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Nuhu Ribadu, Wole Soyinka
and Gov Babatunde Fahola
Good afternoon friends and compatriots.
It is with the deepest gratitude that I
stand here with the privilege of giving
the 13th Professor Wole Soyinka
Lectures.
The great man in whose honour we gather
to do this today clocked 76 a week ago,
but the true insurgent that we have in
him forbids the pleasure of celebrating
his birthday in any outward way. In
retribution, therefore, I propose that
we flip the significance of the day to
interrogate our dear Kongi on the reason
why his presumed 'Renaissance'
generation tragically ended up as the
“wasted generation."
The National Association of Seadogs
[NAS] asked that I speak on Nigeria@50:
The Crisis of Nationhood. I believe
there is already some consensus
regarding our diagnosis of this problem.
The much respected elder statesman,
Christopher Kolade, summed it up for us
the other day, with respect to the
debate on how much the current
administration is proposing to spend for
the 50th anniversary celebration.
Chillingly, he said:
“I have read in the papers that the
country might be celebrating its 50
years of independence this year and that
we might be spending N10bn on that. For
those of us that are more than 50 years,
if we think about what we had in place
50years ago, then we shall be
celebrating 50 years of decline.”
Let us be frank about it, the prospects
of our failure in this nation-building
enterprise had been visible so early in
the day, and had been the subject of
endless journalistic commentaries and
literary texts. It was such that a
mystery handsome and idealistic
youngster in Ibadan, presumably armed
with a gun, back in October 1965, seized
a radio station, stopping it from
announcing a forged election result.
Although a competent court of law
cleared him of any wrong doing, if that
young man is in our midst today let him
stand up for recognition!
Yes let us admit that he is our father,
our friend from whom we learnt
rebellion. But he is also the man who
taught us how to build institutions.
Ladies and gentlemen, kindly clap for
him and say a hearty thank you. Ese gan
ni ooo
THE NATIONAL QUESTION YET AGAIN:
Nations are like living organisms. If
they are nourished with a diseased
breast, the result varies in the
dimensions of birth defects, but just as
in science so it is in nation building;
you cannot plant cassava and hope to
reap cocoyam.
Nigeria’s failing scores often lead many
of our compatriots, out of frustration,
to seek comfort in some absurd
resolution like the balkanization of our
nation. However, for all their
imperfections, some nations at the brink
of a rupture have been able to survive
on account of dogged will for collective
redemption and with the opportunity of
an imaginative leadership.
Fellow compatriots, leadership matters a
lot to the health and progress of every
social institution or community. Let me
illustrate this point with the examples
of two African nations both in the
Eastern region: Tanzania and Somalia.
Think first of the complexity of
Tanzania in terms of its ethic diversity
of about 175 ethnic groups and religious
pluralism—a good balance between
Christians and muslims. Not to idealize
the country, and in spite of the usual
strains and pains of nation building, is
it not surprising to us that it remains
the most stable and peaceful land in
that region?
Think, on the other hand, of Somalia,
with its homogeneity in ethnic and
religious experience-- one people, one
religion, one language. What has become
of it? Somalia is today the poster child
of the very example of a veritable
failed, and rogue state. Part of the
explanatory index for this is the type
of leadership that both nations had at
different phases of its history. The
simple example from the world of fashion
teaches us that sometimes the shoe
doesn’t quite fit well. It will be foul
logic however to trim the foot to
accommodate the legs. Nations are
ultimately works in progress, and the
challenge we face is to confront the
problems honestly and courageously
rather than sweep them under the carpet.
Thus, at this proper beacon of a jubilee
anniversary, I want to strongly
challenge fellow compatriots, in this
hall and outside it, to make a pledge of
honor on how to give our federal
experiment and our democracy a makeover
that is mediated by equity, rule of law,
and, a transparent sense of justice, and
above all, a sincere commitment to build
a modern multicultural Nigeria.
The boundless energies of our people,
the enviable spirit of our youth, and
the lush resources of our environment
all lay in waste and abuse, increasing
our common embarrassment to see what we
are offering the nation, the continent,
and humanity as the product of labor
from the largest black nation on the
planet.
A nation that produced the likes of
Chinua Achebe, Oladele Awojobi, Chike
Obi, Bala Usman, Fela Anikulapo Kuti,
and Murtala Mohammed cannot agonise for
lack of models. A nation at that also
threw up the examples of Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala, Oby Ezekwesili, Sefi Atta,
and Adichi Chimamanda cannot be said to
be deficient in super brands. Above all
however, the nation that produced the
towering presence of Wole Soyinka will
lose a rational argument if it pleads
the absence of heroes as the basis of
the failure of Africa’s largest state.
What we confront from all these examples
is that something structural went wrong,
but with the power of thought, analysis,
and appropriate action we can undo the
wrongs and get the train back on track.
I strongly believe that Nigeria’s
greatness is buried in the fact that it
can be made an asset that works for us
all still. That, indeed, is the
challenge and the task ahead from this
point on.
YOUTH POWER IS THE AGENDA:
Dear compatriots, fifty years of our
federalism and less of our democracy
pose the challenge of what can be an
endless rite of passage, if a new vision
is not allowed to take over our
political space. The experience of our
elders can provide the source-spring and
template for our new trajectory, but let
us say it bold and clear here today that
young Nigerians must take the
responsibility and accountability for
leadership of this great nation from now
on.
From industry, through civil society, to
the world of research and development,
towards the important crucible of
leadership, politics, and management of
development, I call on fellow young
Nigerians today to bury the
preoccupation with anger, cynicism, and
inertia and move in the direction of
taking control of the destiny of our
nation.
Children of Independence, fellow
Nigerians, let us take our nation back
today and save it from sliding
irreversibly into chaos and
disintegration. It may be a difficult
job; it may even require sacrifice of
material and emotional resources on the
part of those who choose to join the
train of change, but it is the most
rewarding and glorious calling to save
our nation from further decline.
Let us strap our boots and roll up our
sleeves. The time is now, no other time
will be right. The work to remake
Nigerian federalism and its democracy
for the benefit of the majority of our
people is not in air-conditioned
offices, not in the long stretched
limousines, the private jets, or the
pent houses on foreign beaches that
house the property acquired with
resources appropriated by a few of us
from our common wealth.
The important work to rebuild Nigeria
then requires that we set our gauge
beyond the sky, we have the grace of a
needful tailwind to coast us home---it
is the boundless energy of our people
and the indomitable spirit of our
youths. Look across the world, just see
what wonders Nigerians, many of them
young men and women, are doing in the
management of institutions and
initiatives. Why is this difficult to
replicate at home?
The challenge for our youth today must
however proceed with humility and
gratitude to the labours of some of our
forebears that mean well for this
country. Few men in our history
epitomize that sense of investment to
community than Professor Soyinka. His
life work either as an artiste or public
intellectual, or even community
activist, has been defined by unstinted
sense of integrity, selflessness, and
excellence.
I call on us all here today, and the
younger generation in particular, to
thank him for all he has done for our
country, and for always being our
conscience and missioner for truth and
justice, but for which he has suffered
exile, death threats, and wanton abuse.
An appreciative nation, and a grateful
community salute your epic virtues, and
your humanity today as always sir. Here,
truly is one god that made a pantheon.
Please live long, not only for your
family but also for a country that is
just about to embark on the true path of
progress, peace, and development.
Yet the irony of a man like Soyinka as
indeed of all the heroes we are so quick
to advertise is that they pose a sharp
antithesis to the social environment we
live in today and from which we hope to
compete in the global market place.
AIMING AT GLOBAL COMPETENCE:
Here was a product of public education
all through his early years, who went
ahead to climb to the very peak of
global excellence in his chosen field.
Contrast that to the product of our new
academic environment where over 80% of
secondary school students are unable to
pass their secondary school exit
examinations. In both the last WAEC and
NECO examinations, less than 15% of
candidates obtained grades that can make
them eligible for admission to tertiary
institutions: universities,
polytechnics, and colleges of education.
Only last year, our Federal Minister of
Education said publicly that over 80% of
our graduates are unemployable in a
merit-based market. And many of our
leaders are acting as if things are okay
with the country. How can things be okay
with a country that is in danger of
losing the contribution of its most
productive generations, those below 35
years of age!
I said it above already; we have a lot
of the diagnosis. What is needed now is
the right policy thrust to reverse this
dreadful situation. Our goal in the
education as well as in the economic and
political sector is to create
capabilities with global competence.
This is how to remake our nation, and
provide regional leadership, and global
competitiveness. It cannot be any less.
My own direct experience as a member of
our nation’s economic management team
assures me that this can be done with
dedication and hard work. Most of us
here will recall that this nation once
had an impressive economic record
indexed by significant growths in
banking, capital market, and in the
telecommunication sectors among other
examples.
SECURITY FIRST:
Thankfully, the case of the four
kidnapped journalists has finally come
to a happy resolution. After a week of
ordeal, they have all returned home to
loved families while the nation too is
nudged to the contemplation of just how
pitiable our law enforcement mechanisms
have become. Corruption and leadership
have been the bridge in the
differentiation of performance between
our law enforcement men and women who
travel abroad on many international
missions and return with praises and
laurels, with their under-equipped and
underperforming peers at home.
Lacking the effective tools, and the
right motivation to excel, our local
security agencies find themselves
outflanked in the battle to make us and
our assets secure. The strategy to renew
the security and law enforcement sector
does not require the knowledge of rocket
science. We need to privilege the
process that rewards and empowers
competent, courageous, accountable and
capable leaders in the security and law
enforcement sector in the full knowledge
that a democracy that cannot secure
lives and property will ultimately fail
to defend itself.
A NATIONAL SHAME:
Nowhere is the shame of our nation more
visible than in the Niger Delta. To say
this is not to claim that the other
regions have been symbols of excellence
but the burden we face as a nation is
the lack of gratitude to the region that
produces the bulk of our wealth. Yet
here again, corruption has made it
difficult for the country to give
adequate protection to its only source
of revenue: petroleum and gas. Through a
failure so shocking in its magnitude, we
have abused the people of the Niger
Delta so badly that it seems to rank
among the world’s highest index of abuse
in the literature of social and economic
rights.
Our country’s reliance on petroleum is
worsened by the intellectual lethargy
and moral depravity of political leaders
who see the Niger Delta region, the core
of the country’s mono economy, as a site
of exploitation. Rather than using
revenue from petroleum to develop the
country’s infrastructure and prepare the
country for industrialization, political
leaders in the last thirty years have
converted such revenue to sources of
easy personal wealth, through graft or
undeserved compensation for political
office holders, and rent seekers. The
result is that today, Nigeria has one of
the lowest per capital income in the
world. Nigeria has more hours of
darkness than any other country on earth
because of our failure in 50 years to
achieve energy security for our
factories and our homes.
In addition, we make no serious pitch at
true development without the right and
adequate investments in growing the
economy. I have always believed that to
have an economy that depends solely on
oil and gas is a sign of lack of
economic imagination and ambition. It is
a sign of mental laziness. We must
mobilize and encourage our citizens to
produce wealth. It is also the
responsibility of the government to
ensure that distribution of such wealth
that comes into government coffers
through taxation takes into
consideration the need to ensure that no
citizen is made to lose his or her
humanity and dignity on account of
neglect at their moment of utmost need
for support from the government.
For this reason, the creation of more
and more wealth is a central challenge
before my generation and those younger
than I am in the audience. We need only
look at emerging economies like China
and Brazil to pick the lessons well.
However, the government must ensure that
regulations that can nurture positive
competition are established and
implemented to the letter. The era of
big, indolent and irresponsible
governments will be over. The culture of
using government to create illegal
wealth for unscrupulous politicians will
come to an end the day we are already to
see these priorities in their stark
reality.
For the kind of progress and modern
society I propose here, the private
sector is a key actor at the driving
seat and it can reduce the burden of
governance by creating jobs for
citizens, providing life and health
insurance for employees, and providing a
bigger revenue base for government to
have additional resources to improve
infrastructure for all.
But a regime of regulatory capture that
has made even the private sector
sometimes a mechanism of abuse of
citizens’ rights must be strengthened.
Proper regulation must ensure that
citizens enjoy the true worth of their
taxes, and to ensure that the proper
interest of the producer and the
consumer are catered for. What young
people, but particularly the civil
society, can ensure now is to come to
the table with their own experiences,
and power of advocacy to demand for a
very strong, transparent, and effective
regulation across the board.
Before I conclude this lecture, let me
quickly touch on the urgent need for
infrastructure renewal. All laws that
inhibit states and local governments
from engaging in infrastructure
development from railway to electricity
and aviation ought to head for the
garbage dump. What Nigeria needs today
is to aggressively support the model of
public-private partnership to solve the
country’s electricity and other
infrastructure deficits.
While it is a correct argument that we
need legislations now to reform the
generation, transmission, and
distribution of electricity, such
reforms must be targeted at the
flowering of the spirit of
entrepreneurship to guide this strategic
sector. Even where the government enters
into partnership with private producers
of electricity, the government should
peg its ownership at no more than 25% of
such investment as in any of the Public
–Private Initiatives.
Energy security will define what kind of
future we seek. We must come to terms
therefore that it is counterproductive
in the 21st century to leave the energy
sector solely in the hands of
government. But production of energy for
us today must embrace all forms of
energy production: bio-fuel, coal, gas,
hydro, nuclear, solar, and wind. This
point cannot be overemphasized. It is a
matter of topmost national security
consideration to get the energy sector
on high salvo because the future of
industry, services, and job creation
will amount to a pipe dream if this is
not promptly addressed.
But our development will lack the right
spirit and the effective vision without
a special programme that mainstreams
gender into all the neural paths of the
new vision of opportunity we must create
to break with the past. Societies that
have made appreciable development are
those that have given special
consideration to cogent demands of
women, especially of maternal health,
children and family progress.
The Nigeria which the young generation
must invest in today must demonstrate a
robust political will and commitment to
gender equality and women’s empowerment;
it must also improve women’s
participation in politics and
decision-making; invest in women’s
economic empowerment and livelihoods;
and above all, value women’s health,
security and safety. All these are
however possible only if we demonstrate
principled transformational leadership
in all spheres of our engagement.
LAST WORD:
Where we are going, dear compatriots, is
farther than where we are coming from. I
feel a great sense of optimism in spite
of the obstacles. That is the power of
youth. This nation has had its great and
low moments, but that is true of all
lands in the world. The energy to draw
now from those great moments and are
embedded in our youth, it is
demonstrated in the feat we accomplish
when we do great deeds, and score
remarkable goals at home and abroad.
Dear compatriots, we do not have the
time any longer. The world is not
waiting for us, we have the stuff to
win, we need to hit the road running,
today, we got the momentum, the pains of
past failures can no longer become the
inspiration or impetus for going
forward.
Let us harness the plutonium power of
youth to march forward and define
excellence as the standard of building a
society. We can do it, we can win, we
shall win. That is the metaphor embedded
in the life and story of this
irresistible rebel, we are soldiers of
Kongi, we cannot fail, not again. Thank
you all, God Bless this country.
Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, AIG (Rtd), Former
Chairman of Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission, EFCC delivered this
at the 13th Professor Wole Soyinka
Lecture held at the Shell Hall, MUSON
CENTRE, Onikan, Lagos on Tuesday 20th
July, 2010
Text culled from SaharaReporters.com
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