By Victoria Ibezim-Ohaeri
A casual glance at the Facebook walls
and pages of most public figures in Nigeria reveals motionless, inactive, and
disused accounts bereft of any form of human or interactive activity. Just about
a year ago, especially in the build-up to the 2011 elections, the same walls
and pages across diverse social media sites fanatically inundated online users
with campaign promises and brightly-coloured pictures of partially-existing and
non-existent roads, schools, boreholes and other “development” projects.
Politicians regaled citizens with unsubstantiated stories and claims of
achievements in their public and private lives. In the weeks and months
preceding the Ondo governorship election, Segun Mimiko and Rotimi Akeredolu’s
Facebook and Twitter accounts were busy day and night with tons of hourly posts
containing promises, goodwill messages and action plans. All these fizzled away
soon after Mimiko was reelected.
Mesmerised or “touched” by these
theatrical spectacles, a teeming audience of undiscerning online users,
especially the youth population, freely gave their support, just as some
assumed “minister for defence” roles for their favoured candidates. Riding
roughshod on undeserved public support into government houses and the hallowed
legislative chambers of the state and federal legislative houses, it was time
to bid farewell to the gullible followers and voters. It is that ‘farewell
treatment” that emboldens a Rochas Okorocha, (Imo State Governor) for instance,
not to see any need to communicate his policies and programmes to his over
50,000 followers on Facebook. As with most Nigerian public officials who have
gained notoriety for maintaining an unduly over-bloated, overpaid, but
unproductive cabinet, Rochas has an embarrassingly large crowd of special
advisers, special assistants, senior special assistants, commissioners,
including a retinue of domestic staff numbering over 300! Out of that
multitude, not even one of them is found fit to manage his accounts on the
social media.
Rochas is not alone in this game of
meting out “farewell treatment” to citizens. For instance, take a look at the
sedentary Facebook pages of Lagos Governor, Babatunde Raji Fashola who has
177,834 “likes”/followers; Rivers State Governor, Rotimi Amaechi: 1195
subscribers and 24,027 followers; Aminu Tambuwal: 2655 Likes…to mention but a
few. Just a single post by any of these public officials regarding government
interventions and issues of implementation will potentially reach no less than
200,000 people directly. With the help of the “share”, “retweet” and
“broadcast” features embedded on many social media sites, such posts hold
stronger prospects of reaching thrice that number within minutes. Yet,
officials continuously refrain to seize these cost-effective opportunities to
engage and interact with citizens – the supposed beneficiaries of their
representative actions and programmes. The begging question then is: why are
Nigerian public officials afraid of engagement?
Despite his declining goodwill,
President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan seems to be the most consistent public figure
dutifully using the social media to communicate his plans, programmes and
policies, no matter how unpopular they are. While this may not be sufficient
to pass the good governance test, it is particularly indicative of an
instinctive willingness to reach out and gauge public opinion directly from
people impacted by his decisions and actions. And this is quite commendable.
While some of the president’s ministers such as Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Stella
Oduah are struggling to imbibe this practice, the observed trend is that their
occasional posts are totally shorn of any corresponding intent to engage
followers and respondents on the issues raised.
It is not only public officials that
show brazen disdain for citizen engagement and feedback accretion. Except the
Dr. Sam Amadi-led National Electricity Regulatory Commission, the Lagos State
government-owned Lagos State Traffic Management Authority and the Federal Road
Safety Commission, resource allocations to the communication departments in
nearly all state and federal government agencies ought to be either reallocated
to more important official programmes, or be totally expunged from state and
national budgets. Only NERC, LASTMA and FRSC maintain a strong online presence
and are effectively using the social media to increase their competitive
contexts as well as the quality of their statutory operations.
A cursory look at some of the websites
of some state and federal agencies shows that they were last updated between
2006 and 2010. In most cases, the quality of diction used on many of these
sites is in dire need of editorial surgery. Despite having federal
information and communication ministers, 36 state commissioners for
information, and countless information officers scattered across 774 local
government areas, Nigeria still ranks low on the index of nations using
effective communication and engagement processes to bolster development and
good governance. The inability of both state and Federal Government agencies to
communicate what they are doing or what they want to do has continued to fuel
suspicion, mistrust and widen the gap between the government and the governed.
Consequently, citizens are left to feed on speculations, or to propound
conjectured explanations for public actions that directly bear on their
welfare.
Thankfully, 2015 will soon be here. The
intrigues, horse-trading, political alignments and realignments have already
begun. Very soon, disappeared public figures will reappear on the social media
with fervent vigour, promising to build bridges even where there is no river.
The bitter fangs of the post-2011 election “farewell treatment” will replay on
the collective consciousness and memories of online users and voters, and that
will spur them to “retaliate”. Come 2015, young Nigerians in particular will
refuse to be treated as foot mats only to be used to realise the selfish
ambitions of politicians that will disappear soon after the elections are over.
That time, the new mantra will change from ‘vote for me’ to “If you good
governance me, I will 2015 you”!
•Victoria Ibezim-Ohaeri is the
Executive Director of Spaces for Change, a non-profit organization. She can be
reached at spacesforchange.s4c@gmail.com
Until we wake up from the slumber of docility that has landed us in the bay of stupidity, this rogue leaders, cheaters and fools will always smile to the banks while the people continue to wallow in abject poverty, disease, sorrow and shame. We must stand up and demand that all tiers of government, agencies and ministries must have a functional websites where all allocations and expenditures can be accessed with contributions by the masses as provided for in the FOI bill.
ReplyDeleteWell said! May the good Lord bless you. Amen
ReplyDelete