by Sabella Abidde
Prof.
Omo Omoruyi was a professor of political science at the University of
Benin. But he was better known as the Director-General, Centre for
Democratic Studies, and as Gen. Ibrahim Babangida’s trusted friend and
intellectual springboard. Outside of the military establishment, Omoruyi
was the man the then Head of State went to if he needed things done.
His loyalty to Babangida was complete and unwavering. He was also
friends with a pool of people — many of whom were titans of the Nigerian
political, economic, social and cultural estate.
In the early 1980s and through the later
part of the 1990s, you couldn’t be half-conscious and not know who Omo
Omoruyi was. He was a star of the Nigerian public space.But, his role
and significance began to wane a few years after his benefactor,
Babangida, left office. Thereafter, he had a fallout with Gen. Sani
Abacha whom, as Omoruyi himself had said, wanted him dead. In various
interviews, he reminded readers that he was“still carrying eight pellets
in my lower hip today.”But of course, eight or 18 pellets pale in
comparison with his current bout with cancer, which first occurred in
2007, and a relapse in the latter half of 2012.
It is this latter round of cancer and
his verbalisation of abandonment, lack and helplessness that caught many
people’s attention. And while a section of the people sympathised with
and prayed for his quick recovery; the other half were not so
compassionate. Omoruyi, himself, made his health and financial crisis
public in, “IBB, friends have abandoned me, I need help” (The PUNCH,
October 30, 2012). You could not read it and not pity a man who once was
a constant presence in the Nigerian landscape; a reminder that nothing
about life is permanent.
The PUNCH further quoted Omoruyi as
saying, “I have been used and dumped, especially by Babangida”Now, did
Babangida really abandon Omoruyi? If he did, why? After all, there are
some who will swear by anything that the former Head of State is known
for his enduring friendships and generosity. And perhaps, the most
ironic part of Omoruyi’s statement was when he said: “There is
vindictiveness in the land. I have paid my dues in this country and the
country is unfair to me. What did I not do?” Well, I am sad that Omoruyi
suffers ill-health. And I am especially sad that he has cancer. No one
should rejoice at anyone’s misfortune. From one human being to another,
he deserves our attention and compassion and prayers.
But he was part of the system, part of
the ruling class that left millions of Nigerians without access to
quality health care and other human and basic needs such as potable
water; clean, safe and secure environment; and to robust private and
public institutions. They made and left Nigeria a mess. They made the
average Nigerians miserable. Consequently, millions of Nigerians are in a
terrible state of need and a terrible state of mind. The second irony
is that there are now thousands of men and women like Prof. Omoruyi– men
and women who basked in the limelight and who had access to the best
medical treatment abroad at the expense of the government, or paid for
by ill-gotten wealth — but who are now in dire need because they
squandered their wealth and position.
After several decades of wealth,
influence and power, Omoruyi now wants government, and other wealthy
individuals, to pay for his treatment abroad. Are Nigerian hospitals not
good enough for him and his type? A better question would be: Are
Nigerian hospitals good enough for any one at all? Of course not!
Nigeria cannot boast a world-class hospital. As a result of neglect, the
vast majority of our hospitals are not where people go to regain their
health. No, they go there to suffer and to die.
According to the American Cancer
Society, “there are medical expenses from doctor visits; lab tests;
clinic visits for treatments; diagnosis and imaging tests; radiation
treatments; drug costs; hospital stays; surgery; and home care which can
include equipment, drugs, visits from specially trained nurses, and
more.” Depending on the type of cancer Omoruyi has, prescription
medicines alone can cost anywhere from $15,000-$150,000 a year. When you
add all the aforelisted expenses, the average cost is anywhere from
$170,000 – $500,000 a year.
The Edo State Governor, Adams
Oshiomhole, has been said to be financially responsible for Omoruyi’s
treatment abroad. Questions: will Oshiomhole also pay for a hundred
other indigenes that may need same or similar medical treatment abroad?
And how much has he spent so far? And was this amount approved by the
Edo State House of Assembly?
In the words of Omoruyi, “There are two
fears. Fear number one is the fear of a recurrence, that the cancer
could come back. Fear number two is that one could die.” If I may
ask,why is he afraid? Millions of Nigerians face these fears on a daily
basis. They face death every single day. They have all sorts of diseases
and ailments the Nigerian medical system is not equipped to treat,
cure, or properly manage. Thousands die every year without the
government batting an eyelid. These needless and senseless deaths are
one of the sad realities of life in Nigeria — the indignity of living in
a failing and reckless society.
Every year, for the last 20 years, about
2,000 Nigerians (the Nigerian Medical Association says it is 5,000
annually) leave the country for medical care (in places like India,
Israel, South Africa, the US, Canada, Germany and other European
countries). How much has this cost the Nigerian government and the
society? Money that could have been used to improve the Nigerian health
care system is sent abroad (a recent account Nigerians spend N80bn
annually on medical tourism) to advance other systems and economy.In
spite of the callousness and or indifference of the ruling class, death
is a leveler. Many of us do not know how or when we are going to die. We
don’t.
But somewhere along the way, death will
surely come. Six feet under; and with worms and all sorts of tiny
creatures crawling and burrowing all around! How we live our life
matters. You may be in a position of power today; and be powerless
tomorrow. And so one must be careful when the going is good; otherwise,
we’ll come to know that life is a bleeding bitch!
Punch
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