Fellow
Nigerians, today’s discourse will dwell on the Nigeria of our dreams.
Let us visualise what we have been missing and where our journey to
nationhood will take us. Imagine the possibilities, the new scenarios,
wealth, glamour, pride, self-fulfillment and probabilities that will
come with a new Nigeria. A new Nigeria led by our first 11 of
knowledgeable, passionate and dedicated men and women who are committed
to the common good, with the nobility of vision and mission to move
Nigeria from the Fourth World to the First World. This will be a Nigeria
flowing with milk and honey, the pride of Africa, and a nation that
uplifts the Black Race.
It will start with well-organised
political parties where there are no moneybags and godfathers who anoint
candidates without the input of the majority. Real and proper primaries
will precede the emergence of candidates and the politics will be
without bitterness. The electoral commission will do its job thoroughly
and the results will be acceptable to all or at least the majority.
There will be no post-election violence.
Government at
all levels will settle down to governance as soon as the elections are
over. A national development framework will unleash a new spirit, a new
energy and commitment to the common good. Government ministers will be
few and will be the best in class while the perks of office will be
reasonable and not the excess of today. The power sector reforms would
have ensured 24-hour uninterrupted power supply while public and private
infrastructure investments would have improved the quality and
availability of transport networks including rail, road, water and air.
First,
we will revive our agriculture, feed the nation and have surplus for
export and for food aid. We will produce enough of rice, wheat, cassava,
corn, cocoa, groundnut, palm produce, rubber, millet, sorghum, etc. The
lands in the northern part of the country, with the support of dams and
irrigation will deliver abundant meat and dairy produce etc. Cattle
ranches will be the norm and the Fulani herdsman will be settled; they
will no longer be nomadic. We will not export the surplus in its raw
form but add value to them before export thereby earning increased
foreign exchange. Factories processing agricultural produce into
finished products will abound and many young men and women will gain new
jobs.
Nigeria’s manufacturing sector will grow in leaps and
bounds. We will be building cars, buses and other automobiles sufficient
for our needs and export to some African countries at the starting
point. The vehicles will be in use at all levels of government starting
from the Presidency that will change all imported vehicles in its convoy
to the locally made ones. The country will become a hub for the design
and value added of various vehicle components while the tyre companies
will be back. The food and beverage component of manufacturing will grow
to new heights turning our agricultural raw materials into new foods
and wines. The electronics and electrical component will begin to
produce household items including televisions, fridges, washing
machines, cookers, etc. There will be a link between the universities
and research centres to industry and students will be taking practical
attachments and refresher courses in industries. Nigeria will stop the
export of crude petroleum products and instead build large refineries
and petrochemical complexes. We will produce enough for the local market
and for export. Over N1.5tn ploughed annually to fuel subsidy will be
saved and invested in capital expenditure. The large tank farms will be
storing products for export instead of being stores for imported
products.
The future will be sure that the Nigerian governments
will no longer be in a haste to establish new tertiary educational
institutions; they will rather concentrate on improving the quality of
existing ones through increased investments that will improve learning
outcomes. To increase intakes, the carrying capacity of existing
institutions will be improved. Individuals and corporations will be
motivated to build endowments for academic institutions running into
billions of naira. Our universities will be in the league of the best in
the world and start attracting students and scholars from around the
world. Learning outcomes at the primary and secondary levels will
improve. Indigent students will have access to loans repayable after
graduation through income from assured jobs. Nigeria will build, manage
and maintain health institutions delivering cutting-edge services in
virtually all spheres of medicine. Public and private investments in
health will increase through a compulsory health insurance scheme for
all taxable adults and a special fund dedicated to health funded by very
small deductions from GSM tariffs. We will reverse the brain drain in
the sector to brain gain and will become the centre point of medical
tourism.
By this time, our culture industry, especially in film
and music, will not just be dominating the African space but will become
a very strong contender globally employing millions of Nigerians. It
will be operating within the context of strong and enforced intellectual
property laws, reduced piracy and a strong domestic and international
distribution network. We will excel in different sport engagements, from
football to swimming; our countrymen from the high altitudes of Jos and
Adamawa will start competing with the Kenyans and the Ethiopians who
are the best in the long distance race class.
With so much
accountability, service delivery and honour in governance, the citizens
will be voluntarily and honestly declaring and paying their tax. Our
court system will be up delivering justice on a timely and principled
basis, thereby reducing impunity in the system. Judges will no longer be
appointed by a cabal as presently done but through a process that
permits popular participation especially of professional brethren of
good repute and competency. Everyone seriously accused of malfeasance in
the public life will honourably resign to clear his name; as such,
aspirants to public office who have prima facie cases of corruption and
other crimes hanging on their neck will drop their ambition until they
clear their name.
The dream can go on and on. But a new Nigeria
is possible where the foregoing will not only be possible but probable.
The realisation of this dream can start in 2015 only if we the voters
are objective, reasonable and give our votes to men and women of
conscience; stop demanding money and other resources before voting and
refuse to accept even if we are gratuitously offered. This will be
possible of we can mobilise for change, not a change to a party run by
men and women who have amassed so much wealth from public office but
have no clear and visible legal means of livelihood supporting the
incredible wealth. It will be possible if we demand accountability from
those put in positions of authority; and the legal profession stops the
“stomach infrastructure” approach to justice, putting away
technicalities and doing justice to all manner of men without
discrimination. Nigerians, the ball is on our court, we can dream
dreams, take steps towards them, work hard enough that the dreams will
have no alternative but to materialise in our lifetime.

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