Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,153,502 members, 7,819,822 topics. Date: Tuesday, 07 May 2024 at 01:08 AM

Nigeria Is A Failed State - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Nigeria Is A Failed State (2288 Views)

Abia Govt Blasts Nkechi Nwaogu Who Called Abia "A Failed State Under PDP" / Breaking!! Nigeria Is A Borderline Failed State And PMB Corrupt- CNBC / Osun State Is Now A Failed State. Received Only 55 Million In FG Allocation (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply)

Nigeria Is A Failed State by flyingsnail(f): 8:06pm On Oct 01, 2015
Nigeria Is A Failed State
Posted on October 1, 2015 by DAVID CHIDIEBERE
I promised my facebook friends that i’ll write something on this… though am a kinda busy since morning, i dnt have to fail my friends like Nigeria

It’s about time we admitted it: Nigeria has become a failed state. For the past 10 years, the signs of collapse have been visible but the picture has been progressively clearer since 2011. About a third of the country’s land mass has been under emergency rule for the past one year for reasons that are glaring also in at least another third of the country including the Federal Capital Territory: mass murders, kidnapping for ransom, daylight armed robberies, breakdown of law and order, and unrestrained stealing of public funds.

Several authorities identify a failed state as one that can no longer perform its basic duties in such areas as security, power, eradication of poverty, education and job creation. Even the Nigerian constitution recognises that the reason for government’s existence is protection of life and property as well as maintenance of law and order. Events of the past few years indicate that Nigeria has since exceeded the minimum requirements for classification as a failed state.

Even today being independence day 5 people were slaughtered in Adamawa

No day has passed in the past weeks without a tale of one horrendous atrocity or the other committed by the bloodthirsty hoodlums. Is it the mass murder of students in their sleep? Is it the kidnap of married and unmarried girls for use as sex slaves and cooks? Is it the invasion of military barracks and sack of police stations? Mosques, churches, villages, banks and farms have come under the terrorists’ fire without challenge from those paid to provide security of life and property.

After each act of terror, the Nigerian president, Muhammed Buhari, has made promises that he has never fulfilled. Time and again, he has set deadlines for ending the terror threat but he has always defaulted. The number of Nigerians killed in the Boko Haram war is inching towards 7, 000, and, with the security situation worsening, more than one million Nigerians have been forced to live in makeshift camps after they have been sacked by insurgents.

And so, we ask again: what is a failed state? In this same country, 6 million university graduates applied for 4, 000 job slots in the Immigration Service last year. Almost 800, 000 of them were invited for an interview during which 23 of them died as a result of stampedes at some centres. That tragedy of March 15 belies the official figures of the country’s unemployment and poverty rates–24 and 70 per cent respectively. Even though these figures are still very high, it is known that they were the outcome of guess work. Common sense dictates that the joblessness rate is closer to 80 per cent while the poverty rate is closer to 95 per cent. Has a state in which these exist not failed? World Bank president Jim Kim did not mince words in declaring, penultimate week, that Nigeria is one of the countries where extreme poverty exists.

Nigeria in recent years, always featured on the list of the world’s failed or failing states. In its Failed States Index 2013 released recently, for instance, The Fund for Peace (FFP) ranks the country 16th out of 178 countries. It is only a few points looking better than war-torn Somalia that is ranked first. So are DR Congo, the Sudans, Chad and Afghanistan. But, even in these other countries, innocent people and children don’t get killed with the reckless abandon we have seen lately in this country. And school girls don’t get kidnapped in the numbers we have been witnessing in Nigeria. No wonder the country performed poorly on all indicators used by the FFP: mounting demographic pressure, movement of refugees or internally displaced persons, vengeance-seeking group grievance, human flight, uneven economic development, poverty or severe economic decline, legitimacy of the state, progressive deterioration of services, violation of human rights, security apparatus, rise of factionalised elites and intervention of external actors.

When a state has failed, it should not be left to be propped up by failed leaders and failed politicians. But nothing is unstoppable, after all division is still an alternative.

https://davidchidiebere./2015/10/01/nigeria-is-a-failed-state/?fb_action_ids=823280377770491&fb_action_types=news.publishes&fb_source=other_multiline&action_object_map=%5B917488594997259%5D&action_type_map=%5B%22news.publishes%22%5D&action_ref_map=%5B%5D

1 Like

Re: Nigeria Is A Failed State by psucc(m): 8:14pm On Oct 01, 2015
Well that is why Nigeria is repeating every year. For 55 years, it has proven to be dull and so cannot progress to the next class.

But I am too sure that if we had heed the advice of the '67-'70 war and let it part ways, the constituent units would have developed much better than what we have today.
Re: Nigeria Is A Failed State by PedroJP(m): 8:54pm On Oct 01, 2015
Thank you OP. Wonder what they celebrated today. Only celebrated deceit. 70 mil dis yr, guess nothing next time as it will dawn on them there is nothing to celebrate about Nigeria.

(1) (Reply)

South West: The Most Developed Region In Nigeria / Barack Obama Bowed To PMB While Shaking Hand / President Buhari To Attend Another World Submit On CONDOM In Croatia

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 18
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.