There seems to be no more
shame in our land. Or the level of
impunity is far beyond what we are all thinking. How do you explain the recent boast by
erstwhile vice president that graduates of public universities cannot compare
with those of his secondary school? What
gall! Have we reached the stage where
those who steal from our till, will rub it in our face by reminding us how unfortunate
we are? Have we so lost our humanity
that we can berate the poor and the honest for being unable to send their kids
to schools established by modern day pirates?
Atiku Abubakar was the
vice president of Nigeria when he established his American University of
Nigeria in Yola. He and his supporters
didn’t see anything wrong in establishing a private institution while
superintending over the systematic destruction of all government social
services, education inclusive, while serving as the vice president. The unprecedented decline in the capacity of
public schools to accommodate, train and graduate students reached its zenith
during the period he was vice president.
The former vice president’s schools were established when Boni Haruna,
his political son was holding sway in Yola as governor of Adamawa state,
therefore conventional wisdom has it that the schools were established using
public funds – the same funds meant to run these same institutions that the former
vice president is running down its graduates.
As a matter of fact, the American University was established at a time
the Adamawa state government was not able to pay WAEC/ NECO fees for students
of public institutions.
I think it is the height
of insult for this carpetbagger to come out bragging about the quality of his
students, rubbing it in the face of the those less fortunate to occupy public
offices thereby availing themselves of our common patrimony and sending their
kids to such schools; established by pirates for the nouvea riche. Yes, the quality of graduates of public universities
may not be at par with those who passed through his schools – but how about the
satisfaction of knowing you don’t have to deprive the less unfortunate in order
to send your kid to such schools like American University and Bells University?
I know that the likes of
Atiku Abubakar feel the poor lacks understanding of their social importance to
the society and to the politician. This
lack of understanding may not be unconnected to the deliberate policy of those
in government to pauperise the people and destroy government social services and
making sure those they established becomes unaffordable to us. Thus the poor have been conditioned to think
of themselves as only important to the politician either only as a voter or a
political thug with no higher purpose than to be at the beck and call of the
same people that turned him into a zombie.
Isn’t it time to pause and redefine our position and importance to the
politician?
I do not have any problem
with Atiku’s desire to be the president of Nigeria. I equally do not have any problem with firing
his first campaign shots this early in the life of an administration he was
supposed to have midwifed (though anyone observant enough knew he never gave
Buhari a chance of winning). But for him
to have the guts to come out and tell Nigerians what he was credited to have
said is the height of insensitivity. But
this is Nigeria where criminalise are canonised – the more you steal the more
you are revered.
Anyone with a modicum of
compassion in his heart won’t be so callous as to denigrate the same system
that he once benefited from and help in destroying. Most of those from Atiku’s generation
attended public schools because it was free.
Whatever position they attained in life was largely due to this free
education they were given by a caring and result-oriented government of that
time. Most of them might not have been
lucky to attend school for the same reason we now have school-age children
hawking and begging on our streets. The
few that are lucky to attend public schools are now facing ridicule from the
likes of Atiku, who helped in no so small way in destroying the very
foundations of their successes.
Atiku Abubakar lined up
activities to mark his 70th birthday – doling out handouts to IDPs,
visiting his various business interests in and around Yola and hosting
political jobbers. I don’t have any
quarrel with that. But to think he can
use the serene environment of his University to denigrate us? Ah, ah! Feeding IDPs who made IDPs in the first place
by the (in)actions of the same man Atiku was wining and dining with on the eve
of the 2015 elections is bad PR as far as I am concerned. We still remember vividly the night Goodluck
Jonathan visited him in his house in Abuja in the heat of the 2015
campaigns. When all thought he was
leading the campaigns in the north for Buhari, he was actually hosting Goodluck
to a nocturnal visit. Atiku should
therefore be held vicariously liable for the plight of the IDPs since he played
a passive role when Goodluck was fiddling while the villages of these IDPs were
set ablaze.
We attended public
schools from LEA primary schools to public universities and we are proud of
these institutions. For anyone to think
he could put them down, good luck to him, but first he must tear his
certificates.
Funny, isn't!The same man who is desperately trying to be President of Nigeria by hook or by crook is the same man that is abusing the system that brought him up!
ReplyDelete