First
of all, ask yourself, what is the logic behind Nigerians buying diesel
and kerosene at the same price today as they did last year when the
difference between the price of a barrel of oil today and last year is
over $50? For those still able to think without the cloud of confusion
caused by partisanship, there is definitely an ongoing scam in the
downstream sector and the size may just be bigger than the monumental
heist of 2011.
Let
me break it down in naira; the price of oil has reduced by as much as
N10,000 since last year – at more than 50 per cent reduction – but a
supposedly deregulated diesel and petroleum downstream sector has never
seen its prices shift against the global norm that has seen prices go
down all over the world, from the United States, to the United Kingdom,
from India and down here to sub Saharan Africa.
Now,
we will quickly jump the gun and start blaming our regular thieves in
government and their cronies posing as businessmen but aren’t we the
biggest culprits here? We have been watching oil price take a plunge but
we have not even bothered to ask, what happened to the pump prices in
Nigeria? Oh, do we need the late Gani Fawehinmi and Dr. Beko
Ransome-Kuti to lead this particular fight again? But really, when are
we as a people ever going to fight for ourselves? Is it after we pray
and Jesus finally appears to say, “If you like pray till tomorrow, the
power to save your country is in your hands!”?
I have an idea,
maybe, we should beg Fela Anikulapo-Kuti to do a song about this? Oh! He
did one that should inspire you, “Zombie oh, Zombie, Zombie no move
unless you tell am to move, Zombie!” Another old Fela line aptly
captures our docility even today, “My people sef dey fear too much…we
fear to fight for freedom, we fear to fight for liberty…we no wan die…we
no wan quench…papa dey for house…mama dey for house.” We will never run
out of excuses to keep quiet about the things that hurt us most but we
will never get out of this mess until we find our voices. We need to
walk the talk of all that angers us about this ordinarily beautiful but
unfortunately abused country.
It is indeed funny that we find
ourselves in the same position decade after decade. We trust a new
government to do better than the old by getting more things right. Most
times, new governments come in amidst jubilation and high expectations
from the people. Within months, the song begins to change as the
promising government eventually starts to lose goodwill. What hardly
happens are the people actually going on the streets to make their
feelings known, they often immediately start looking to have a new
government replace the current one.
It is okay to work out plans
to do away with a bad government, what is not okay is to let every bad
government run its course without the people at least working to make
sure it gets the job done while its time runs out. We cannot always look
to new governments to save us if we don’t decide to save ourselves. The
worst leader would be forced to get more things right if we were not
this docile a people. As children, most of us naturally protested to
have our parents feed us. As children, we’d cry at night to let our
parents know that the heat was getting to us. The noise from our cries
ensured that our parents got more or less forced to attend to our needs.
Children often have their way simply because they are natural
protesters.
On that note, we Nigerians have a lot to learn from
children. The child gets what it wants because they make life
uncomfortable for their mother until they will get done. Yes,
politicians have failed Nigerians but we the people have failed
ourselves too. Pick Nigerians of high integrity, with time tested values
and expertise to run this country, they’d only do marginally better
than the crops of leaders we have had in the past half a century. The
reason is because politicians are indebted to too many people, cabals
and forces. These forces are their permanent distractions. It is often,
almost always, impossible for a leader to be tuned into the real thing;
running a country or a state. The allure and blindness that come with
power eventually get these leaders carried away.
The onus is on
the people to cure that blindness. An average president lives in a
prison. There is hardly anytime to follow the news or read the papers.
They are left to read what their aides want them to read. They are often
always in situations where they get told that the people are so happy
with them they are working to see how they can make the leader live for
another 900 years so that they can continue to lead the country for that
long. Power is a garden full of sycophants. It takes a lot of
intentional control, personal stubbornness and self-awareness to have
power and remember its essence. Many get carried away by power,
especially those who never prepared for or wanted it.
Elections
are here again. As it is, there is a huge chance a new government will
be formed on May 29, 2015. Again, it would take a certain level of
delusion or getting lost in the garden of power to pretend that the
incumbent is not in danger of losing. If a new government comes in,
trust Nigerians to celebrate. We will expect them to be different, to be
better and to indeed fix Nigeria. They will come with such intentions
too but like every government, they will be in power, dwelling as
tenants in a garden full of sycophants. Except, we, the people, run the
government with them, getting them to be immediately aware of what we
want or don’t want, we’d be looking to vote them out within two years of
their tenure.
If we retain the status quo, it would of course
mean that we are okay with the way they are running the country. That
wouldn’t need us to protest or get them to run the country better. They
have been running the country since 2010 so if we vote them to run it
till 2019, we’d be saying, “Thank you for all you did between 2010 and
2015, now we will be trusting you with another four years.” No matter
what parties post as ads in newspapers, one can only hope that the
decision of the majority of Nigerians is influenced by the three main
issues; the economy, national security and the fight against corruption.
The ball is in the court of the average Nigerian. The ball has
always been even though we wrongly assume that we only have power during
elections. No, citizens have power at all times. Having it is of course
one thing, knowing we have it is another and using it is in itself
another entirely. We just must know that privately debating our problems
won’t cut it, we need to walk the talk. Until then, nothing will change
even if we change the government every New Year.
- Japheth Omojuwa is a social media entrepreneur
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