The average Nigerian is believed by many to be
educated, yet those who govern him treat him and relate with him as if
he has never been to school. Or, what can you make of the melodrama
surrounding the fuel subsidy saga? The tongue of the Nigerian has been
waggling as to how a budget line could be over-spent by more than 500
per cent in an election year without the chief executive and driver of
the budget knowing. Despite his current low estate, the Nigerian still
has his senses intact and is waiting to see how the whole matter will
end. He is interested in knowing whether the Nigerian CEO was ignorant
of this unusual and unprecedented budget variance or whether he simply
turned his eyes the other way to enable the spending spree serve a
pre-determined and intended purpose.
Then, we have the unprecedented appointment of the
wife of a sitting president as Permanent Secretary in Bayelsa State.
While agreeing that the Permanent Secretary position is now a political
appointment which the governor of a state has the power to make (no
thanks to one of the most unfortunately reforms that destroyed the once
globally acknowledged best civil service in Africa), it would have been
nice to know what her last career position was before taking sabbatical
for her first lady role. The Nigerian should have been spared the
justification and rationalisation by the beneficiary of this unusual
act, but no; he must be further insulted because it is assumed he has
lost his senses to the rat race he is now forced to run. This was the
nutrient-deficient meal the Nigerian was still struggling with on his
now contaminated and germ-laden plate when the story broke that a piece
of land once allocated to a former First Lady with proper documentation,
has now been re-allocated to another First Lady, both of the same
party. As a matter of fact, the latter used to be the second in command
to the former. Although this matter is in the court (or is it for
out-of-court settlement), the Nigerian feels he should be spared this
type of insult, which is driving him to insanity because all attempts to
justify this, rather than blow the particles away, are turning them to
sediments.
Of all the special projects started by Nigeria’s
‘First Ladies, right from the time of the late Mrs. Mariam Babangida,
who brought glamour and attention to this constitutionally unrecognised
office, how many of them are still alive? Who said the one the incumbent
is pursuing, which is now bringing her in conflict with her
predecessor, will outlive her? Instead of hurting her former boss the
more (having lost her husband in office – otherwise he probably would
still be president now in his second term), shouldn’t the Christian in
her prevail – even if the Abuja politicians are nudging her to the
contrary? Well, as my late mother used to say, ‘the cane that was used
in beating the senior wife is still in custody for the junior one’.
You can see how badly injured the Nigerian’s
sensibility is. But as if that is not enough, the National Assembly is
now rubbing insult on this wound with its action on the 2012 budget. It
started at first like a “suffering and smiling” matter (apologies to the
late Fela Anikulapo Kuti) for the Nigerian until the House of
Representatives bared its teeth at the Presidency. It became a matter
for deep regret, when the Senate, known for its usually mature and
calculated interventions, also joined the fray, threatening the Minister
of Finance, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, to appear before it. What was the
matter? That a budget that was passed in April had only been implemented
by less than 40 per cent; that the minister lied by canvassing a figure
of 56 per cent; that the Executive must know that it (the Legislature)
has the statutory power to do what it is doing! Haba! And when the
minister eventually appeared, the lawmakers swallowed the humble pie.
The questions that popped up at my face are: What does it take to be
properly educated over a subject matter before blowing your top in
ignorance? Is financial allocation and spending equivalent to budget
implementation or value-for-money projects that can be verified? Given
the huge deficit in the 2012 budget, shouldn’t someone know that 100 per
cent implementation depends on government’s ability to source funds for
the deficit? Even if such funds are available, when has Nigeria
suddenly transformed to a perfect economy with the capacity to implement
her budget 100 per cent?
Please, we need sanity in this land. We know, in the
words of John Maxwell, that a person who becomes a leader by virtue of
his position should grow up to it, otherwise he cannot claim to be a
leader. Our legislators should use their positions judiciously. In
exercising their power to summon citizens, there should be mutual
respect at such meetings. It is basic courtesy that when you ask someone
a question, you allow him to answer. Interjecting him while still
speaking does not suggest civility. Our legislators, who truly are our
representatives, should always remember that the average Nigerian is a
courteous person and that should be reflected in the discharge of their
functions. In areas where there are knowledge gaps, they should make
efforts to fill the gaps.
The recent noise on budget implementation amounts to
rubbing salt on the injury of the Nigerian. Such should not happen
again. In the words of one of my professor friends: “The illiterates of
the 21 century are not those who have never been to school, but those
who refuse to learn, unlearn and re-learn.” I commend this word of
wisdom to all our leaders – whether at the Federal, State or Local
Government levels. Readers are leaders, and knowledge is power. Our
leaders must spend more time developing themselves and deepening their
intellectual capacity. It is a requirement for outstanding leadership in
this century.
•Olufemi Adebiyi, Managing Partner, R&S Consulting Limited, Maryland. Lagos.
No comments:
Post a Comment