By Jaye Gaskia
According to the recently released 2014
Progress Report by the Africa Progress Panel on the condition of electricity
and power generation in Africa; 'The total power generation for all of
Sub-Saharan Africa minus South Africa is 28 GigaWatts [GW], an amount just
about equivalent to Argentina's total power generation capacity'.
The report further
lamented concerning Africa's largest economy: - Nigeria, that 'Power generation
in Nigeria has never exceeded 4,500MWs, while Power supply deficit for the
country stands at 166,400MWs'. It further said that 'about half of world's
population without access to electricity live in Sub-Saharan Africa'.
Now on the eve of a general election, with the
elections barely four months away, one expects that the national political space
will be dominated by political discourses about the political and economic as
well as social development and fate of the country.
One would expect
politicians, aspirants as well as incumbents, and their political parties;
ruling and opposition, to have been engaged in a robust debate about what
should constitute the priority for national development, and what policies
would be needed to address those issues.
Given the centrality of power availability to
economic development, given the centrality of the cost of having to generate
one's power to the rising and unsustainable cost of doing business in Nigeria;
what Nigerians would like to know is what will be done in the next four years
to tackle this power and electricity problem?
What we demand from
aspirants as well as incumbents is a detailed plan and strategy of how this
will be done and what level of measurable progress should be expected at the
end of four years. This plan must be a strategic plan, with projections, and
including a funding and investment plan.
How will the money
and funds be raised? How can we address the appalling paradox of a giant
walking on Liliputian legs, of Africa's largest economy powered by 4,500MWs
less than a tenth of the power generated by its distant second, South Africa?
Our task must be threefold: in the short term,
that is towards 2015; we should intervene to influence the discourse and the
outcome; in the medium term, that is between 2015 and 2019, our duty is to
build a movement power enough politically to become the real opposition; and
our task in the long term, that is towards 2019 general elections and beyond,
is to ensure that this mass political alternative challenges the ruling class
electorally for power and is in a position to win the general elections.
So enough of all the circuses around the
declaration of presidential aspirants and rallies being staged to beg people
including the incumbent to come and rule us; what we demand from them are
answers. How will this single most significant problem which is the bane of our
national development going to be tackled?
How can we make this
stupendous economic growth become inclusive, and generate real jobs? What will
the candidates do to reduce this inhumane gap between the rich and the poor,
one of the widest such gaps in the world?
In Nigeria, the richest top 10% own 41% of national wealth compared to the paltry 4% of national wealth owned by the bottom 20%! What economic programs will be implemented to drastically redistribute wealth and bridge this gap?
In Nigeria, the richest top 10% own 41% of national wealth compared to the paltry 4% of national wealth owned by the bottom 20%! What economic programs will be implemented to drastically redistribute wealth and bridge this gap?
We at Protest To
Power Movement [P2PM], these are the questions we want answered with convincing
details by the aspirants and incumbents at all levels.
Jaye
Gaskia is National Coordinator, Protest To Power Movement & Co-convener,
Say No Campaign [SNC]
Follow
him on TWITTER: @jayegaskia & @[DPSR]protesttopower; Interact with him on
FACEBOOK: Jaye Gaskia & Take Back Nigeria

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