The
land of Samaria was once under intense hunger. There was hunger in the land,
occasioned by a serious famine. The famine was caused by the siege laid on the
city by another king, Beh-hadad, the king of Syria. The situation was such that
cannibalism became the order of the day. Two women agreed to eat their sons.
The first one, in her fidelity to the agreement, killed and boiled her son for
supper. The duo ate the meal. When the time came for the second woman to also
offer her son, she reneged. King Jehoram was passing by. He heard the wailing
of the first mother and inquired what afflicted her. The woman narrated her
sordid story.
Of
course, the king was troubled. He rented his clothes, and put on a sackcloth in
mourning. He took a personal oath and promised to have the head of Elisha the
prophet, blaming him and his prophesies for the trouble in the land. This
account is rendered in 2 Kings: 6 25-31. Every bad leader blames someone else
but himself, for the failure of his government. Something similar is already
happening in Nigeria. Parents have started selling their children to buy food
for others! Samaria is already here. Is President Bola Ahmed Tinubu aware?
In a
situation akin to what my people call: omo ina laa ra si’na (you send the child
of fire to fire), the Emir of kano, Alhaji Aminu Ado Bayero, sent the First
Lady, Mrs. Oluremi Tinubu, to her husband, President Tinubu. The emir told Mrs.
Tinubu thus: “Tell your husband to address hunger and insecurity in Nigeria”.
The
emir admitted that the two issues of hunger and starvation “did not start with
this government but the situation has become more alarming and needs urgent
attention.” Again, the Kano foremost traditional ruler admitted that “although
we have several means of communicating to the government on our needs and
requests, but your way and means is the surest way to tell the president the
actual happenings in the country.” Alhaji Bayero spoke through an interpreter
to the wife of the president, who was in his domain to perform a formal duty.
Check the emir’s background, you will find him a well lettered individual. But
he chose to speak in Hausa to a non-Hausa-speaking guest. There are ways with
emirs, when they address ‘aliens’. But I will not delve into that here.
It is
rather unfortunate that the Emir of Kano, Alhaji Ado Bayero, who lost his
tongue for the complete eight ruinous year that the Bayyajida II, General
Muhammadu Buhari, ruled this country would suddenly find his voice in the eight
months of Tinubu’s administration. It is true that once one is down because of
a big problem, the inconsequential ones would seize the opportunity to trample
on one’s tummy, and the balls to toys. Where was the Emir of kano when Buhari
brought this country to its knees? For eight solid years, where and when did
Alhaji Aminu Ado Bayero send any message of “urgent attention” to Buhari to
address the insecurity and hunger in the land?
Do we
blame the Emir, or the man, Tinubu, whose masquerade has refused to dance very
well in the arena to give one courage to point out and say: “here comes my
masquerade? One can only hope that Tinubu will understand that more insults
would come his ways from very underserving quarters unless he sits up and act.
If there are people in his government putting ‘sand in his gaari’, the
president should get rid of them unless he is a ‘sand-sand’ man himself.
Nigerians are tired of excuses. Tinubu is the one elected president and not all
these guys that are running all over the place, doing nothing like Sisyphus in
Hades. So much for emir Ado Bayero and his bad-belle message.
Now,
how does one defend president Tinubu in this matter? On what ground should one
stand to say what the emir said was, and remains, unbecoming of a man of his
stature, given the calamities that have been the lot of Nigerians in the last
eight months. However, one must point out the anomalies in the emir of Kano’s
message to Tinubu. Our elders say that only a madman will say this is where my
brother was disgraced yesterday without doing anything about it. So, I will
impose on myself, and briefly too, the role of a devil’s advocate, here, if
only to set the record straight.
A lot
has been written about the level of hunger in Nigeria today. The last eight
months of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s government have been horrible for
Nigerians and Nigeria. The streets are not smiling. But our new husband,
President Tinubu, is behaving like he doesn’t know our situation. Ikún, the
deaf squirrel itself, ought to have heard the agony in the land by now; how
much more the president. But, if President Tinubu has the tendency of the deaf,
we as diviners also have the duty to repeat his divination several times
(korokoro laa ró’fá adití).
The
messages from the divination boards are not good. They are very ominous. Hunger
has joined our legion of afflictions. President Tinubu can no longer pretend
not to know what is happening. And it doesn’t matter what his hangers-on are
telling him. Nobody is happy in Nigeria anymore. That is the bitter truth. The
lamentations from those who broke limbs and heads to put Tinubu in Aso Rock
Villa are louder. They wail, nowadays, more than those of us they labelled
‘Tinubu’s enemies’. Like I told a very close friend; I have passed the stage of
being labelled ‘Tinubu’s enemy’. Why should anyone befriend failure in the
first instance? Who romances sheer ineptitude, if not a hypocrite?
Every
king has an inner caucus he listens to at critical moments. I witnessed that
several times when Kabiyesi Òjó Àmúpìtàn Olúyeyè Òjoyèbugiòtèwó (he who gets to
the throne and uproots the tree of conspiracy), was the Onise of Odo Oro Ekiti;
the Oba of my town. Whenever there was a knotty issue, Kabiyesi would listen to
all the people; he would allow them to talk. Then turning to his chiefs, he
would ask (depending on the matter), a particular one among them this: “Ngbó
Obadòfin, Kú a ti wí? (Listen Obadòfin, what do you say to this?). Once
Kabiyesi asked any of his Chiefs that question, the one so asked would know
that the Oba was looking for the truth and nothing less. And he got more than
enough pieces of quality advice.
Who is
that inner man who can tell President Tinubu the whole truth and nothing but
the truth about our condition? Who has that capacity? Who has the boldness, the
courage and goodwill to tell the president that Nigerians are dying of hunger
in instalments? Or, better still; do we ask, what truth does Tinubu tell
himself when he is alone? I read a disturbing piece on Sunday. The author,
Taiwo Adisa, Nigerian Tribune’s General Editor, wrote that some close associates
of the president could no longer reach him to give him the feedback from the
streets. Is that true? Is that why the president has been unfeeling in the past
eight months? Who are the ones who see the president as they wish? What do
those few privileged ones tell President Tinubu?
I am
not a prophet of doom. And I am not afraid to be labelled, also. Disaster looms
at the rate we are going. Hunger is already in the land. Unfortunately, there
is no market in Nigeria from Nasarawa to Ògún, Gombe to Anambra and everywhere
else, where there are no foodstuffs on display. What is lacking is the
purchasing power. The quality of our Naira has depreciated so much that a huge
amount of money buys nothing from the market.
A
senior colleague buys a particular brand of milk regularly. He says it has a
low cholesterol level. The last time I drove him to the store, a tin was sold
for N650! He refused to buy it. I refused to persuade him to buy it. The
following day, I asked him how he managed to have his cereal without the milk.
He told me that he resorted to taking Cocoa beverages. What a life! That is the
situation across the country.
The
Tinubu government responded by saying it would release millions of tonnes of
grains to the market. I shook my head in pity. Is that the solution? When the
stocks from the national silos are exhausted, what will the people resort to?
Or, are the stocks from the exalted silos inexhaustible? Besides, how much will
it cost a trader in New Benin Market to travel to the silos in Auchi to buy the
grains and bring the same back to Benin to sell? In Benin City and adjourning
towns and villages, a liter of fuel goes for an average of N660. Due to the bad
roads between Benin and Auchi, commuters spend an average of seven hours for a
journey of less than two hours before. They are at the same time at the mercy
of kidnappers and other felons on the highway. So, Mr. President, if a trader
succeeds in making the journey to Auchi and back to Benin after 14 hours, how
much will she sell a mudu (measurement) of beans? This is the problem
confronting the people all over.
I
decided to write this piece at home yesterday. Staying at home afforded me the
opportunity to know another level of suffering in the land. Intermittently, I
heard people knocking at my gate. Each time I tried to check, I discovered they
were people I had never seen in the neighborhood before. They were carrying all
manner of containers, looking for water. I realized that there are boreholes
around but no water. Why? In the last one month, there has been no electricity
supply in the neighborhood. One of them told me that they were just approaching
any home with overhead water tanks to ask if they could fetch water. I had no
choice than to open the outside tap for them to fetch water. That would be at a
huge cost of N660/liter fuel to pump the water. It then dawned on me why I saw
some fellas who came to the Edo State Council of the Nigeria Union of
Journalists (NUJ) Secretariat with jerry cans in the booths of the cars to
fetch water. The implication here is that once there is power failure and
electricity is cut off, the people suffer. This is another area that this
government should look into. It is not just about releasing the
never-sufficient grains; it is also about providing the means of cooking the
grains for the people – water, gas and the ingredients to make the meal
palatable.
I am
worried for President Tinubu. I am worried that he is the one demystifying
himself. Where are the attributes of his ‘Lagos Magic’? They told us he is the
sole architect of modern Lagos. Where is the magic wand? In under eight months,
everything has collapsed under the watch of the ‘Chief strategist’ himself!
They boasted that the president would come to government with the best of
brains?
“The
last of Thomas Erikson’s tetralogy is titled: “Surrounded by bad bosses and
lazy employees”. The first chapter of the 2021 book has this sub-title: “Really
Bad Leadership-and Its Appalling Consequences”. In it, the Swedish behavioural
expert says: “Good leadership is dependent on the boss and the staff
understanding the symbiosis they are working in and both parties realizing that
they are dependent upon each other to get the system work”.
He goes
further: “…Every one of us, at some time or another, has had an incompetent
boss and wondered why he or she doesn’t do their job better. Some bosses don’t
exercise any leadership at all, which makes them unnecessary. And that raises
the question: a boss who doesn’t actually lead – what’s the point? (Page 11).
This is
exactly the question Nigerians have been asking in the last eight months. Who
is leading this government – the same super magician we were sold in February
2023? Nigerians have also been asking: where are the technocrats, the best
brains they told us were coming? Who in this government can match our Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala? Who among the Tinubu boys is in the same league with Oby
Ezekwesili? Who among the present lot can compete with Akinwumi Adesina, Frank
Iweke Jnr. and the powerful host of technocrats that were in the previous
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)’s governments that these present lords termed
‘clueless’ and accused of ruining the nation? What sort of leadership is Tinubu
providing?
My
people say when the lead giant ant misses the road, its followers become a
flock without a shepherd. What exactly is the economic drift of this
administration? What is its focus? And how long does the government think the
people will endure its voodoo monetary policy of “ways and means”, which, in
street parlance, is printing of money to pay federal government workers’
salaries every month, before something would snap?
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