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We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda - Politics - Nairaland

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We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by Ennyholar: 5:33pm On Aug 04, 2020
We Won’t ‘Calm Down,’ Nigeria Must Breathe by DAVID EDREMODA

“The more things change, the more they remain the same.” – Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr

At the commencement of the Fourth Republic in 1999, Nigerian politicians promised citizens the ‘dividend of democracy.’ Today, 20 years after, nothing has changed despite the appearance of Change, which is an interesting paradox in nation building. Today, Nigeria still grapples with insecurity, incompetence, widespread corruption, hopelessness, unhealthy rivalry among government officials and a clear absence of accountability in governance. Worse is that the unravelling yet sordid stories of massive corruption in high places, are not only disappointing but are indicative of total loss of control by those we elected to lead us to the Next Level.

Case study 1: the secret trial of Ibrahim Magu, the suspended Acting Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC). This is a dispiriting commentary on a government that came to power on the mantra of anti-corruption and due process. It is ironic that Magu, the major driver of Nigeria’s crusade against corruption was investigated and questioned on allegations that bordered on abuse of office and financial malfeasance here and abroad. But this matter would probably never have come to light in the public sphere without the power play in the corridors of The Presidency.

Whilst Magu’s suspension may reassure the international community that war on corruption is still being waged by Mr. President, the taint of corruption on the head of EFCC has further exacerbated the problem of credibility suffered by the body. Arguably, EFCC last enjoyed good credibility rating under the leadership of its pioneer Chairman, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu.

Unfortunately, Ribadu triggered EFCC’s credibility crisis by allowing himself to be used as a battering ram against perceived political opponents of the then incumbent President Olusegun Obasanjo who appointed him. The crisis was later heightened by the manner of his disengagement in December 2007 by President Umaru Yar’Adua who succeeded President Obasanjo. Thereafter, the predictably unceremonious sack of successive EFCC Chairmen made the anti-graft agency a laughingstock.

In 2011 Farida Waziri, who was appointed Chairperson in May 2008 by the late President Umaru Yar’Adua was sent packing in the ‘national interest’ by former President Goodluck Jonathan. Ibrahim Lamorde, Jonathan’s appointee, was kicked out on November 9, 2015 by President Buhari. No gift of clairvoyance is required to tell that global investment capital inflow to Nigeria would be negatively impacted by the serial dismissal of EFCC Chairmen. Which investor would be encouraged to bring his money to Nigeria if the organization charged to protect his investment is a painted sepulchre?

Case study 2: the corruption cesspool at the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC). In 2000, the Federal Government established NDDC to facilitate “the rapid, even and sustainable development of the Niger Delta into a region that is economically prosperous, socially stable, ecologically regenerative and politically peaceful.”

Regrettably, NDDC in 20 years has yet to become an interventionist agency. Rather, it has been regenerating corruption with successive managements of the Commission working hard to outweigh one another on the scale of corruption. The list is long, unedifying and ludicrous. Samples: in 2008, the Chairman of the agency, Ambassador Sam Edem, allegedly expended N1bn to procure spiritual fortification. In 2015 the Office of the Auditor General of the Federation uncovered N183bn scam that did not draw any sanction. Water Hyacinth Emergency and Desilting Contracts were inflated from N2.5bn to N65bn. In 20 years, the Commission still pays over N300 million per annum as rent for its headquarters building in Port Harcourt; has 12,000 abandoned projects across the nine states of the Niger Delta and has over N3trillion liabilities to its contractors.

Reasons for the malfeasance are not far-fetched. Cairo Ojougboh, NDDC’s Executive Director of Projects, says “once you have a contract in NDDC, it is like you have won a lottery.” The Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Senator Godswill Akpabio, also said as much: “The budgeting process in NDDC has been warped. I think people were treating the place as an ATM, where you just walk in there to go and pluck money and go away.” Given these known facts, who then would arrest and prosecute the culprits? Or will the looters be allowed to go scot free? Rather than answer these and other questions, the forensic audit ordered by President Muhammadu Buhari and investigations by the National Assembly have merely served comic reliefs to Nigerians. Today, our lexicon has been enriched by phrases like “Hon Minister, it’s okay”; “please, off your mic,” ad nauseam.

The tardiness with which the nation fights corruption speaks to what our country has now become in the international arena where Nigeria is the biggest loser. The situation may even deteriorate further if citizens refuse to mobilize soon to halt the trend of extremely poor leadership. It is now evident that propaganda can only work for so long. Now, everyone is aware of the true state of governance in Nigeria. This awareness has begun to make citizens to trust government less and this should worry those in power.

As Prof. Femi Odekunle, a member of the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC) once advised, the President, needs to “wake up to the ongoing shenanigans of power players that are working from the inside against his anti-corruption fight.”

The painful truth is that we are all going to live with this unpleasant reality until 2023 even as there are strong indications of brutal power play ahead by politicians who have already taken positions without delivering on their current promises. But the good news is that 2023 is long enough time to address the challenge of leadership and lay the foundation for future leaders who would be ready to serve.

And what does it take to do that? First is knowing that it is not up to your neighbour or a civil rights activist to fight your cause. More important is how you scrutinize public office candidates for visionary leadership the way you would critically appraise where to keep your money. If we do not sort out these disorders and take our chances now that it is still daylight, we may live to regret our actions or inaction.

To save Nigeria and make her breathe, we must all get involved. This is the time to start. Let us refuse to ‘calm down.’

Edremoda, a public affairs commentator, wrote in from Lagos.

Source: https://www.independent.ng/we-wont-calm-down-nigeria-must-breathe/

7 Likes 2 Shares

Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by donbachi(m): 5:39pm On Aug 04, 2020
The angers of the masses against the govt are accumulating.soon their hearts wont be enough to accomodate it...na dat time dem go know sey water don pass garri..nonsense govt.

35 Likes 1 Share

Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by Baba1234: 6:57pm On Aug 04, 2020
We all have to change our mentality as citizens of Nigeria. I just don't want to cry for the generation we are leaving these mess for.. everywhere messed up from top to bottom. The percentage of people one can trust for or with business in this country are not more than 10percent. My question now is ( leave politicians first, yes I'm talking to you) ....If responsibilities comes and maybe cash involved...can u be trusted

14 Likes 3 Shares

Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by borngenius(m): 6:57pm On Aug 04, 2020
Ok.
Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by yrret: 6:58pm On Aug 04, 2020
I see a Nigeria where G-boys will be our future leader.

corruption will be legalized.

constitution amendment will be to prosecute the poor.

where ethics will be a crime.

morals will be achaic

and everyone will be their government.


A country where future leaders won't understand the meaning of being wrong and enjoy exclusive right of whatever it's done.


The way Billions and trillions are stolen in this country should give our Maker concern to blow the trumpet.

Nigeria is finished!

17 Likes 1 Share

Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by Jeromejnr(m): 6:58pm On Aug 04, 2020
donbachi:
The angers of the masses against the govt are accumulating.soon their hearts wont be enough to accomodate it...na dat time dem go know sey water don pass garri..nonsense govt.

You guys should stop deceiving yourselves. Which masses? Is it the docile ones?

That's how people will keep deceiving themselves for 20 more years and Nigerians will still be taking the suffering and smiling.

27 Likes 1 Share

Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by Faaavvv: 6:58pm On Aug 04, 2020
It is well
Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by safeopportunity(m): 6:58pm On Aug 04, 2020
What do you understand by Wealth Creation?

Anybody??


who know the answer to this please visit the link below

https://www.nairaland.com/6030137/alleviating-poverty-hunger-starvation-nigeria/3#92457869

and drop your answer ...

let's eradicate poverty of hunger and starvation once and for all in Nigeria!
Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by oka4ugoo: 6:59pm On Aug 04, 2020
This country can never and will never work under democratic system of govt with the current constitution. A senior or junior military officer with vision needs to take over amend the constitution in line with the report from confab and return the government to democratic govt.

7 Likes 1 Share

Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by SpecialAdviser(m): 6:59pm On Aug 04, 2020
donbachi:
The angers of the masses against the govt are accumulating.soon their hearts wont be enough to accomodate it...na dat time dem go know sey water don pass garri..nonsense govt.

Some paid mumus are still defending them in nairaland and some mugus still dey follow them.

3 Likes

Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by Haymaykar(m): 6:59pm On Aug 04, 2020
May God help us in these country
Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by princejayy(m): 7:00pm On Aug 04, 2020
sad
Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by jamaicabakare(m): 7:00pm On Aug 04, 2020
I support
Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by astonished: 7:00pm On Aug 04, 2020
no be by write long article or be behind keyboard and rant on social media.

the government has realised that the above is the least we can do no matter the oppression, that's why they take us for granted.

we need to leave our comfort zone, abandoned all our engagement & face the government through physical protest & tell them enough is enough

4 Likes

Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by EyezofGod120: 7:00pm On Aug 04, 2020
sadno you must calm.down,I mean rest small
Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by Nobody: 7:01pm On Aug 04, 2020
donbachi:
The angers of the masses against the govt are accumulating.soon their hearts wont be enough to accomodate it...na dat time dem go know sey water don pass garri..nonsense govt.

Keep deceiving yourself.

Bb naija is far more important incase you haven't noticed.

3 Likes

Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by Henrydata(m): 7:01pm On Aug 04, 2020
Ok
Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by ProfAmaben(m): 7:01pm On Aug 04, 2020
Nigeria has long expired. The youths don't care. The youths are only interested in online rants and tribal bigotry, who would bell the cat?

When I think of men like Nzeogwu, a youth who almost succeeded in liberating this country, I weep at the quality of today's youth.

Someone would come to nairaland and call himself pigipobhunter, arewabushboy, ipobhunter etc

Rest on Nzeogwu

12 Likes 4 Shares

Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by Abasman008(m): 7:02pm On Aug 04, 2020
Lol something tells me that whatever sowore is brewing will be devastating to the government... The guy choosed the correct to stage this protest and lol even stylishly putting the pilipo and army in their side.




#REVOLUTION NOW
#BUHARI MUST GO!!!

5 Likes

Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by AmadorSays: 7:03pm On Aug 04, 2020
As we all know, Nigeria is just a ticking bomb waiting to explode

6 Likes 1 Share

Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by Racoon(m): 7:03pm On Aug 04, 2020
Nigeria is totally irredeemable.Dissolve this useless country.Let all regions develop themselves @ their own pace.

2 Likes

Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by YorubaKinging: 7:06pm On Aug 04, 2020
The end of the world is already here
Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by Gurusmark1: 7:07pm On Aug 04, 2020
Nigeria died a natural death in 1967. The moment the northern regional elites coaxed the western regional backstabbers that January 15, 1966 coup was Igbo, Nigeria went into coma and has never recovered since then. It probably will not recover despite all measured efforts.

1 Like

Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by xpensivNas(m): 7:08pm On Aug 04, 2020
Govt of d few by d few and for the few

1 Like

Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by dalass(f): 7:08pm On Aug 04, 2020
cheesy
Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by dalass(f): 7:08pm On Aug 04, 2020
Racoon:
Nigeria is totally irredeemable.Dissolve this useless country.Let all regions develop themselves @ their own pace.

Correct!
Re: We Won’t ‘Calm Down', Nigeria Must Breathe By David Edremoda by dalass(f): 7:10pm On Aug 04, 2020
ProfAmaben:
Nigeria has long expired. The youths don't care. The youths are only interested in online rants and tribal bigotry, who would bell the cat?

When I think of men like Nzeogwu, a youth who almost succeeded in liberating this country, I weep at the quality of today's youth.

Someone would come to nairaland and call himself pigipobhunter, arewabushboy, ipobhunter etc

Rest on Nzeogwu

No comment grin

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