By Reuben Abati
A loosely bound
group of yesterday’s men and women seems to be on the offensive against the
Jonathan administration. They pick issues with virtually every effort of the
administration, pretending to do so in the public interest; positing that they
alone, know it all. Arrogantly, they claim to be better and smarter than
everyone else in the current government. They are ever so censorious,
contrarian and supercilious.
They have no
original claim to their pretensions other than they were privileged to have
been in the corridors of power once upon a time in their lives. They obviously
got so engrossed with their own sense of importance they began to imagine
themselves indispensable to Nigeria. It is dangerous to have such a
navel-gazing, narcissistic group inflict themselves with so much ferocity on an
otherwise impressionable public. We are in reality dealing with a bunch of
hypocrites.
With exceptions
so few, they really don’t care about Nigeria as a sovereign but the political
spoils that accrue from it. And so they will stop at nothing to discredit those
they think are not as deserving as they imagine themselves to be. President
Jonathan has unfairly become the target of their pitiable frustrations.
Underneath their
superfluous appearance, lies an unspoken class disdain directed at the person
and office of a duly elected president of the country. It is a Nigerian
problem, perhaps. In the same advanced societies which these same yesterday men
and women often like to refer to, public service is seen and treated as a
privilege. People are called upon to serve; they do so with humility and great
commitment, and when it is all over, they move on to other things. The quantity
surveyor returns to his or her quantity surveying or some other decent work;
the lawyer to his or her wig and gown; the university teacher, to the
classroom, glad to have been found worthy of national service. When and where
necessary, as private citizens they are entitled to use the benefit of this
experience to contribute to national development, they speak up on matters of
public importance not as a full-time job as is the case in Nigeria currently.
What then, is
the problem with us? As part of our governance evolution, most people become
public servants by accident, but they soon get so used to the glamour of office
that they lose sight of their own ordinariness. They use the system to climb:
to become media celebrities, to gain international attention and to morph into
self-appointed guardians of the Nigerian estate. They mask self interest
motives as public causes and manipulate the public’s desire for improvements in
their daily struggles as opportunity for power grab.
They are
perpetually hanging around, lobbying and hustling for undeserved privileges.
They exploit ethnic and religious connections where they can or join political parties
and run for political office. They even write books (I, me and myself books,
packaged as cerebral stuff); if that still doesn’t work, they lobby newspaper
houses for columns to write and they become apostolic pundits pontificating on
matters ranging from the nebulous to the non-descript. Power blinds them to the
reality that we are all in this together and we have a unique opportunity to do
well for the taxpayers and hardworking electorate that provide every public
official the privilege to serve.
Unsatisfied with
the newspaper columns, they open social media accounts and pretend to be voices
of wisdom seeking to cultivate an angry crowd which they feed continually with
their own brand of negativity. They arrange to give lectures at high profile events
where they abuse the government of the day in order to gain attention and steal
a few minutes in the sun; hoping to force an audience that may ‘open doors’ for
them, back into the corridors of power. These characters are in different sizes
and shapes: small, big; Godfathers, agents, proxies. The tactics of the big
figures on this rung of opportunism may be slightly different. They parade
themselves as a Godfather or kingmaker or the better man who should have been
king. They suffer of course, from messianic delusions. The fact that they boast
of some followership and the media often treats them as icons, makes their
nuisance factor worse. They and their protégés and proxies are united by one
factor though: their hypocrisy.
It is in the
larger interest of our country that the point be made that the government of
the day welcomes criticism and political activism. This is an aspect of our
emergent democracy that expands on the growing freedom of expression, thought
and association but there is need for caution and vigilance, lest we get taken
hostage by the architects of odious disinformation. Nigerians must not allow
any group of individuals to hold this country to ransom and no one alone should
appropriate the right to determine what is best for Nigeria. The accidental
public servants who have turned that privilege into a life-long obsession and
profession must be told to go get a life and find meaningful work to do.
Those who
believe that no one else can run Nigeria without them must be told to stop hallucinating.
The former Ministers, former Governors, former DGs, and all sorts who have been
busy quoting mischievous figures, spreading cruel propaganda must be reminded
that the Jonathan administration is in fact trying to clean up the mess that
they created. They want to own the game when the ball is not in their
possession. They want to be the referee when nobody has offered them a whistle.
They seek to play God, forgetting that the case for God is not in the hands of
man. One of the virtues of enlightenment is for persons to have a true
perspective of their own location in the order of things. What they do not seem
to realise or accept is that the political climate has changed.
When one of them
was in charge of this same estate called Nigeria, he shut down the Port
Harcourt airport and other airports for close to two years under the guise of
renovation. The Port Harcourt airport was abandoned for so long it was
overgrown with weeds after serving for months as a practice ground for motoring
schools. It was reopened without any improvement and with so much money down
the drain, and the pervasive suspicion that the reason it was shut down in the
first place was to create a market for a new airline (Arik Air) that had been
allowed the monopoly use of the other airport in the city .
Under President
Jonathan, airports across the country are being upgraded, rebuilt and
modernized; in less than two years, the transformation is self-evident. Perhaps
the greatest hypocrisy from our see-no-good commentators comes from the one who
superintended over the near-collapse of the aviation sector who is now
audacious enough to claim to be a social critic.
For the first
time since 1999, the Nigerian Railway Corporation is up and running as a
service organization. The rail lines have become functional from Lagos to Kano;
Ewekoro to Minna, and very soon, from Port Harcourt to Maiduguri, Abuja to
Kaduna and Lagos to Ibadan. They couldn’t do this in their time, now they are
busy looking for money that is not missing with their teeth. When questions are
asked, they claim they invented the ideas of due process and accountability.
They once promised to solve the crisis of electricity supply in Nigeria. But
what did they do? They managed to leave the country in darkness with less than
2,000 MW; abandoned independent power projects, mismanaged power stations, and
uncompleted procurement processes. The mess was so bad their immediate
successors had to declare an emergency in the power sector. It has taken
President Jonathan to make the difference. Today, there is greater coherence in
the management of the power sector with power supply in excess of 4, 200 MW; a
better conceived power sector road map is running apace, and the administration
is determined to make it better.
They complain
about the state of the roads. Most of the contracts were actually awarded under
their watch to the tune of billions! They talk about corruption, yet many of
them have thick case files with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission,
the courts and the police on corruption-related charges. One of them was even
accused of having awarded choice plots of government land to himself, his wives,
his companies and other relations when he was in charge of such allocations!
Really, have we forgotten so soon?
These yesterday
men and women certainly don’t seem to care very much about the Nigerian
taxpayer who has had to bear the brunt of the many scandals this administration
is exposing in its bid to clear out the Augean stable. They’d rather grandstand
with the ex-General this, Chief that, Doctor this and ex-(dis)Honourable
Minister who has no record of what he or she did with the funds the nation
provided them to deliver results to protect our interest so that we don’t end
up continuing to make the same wasteful mistakes.
It is enough to
make you shudder at the thought of any of them being part of government with
access to the public purse; but then we’ve already seen what some of them are
capable of doing when in control of public money, authority and influence; and
to that the people have spoken in unison – they have had enough. Nigerians are
wiser and are now familiar with the trickery from these persons whose claim to
fame and fortune was on the back of their public service.
Our point at the
risk of overstating what is by now too obvious: We have too many yesterday men
and women behaving too badly. We are dealing with a group of power-point technocrats
who have mastered the rhetoric of public grandstanding: carefully crafted
emotion-laden sound bites passed off as meaningful engagements. That is all
there is to them, after many years of hanging around in relevant places and
mingling in the right corridors, all made possible through the use/abuse of
Nigeria. Our caveat to their audience is the same old line: let the buyer
beware!
Dr. Abati is
Special Adviser (Media and Publicity) to President Goodluck Jonathan
Point blank ! I love this ! The times call for these kinds of truth , to shine some light against the lies and distortions build by those who call themselves political godfathers of the nation !
ReplyDeleteThis is a killer , a well thought and articulated piece. Well done Ruben
ReplyDeleteNicely written Abati. You seem to have left out the billions of dollars that have gone missing during this administration and the reluctance to punish or sack those who embezzle tax payers fund. Not to talk of the presidential pardon of a wanted man who escaped from the UK dressed as a woman. What a shame. WHERE IS OUR MONEY ?
ReplyDeleteReuben, why don't you guys who have found yourselves in power do your job so well that we have electricity/power, employment, credibility among nations and ease the suffering of the people. Then we the people, will tell the "Yesterday men or women/Accidental public servants" to go get a life. Advise the president well, infact just do your job.
ReplyDeleteOga Abati pls advise Mr President to reopen Polytechnic schools, al dis story does not add value to we Poly student, is been almost 8 month @ home, mind U if this strike is not called soon We student might be forced to stage a mass protest to the ongoing National Conference, WATCH OUT.
ReplyDeleteDamn! Mehn dis guy can speak! And all he said is jx so on point! Nice 1 man
ReplyDeleteTell us, why does it take all of 8 months to settle the polytechnics dispute with ASUP. I know that issues like this can be resolved within one month at most so that the students can go back to school. I remember that it took government an unnecessary 8 months to settle with ASUU, yet at the end, government still did what ASUU wanted. So why did it whole take 8 months of circus dancing and gyration for govt to agree with ASUU and now ASUP? Remember, the students lost one full semester in that strike which would never have lingered for so long. Reuben may be right about yesterday's men and women whose tenures darkened us, but why is he not telling Nigerians why corruption still continues under this government and still growing instead of abating to prove to us that they are fighting it, rather than spend all the time attacking past public officers. Why is he not telling us why, why, several whys, why all the bizarre things are happening under this regime and nobody is punished for impunity, unemployment, stealing, election rigging, oil thefts, etc. Rather, known convicts are being rewarded with awards, gifts and honours as if government is happy with them for robbing the country. Let Abati go public on government achievements and let his rebuttals provide explanations, not attacks.
ReplyDeleteAbati , will change his song when Jonathan leaves office in 2015 . He has seen the money in politics and will not want to be out of goverment. .
ReplyDeleteThe international community is in agreement with Nigerians that GEJ lacks the courage to fight corruption which will require stepping on powerful toes. Both past and present leaders are deep in this. Nigerians are clamouring for someone with this courage.
ReplyDelete