By Abubakar Usman
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Gov. Rotimi
Amaechi
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If you have ever wondered why our so called leaders treat us
with so much disdain and neglect, the statement credited to Governor Rotimi
Amaechi of River state at a public function recently should give you an idea of
what is behind it.
At a symposium organised by The Future Awards, TFA, to
brainstorm on how to find solutions to some of Nigeria’s problems, the governor
was quoted to have said that there could be no revolution in Nigeria because we
are too timid.
Whatever reasons he has for making that statement can simply
be described as the cause of irresponsible leadership we have had to contend
with for years now. The situation has become so bad that a U.S. based Nigerian
writer and teacher described the scenario saying, “One of the greatest crimes
of which the Nigerian state is guilty of is a failure to take the Nigerian
state seriously.” True to that word, when the people you empowered to administer
on your behalf do not take you serious, how can anything good come from them?
Governor Amaechi said we are too timid, but despite our
timidity, it didn’t deter him and his likes who are occupying public offices at
various levels across the country to go about with battalions of security men,
ride in bullet proof vehicles, live in houses with high walls and employ a
retinue of aides who stand between them and the people they claim to represent,
all in the name of seeking protection; protection from the same people who
placed them in such positions.
Amaechi’s thinking and by extension the thinking of people
in his class is that they can and will always get away with their actions in
office no matter how unfavourable it is to the populace. What they failed to
realise is that patience is exhaustible and when it happens, reaction that are
never expected occur.
Amaechi should be reminded that it is the timidity he
associated Nigerians with that the people of Romania had when they revolted and
ousted their communist dictator, Nicholae Ceasuscus who had the people of
Romania under his whims and caprices for years. All that was needed is for an
unknown woman to shout “liar”, “liar” in an apparent and unsolicited response
to a statement made by Ceasuscus while delivering a speech at a public square
in Romania on December 24, 1989. That famous “liar” was what gave the people
courage to stage a revolt that later consumed Ceasuscus, his government and
family.
If 1989 is too far for governor Amaechi to remember, I will
cast his mind back to what transpired a few years ago in Libya. Libya under
maummar Gaddafi was a country that had only him calling the shot. Nobody could
go near him or challenge whatever decision he makes, but the very people whom a
huge wall of separation existed between them and Gaddafi were those who
revolted against him.
If most Libyans were to be asked a few years to 2011 when
the Libyan revolution began, many of them would have sworn it will never
happen, but it did eventually and all that was required is the bravery of a few
men who gathered and organised a protest that soon spiraled into a bloody
revolution.
If governor Amaechi has forgotten so soon, let him be
reminded that we were still timid in January, 2011 when Nigerians poured into
the streets of Lagos, Abuja, Ibadan, Ilorin amongst many others to protest
government’s arbitrary and unjustified hike in petroleum price.
The protest may not have achieved much of what was
envisaged, but the mere fact that a protest of such magnitude never happened in
the history of this country is enough to tell “Doubting Thomases” that the
status quo cannot always be the same. It may only not come at a time that many
expect, but conditions call for a revolution, it is only a matter of time
before it happens.
Governor Amaechi must be told that the length of years it
takes to oppress the people and take them for granted does not determine
whether or not a revolution is possible. All it takes is for the elastic limits
of the people’s patience to be stretched to the end. Nicholae Ceasuscus ruled
Romania for about two decades, Maummar Gaddafi held sway in Libya for forty two
years, Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak was in power for thirty years, exiled Tunisian
leader, Zine El-Abidin ruled Tunisia for 24 years.
These people were dictators during their reign. They could
have sworn that remaining in power till death is a guarantee, but when the
patience of the people got exhausted, they were consumed by the revolts
organised by the people they considered to be timid. They were not just removed
from power by force; some of them got killed in circumstances that are
unbefitting even for animals.
Rather than governor Amaechi basking in the euphoria of our
timidity with the false belief that a revolution is far from happening in Nigeria,
himself and other public officials saddled with positions of authority should
concentrate their efforts, energy and time in providing the dividends of good
governance for the people.
Nigerians are hungry, they want to eat; Nigerians are dying
every day, they want security for their lives and properties; Nigerians want
good schools, hospitals, good roads and jobs for the teeming youths. It is with
the availability of such needs that a revolution can be expressly dismissed.
The Nigerian people must not be cowed and intimidated by
governor Rotimi’s false belief that Nigerians cannot revolt because they are
timid. We shall continue to engage our leaders with utmost civility and within
the tenets of democracy in matters that concern us; because an act of
revolution leaves grave consequences in material and human lives, our leaders
must however not be deceived that it is the only option available to the
Nigerian people.
If we are pushed to the wall, we shall revolt and that
revolution shall consume them all.
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Abubakar Sidiq Usman is an Urban Planning
Consultant; Blogger and an Active Citizen working towards a better Nigeria. He
blogs HERE and
can be engaged directly on twitter @Abusidiqu

What Gov Amaechi was saying in effect was galvanizing us to revolution. He wasn't saying that revolution can't take place because we are timid but was wondering why we have not started one, yet, as all conditions for it are in place.
ReplyDeleteRevolution or destruction : Egypt, Syria etc
ReplyDelete