We are sick in this country – yes we are. Or how else how can
we be debating about phrases in presidential communication to the Senate and
not the failure of the Senate to pass a budget laid before it by our “sick”
president almost six months ago? In the
interim we allowed the Senate to divert our attention from its failure to pass
the Appropriation Bill by pretending to be angry that Col. Hameed Ali, the
Comptroller General of the Nigeria Customs Service refused to wear the
Service’s uniform; we permitted the spoilt brats at the National Assembly to
entertain us with clowns like Dino Melaye appearing in a ceremonial academic
gown in the supposed hallowed Chamber of the Senate. We spent quality time speechifying on the
superiority of Section 171 of the Constitution over Section 2 of the EFCC act
with regards to Magu’s continued headship of the Commission in an acting
capacity. We are sick if we believe the
mundane is more important than the substance.
What is our take on the suspension of Babachir David (BD)
Lawal? He was suspended because he is a
Kilba minority Christian from Adamawa who the Hausa and Fulani Muslims wouldn’t
want to see appointed as the Secretary to the Federal Government if not for the
benevolence of Tinubu and Akande, forgetting that the man who appointed him in
the first place is a Fulani Muslim. He
was not suspended because he turned the Presidential Initiative on the North
East (PINE) into an initiation into pain by hundreds of thousands of those who
lost their loved ones, their economic power and dignity, their households and
all worldly material. He forgot the
essence of establishing the PINE in the first place.
The essence of establishing the Initiative, in my opinion, is
to give an undemanding assistance to the victims of insurgency in the North
East; to give them a strong arm and a crutch to stand-on and pick the pieces of
their shattered lives. It is also meant
to be a vehicle for extending comfort and aid to our unfortunate brethren whose
only desire is to get resettled to the monotony of their past lives. The PINE is meant to jump-start economic
activity and restore economic dignity in communities that has seen their economy
ravaged by mindless insurgency and help reintegrate families who hitherto
engaged in one form of business or the other but are now reduced to living in
IDP Camps. These are the people the SGF
denied the opportunity to live again like him and other fellow human beings –
live with dignity and the privacy they have been denied in the recent past. They don’t belong to these camps but the
failure of the past government to secure their lives and properties brought
them to this sorry state.
The SGF believed that the PINE was specifically established
for him to satisfy his yearn for money. He cared less for the integrity of the one who
appointed him to the office nor the dignity of the supposed beneficiaries, now
living in Camps that has been adjudged to be not fit for human habitation, no
thanks to BD, who turned the iniative into his chequebook. We have seen the quantum of monies
transferred to his company or personal accounts by contractors engaged to
execute these palliative projects in the zone.
We have seen the crudity and the wickedness; we have witnessed the inhumanity
and vulgarity in “chopping” the widow’s mite meant to provide succor to the
needy in the SGF’s locality. We are sick
if we still believe the SGF’s religion has anything to do with his
suspension. We are doubly sick if we
believe he should be walking around freely when Dasuki is rotting in jail for
almost the same offence. Dasuki is
guilty of diverting monies meant for the purchase of arms to fight the
insurgents who put these people in the IDP camps in the first place while the
SGF is guilty of denying them their humanity by stealing monies meant for their
reintegration. Same difference in my
opinion.
When big things happen to some people, they go gaga – and I
believe nothing bigger has ever happened to our SGF in his entire life than
being appointed into this office – occupied by the likes of Alison Ayida, Liman
Ciroma, Gray Longe, Shehu Musa and even Yayale Ahmed. He pictured himself as this “big man” in this
“big office”, without a dime to his name.
And then he got to work to remedy the situation. What then do we tell those among us who are
in IDP camps until God-knows when? Those
who cannot afford smartphones and tablets to see the primitive defence we are
putting up on behalf of their tormentors; or for those who still possess
smartphones among them, the cost of data is contrasted with that of a hot meal;
or to those whose daily survival is a trauma not knowing where their near and
dear ones are; those whose present in hopeless and their future bleak. Where is our humanity?
We have spent the better part of this year talking about
Buhari’s health. First he is dead, then
he is suffering from dementia, then he is terminally ill and when he came back
from his treatment in England and we all saw him walking from the plane to the
helicopter we changed the tune. After
addressing the nation on how sick he was and even disclosing some of the
treatment he underwent and alerting Nigerians on the possibility of going back
for further tests and treatment, we still insist he conducts a media chat or
should pack out of the Villa. We are so
filled with hate that we cannot empathize with a seventy five year old man in
his hour of trials. Who is sick –
Nigerians or Buhari? The recent case of
former Taraba state governor James Danbaba readily come to mind. Here was a pharmacist whose love for flying
nearly ended his life. His plane crash
in late 2012 turned him into a vegetable to be wheeled around by those
concerned with maintaining the political status
quo in Taraba state, yet not a single voice was raised against the charade
that we were treated to in the name of bigotry.
Nobody asked Danbaba to be shoved aside for a healthier person to take
over. We are truly sick if all we do is
harangue an old man facing health challenges and needs our sympathy and
prayers.
We have seen how first Andrew Yakubu, erstwhile Group
Managing Director of the NNPC, stashed away $9.8million dollars in the ghettoes
of Sabon Tasha, in Kaduna and then Ayo Oke, the suspended Director General of
the Nigeria Intelligence Agency (NIA) warehoused about $47million in an
apartment in Ikoyi Lagos. Monies that
have been denied Nigerians because they have been removed from circulation but
all we are thinking of is their religious affinity and not their criminality. How did their thieving benefit their religion? Is their any religion that encourages one to
steal? Is there anywhere in our holy books that provided for the glorification
and protection of thieves? Can you in
all honesty and good conscience kill an armed robber and a kidnapper while
sparing these two? Common folks, if this
is the way you think, then you better consult the next psychiatrist you meet.
The life of the 2016 federal budget came to an end on May 5th,
2017 while the 2017 federal budget is bogged down in the National
Assembly. The president presented the
budget to the National Assembly towards the end of 2016. So what was the National Assembly doing all
this while? Nobody is asking them
questions because we are occupied with the president’s death or ill
health. Knowing our proclivity for the
humdrum, they staged plays, which cannot be staged by NTA of years gone
by. They picked a fight with Hammed Ali
over the issue of uniform because most of them are smugglers whose nefarious
business have been affected by his tough guy stance; they refused to confirm
Magu on two occasions because most of them live on corruption and are scared of
the wooden-face Magu and their poster-boy, Dino Melaye’s academic status remain
hazy.
What was our reaction when all this was going-on? We clapped for them and egged them-on. We forgot there is a budget to work-on and
pass to the executive for assent and implementation. In less than twenty days (June 5th), if the
budget is not passed and assented to, we will have a government lockdown and
then the blame game will start all over again with the vilest language reserved
for the president. That is when we will
conveniently forget that the budget was presented to our representatives long
before now.
You tell me we are not sick?
We are sick my friend. Buhari may
be the only healthy person among us.
No comments:
Post a Comment