nature, I expect a sustained, single-minded, and uncompromising battle in the coming months. The time may have finally come when the fault-lines of ethnicity and religion that have historically divided Nigerians will no longer matter.




But the Nigerian people should never wait until next year when the government increases fuel prices before they strike. The “Occupy Nigeria” movement should start right away! And here is why.

While over 80 percent of Nigerians live below the breadline, our legislators at both houses of the National Assembly earn more money than any elected official in the whole world, including Barack Obama, president of the world’s most prosperous nation. Our president and his numberless coterie of useless minions pillage the national treasury daily in the name of maintaining government. Our ministers are the most expensive public officials in the world.

Now, because a numerically insignificant portion of the population that are “privileged” to work for government asked for a miserly 18,000 naira ($114) a month minimum wage, the government wants to push every Nigerian who falls outside the orbit of institutionalized stealing otherwise known as government to the brink, to the very edge of existence. The same government that is complaining of the unbearable burden of “subsidizing” fuel prizes for the masses of Nigeria has depleted our foreign reserve by $3.5 billion in 2011 alone to subsidize the unconscionably lavish opulence of its members.

In all of this, perhaps the biggest scandal is that among oil-producing countries in the world, Nigerians pay about the most for petrol. While Nigerians currently pay about $1.64 for fuel per gallon, Venezuelans pay only 18 cents per gallon (meaning a bottle of water is cheaper than a gallon of petrol in the country!), Iranians pay just 37 cents per gallon, war-ravaged Libyans 54 cents, Saudi Arabians 48 cents, Qataris 72 cents, Bahrainis 78 cents, Turkmens (citizens of Turkmenistan) 72 cents, Kuwaitis 87 cents, Omanis $1.17, Yemenis $1.32, etc. Only citizens of the United Arab Emirates pay slightly higher than us for petrol at $1.78 per gallon.

The standard of living in all of these countries is, of course, light-years higher than Nigeria’s. They have better social safety nets for their poor.

[size=14pt]I read that that government wants to raise the fuel price to 141 naira per litter at the very minimum, which adds up $3.6 per gallon! That would mean that petrol would be cheaper in America and some European countries that don’t export oil than in Nigeria! I currently pay a little over $3 per gallon in Atlanta for quality fuel that actually burns a LOT slower than the fuel I use when I’m in Nigeria. (Nigerian importers always import the lowest possible quality of fuel to the country).
Remember, too, that the federal minimum wage in the United States is $7.25 per hour. That adds up to $1,160 per month, which is equivalent to 184,000 naira per month. In the state of Washington, the minimum wage per hour is $8.67.[/size]
So by next year, a low-grade clerk with an 18,000 naira monthly salary in Nigeria will be paying more for fuel than an American laborer who receives the equivalent of 184,000 per month. And the low-grade clerk is a citizen of the world’s 8th largest exporter of oil. Where is the justice in that? Why the heck should we have cream and our faces are dry?

If Nigerians don’t wake up now and occupy Aso Rock, the National Assembly, the Federal Secretariat, the Central Bank, governor’s offices all over the federation, etc they will be “occupied.” And this “occupation” will be more suffocating than it has ever been. The choice before Nigerians is one between death and life. I hope Nigerians choose life!

http://saharareporters.com/article/fuel-subsidy-removal-time-%E2%80%9Coccupy%E2%80%9D-nigeria-farooq-kperogi


The US has more oil and gas than Nigeria. The only reason they import more than the rest of the world is to satisfy demand. The number of active oil and gas rigs currently in the US exceeds the total number of rigs WORLDWIDE put together by a far margin.
Its of no use comparing the US and Nigeria. The US has tonnes of refineries so unless world oil prices go up, don't expect gas prices to be unreasonalble. Petrol should not be expensive in Nigeria period. Dont contradict yourself by comparing the US. By the way, i'm not sure about this but i believe the fuel used in Nigeria is Premium grad.
Re: Fuel Subsidy Removal: Time To “occupy” Nigeria? by arsenefc: 11:40am On Oct 23, 2011
arsenefc:




If Nigerians don’t wake up now and occupy Aso Rock, the National Assembly, the Federal Secretariat, the Central Bank, governor’s offices all over the federation, etc they will be “occupied.” And this “occupation” will be more suffocating than it has ever been. The choice before Nigerians is one between death and life. I hope Nigerians choose life!

http://saharareporters.com/article/fuel-subsidy-removal-time-%E2%80%9Coccupy%E2%80%9D-nigeria-farooq-kperogi


This will never happen in Nigeria. Nigerians are too docile and Oshiomole is now playing for the other team, and Wole Soyinka is too old and Fragile and Gani Fawehinmi is dead .

Oh well, who will help us
Re: Fuel Subsidy Removal: Time To “occupy” Nigeria? by arsenefc: 11:44am On Oct 23, 2011
phuck_NL:

The US has more oil and gas than Nigeria.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oil_reserves



The only reason they import more than the rest of the world is to satisfy demand. The number of active oil and gas rigs currently in the US exceeds the total number of rigs WORLDWIDE put together by a far margin.
Its of no use comparing the US and Nigeria. The US has tonnes of refineries so unless world oil prices go up, don't expect gas prices to be unreasonalble. Petrol should not be expensive in Nigeria period. Dont contradict yourself by comparing the US. By the way, i'm not sure about this but i believe the fuel used in Nigeria is Premium grad.


I believe the OP was talking about exportation.  And it is true, Nigeria export more oil than America
Re: Fuel Subsidy Removal: Time To “occupy” Nigeria? by Gbawe: 12:15pm On Oct 23, 2011
arsenefc:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oil_reserves




I believe the OP was talking about exportation.  And it is true, Nigeria export more oil than America

You are truly schizophrenic.  Why not just say ,since you are the OP,  "I am talking about exportation"? Instead you have to ludicrously refer to yourself in the third like an insane person struggling with multiple personalities. No wonder you need multiple Nairaland aliases. Get help.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illeism

Patrick Bateman, in American Psycho refers to himself in the third person near the end of the novel, as his depersonalization is at it's peak.
Re: Fuel Subsidy Removal: Time To “occupy” Nigeria? by arsenefc: 12:49pm On Oct 23, 2011
Gbawe:

You are truly schizophrenic.  Why not just say ,since you are the OP,  "I am talking about exportation"? Instead you have to ludicrously refer to yourself in the third like an insane person struggling with multiple personalities. No wonder you need multiple Nairaland aliases. Get help.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illeism


O[b]p [/b]means a lot of things from Opinion poster (OP) to origininal poster to just opinion (Op or Op-ed aka opposite the editorial page).

That wasnt my opinion. Thats Farooq Kperog's opinion and so in this context Farooq Kperogi is the Op, sorry for the confusion. I didnt realize I had to spell it out for illiterate niggers like you. So much for your much touted Oxford education. It seems even a rat is far wiser than you Mr. Gbawe Oxford. You are a product of Nigeria's broken system. A system that rewards political associates of corrupt godfathers with juicy oversea, expensive education; education that makes dumba/r/s/es like you feel clever, when they really arent. You go around on NL fumbling and wobbling from one thread to another, derailing them like a mad man.


Now that you've exposed your ignorance to the whole world, take a sit and watch well educated people comment on this very important topic.

BTW, since you have some sort of  romantic fascination with psychiatry and MPD, Fugue and Fugue-like states, I'd advise you to spare some time and read  DSM IV ( Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders of the American Psychiatric Association ) and stop embarrassing yourself all over NL.

Montaigne was right after all when he said, Have you ever seen a man who thinks he is wise? You have more to hope for from a madman than from him.
Re: Fuel Subsidy Removal: Time To “occupy” Nigeria? by Parisgoodman(m): 12:54pm On Oct 23, 2011
@ op, u wrote well, many times tears have fell from my eyes thinking of dis nation; not as if i want 2 cry but they just roll out, i.e my soul is d 1 crying. our children wont 4give us 4 dis! it has 2 start from somwhere, some1 or group must stand first. we have people who cal themselves n.g.o, cant they raise alarm? where is labour congress? trade union congress, arewa, ohanaeze, union of journalists, teachers union and so on. u dont expect the d aboki n tomato seller in d streets 2 start a protest. something needs 2 b done!
Re: Fuel Subsidy Removal: Time To “occupy” Nigeria? by Gbawe: 1:05pm On Oct 23, 2011
arsenefc:

O[b]p [/b]means a lot of things from Opinion poster (OP) to origininal poster to just opinion (Op or Op-ed aka opposite the editorial page).



Why don't you just get help for your schizophrenia instead of resorting to pedantism? Unregulated as it may be, internet chat now has parameters, terms and qualifiers everyone recognises and accept. Who will you convince that "lol" means "leaders of love" when everyone accepts that , in internet speak, lol means "laughing out loud"?

OP, here on NL , strictly means original poster. Your schizophrenia led you to describe yourself in the third. No pedantism can disguise that. Just seek help. I think you need it ASAP. You are , without doubt, schizophrenic. Your love of using multiple ID's confirm it. So does your fickle stance that changes , not according to enduring principles, but in relations to who you are talking to.

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