Abaribe’s admonition

By Kene Obiezu

 

SIR: For years now, Senator Eyinnaya  Abaribe has remained a lone voice crying in the wilderness of the Senate over sundry issues.

His latest exertion has been to ask President Muhammadu Buhari to resign over the deteriorating security situation in the country. On this point, even the strongest of his detractors would struggle to differ.

President Muhammadu Buhari came into power at a time when Nigerians were crying out for a change from the leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party   which for 16 years had run a succession of corrupt and inept governments. In unprecedented circumstances, Nigerians handed him their mandate and fate.

His vaunted squeaky clean public record and tough talk against corruption fanned the flames of hope among Nigerians who ignored his age and rapidly advancing frailty.

Now, well into his second term of four years in office, that hope has all but faded replaced with desperate disappointment and anguish.

The standard of living in the country has plummeted, insecurity has worsened and the public space has shrunk considerably as the different security agencies in the country have become more active in their pursuit of imaginary enemies.

There has also been a thinly veiled marginalization of sections of the country in appointments to fill public offices as religion and ethnicity has taken center stage.

Then there has been the much heralded war against corruption. That too has stuttered and staggered, taking on different shapes and leaving a lot to be desired among discerning Nigerians.

Then there is the never ending talk of a cabal. Nigerians remember with great anxiety the last time a cabal was rumored to be in charge of the country.

Read Also: ‘Abaribe’s call for Buhari’s resign mere showmanship’

 

It is safe to say that majority of Nigerians have long lost confidence in the ability of the current administration to take Nigeria to the promised land, and the consequences have been dire.

The chief consequence is that Nigerians have stopped being believers in the Nigerian project. With this   erosion of patriotism and hope has come an abrasive apathy.

Those Nigerians who have the means are abandoning the country in droves, with no intention of returning. Those who stay turn to sabotage at the slightest opportunity. They see it as the only way to survive the jungle that Nigeria currently is.

Court orders are obeyed at selectively; people are arrested and remanded without orders of court or in outright defiance of such orders.

There have also been statements from those in authority which have shown nothing but contempt for Nigerians and the avoidable challenges they are going through.

It is in the light of all these that Senator Abaribe continues to speak. Those for whom every act of those in authority would always remain beyond reproach will do well to remember that an unchecked fire in a neighbor‘s house would only take time to spread to one‘s house.

 

  • Kene Obiezu ,Abuja.

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