Tag: Nigerian youths

  • The creative industry is our life and our job – Austen Peters

    The creative industry is our life and our job – Austen Peters

    Ms. Bolanle Austen-Peters has described the creative industry  as a money-spinning sector that the Federal Government must not neglect its development.

    “Art is money; art is life, art is job, art adds value to the individual and the environment,” the Founder and Managing Director, Terrakulture, a cultural firm, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Wednesday.

    She said in Lagos that it if well developed by the government, it would also boost the nation’s Gross Domestic Products (GDP) and employment generation for its teeming unemployed youths.

    She said that the industry was blessed with enormous potentialities that could be harnessed to solve the unemployment challenges facing the country.

    “Some of the areas of specialisation that the youths can venture into in the sector are: visuals, food, music, dance, and script writing.

    “ These areas are capable of employing millions of Nigerian youths and solve problems facing them,” she said.

    She also said that the industry was a fertile ground for the production of artistic and movie producers/directors, fashion designers, models, image makers and painters.

    Austen-Peters tasked the National Bureau of Statistics to disclose the data on revenue generated from creative arts and its contributions to the nation’s economy.

    She said that the data would enable government to know the immense contributions of the industry to national development in the areas of employment, revenue and foreign exchange earnings.

    She said that her firm had engaged several youths since its inception in 2013 through its periodic organised exhibitions.

    Austen-Peters said that the organized private sector should be ready to partner the Federal Government under the Public Private Partnership (PPP) initiative because the former had lots of statutory responsibilities to perform.

  • NYSC scheme has failed  Nigerian youths – Olulade

    NYSC scheme has failed Nigerian youths – Olulade

    Member of the Lagos State House of Assembly, Hon. Segun Olulade, has condemned the handling of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) scheme, saying it no longer makes any sense and is unfair to the present Nigerian youth. Olulade, who represents Epe 2 constituency, stated this while commemorating the International Human Rights Day in a press statement he signed yesterday.
    He lamented the recent series of tragedies occurring at various orientation camps, leading to avoidable deaths of young people, especially in careless circumstances. The lawmaker said the scheme, which was primarily established after Nigeria’s civil war to foster unity in the nation, has outlived its purpose, just as he added that young people have rights that must be respected under all circumstances.
    He further noted that the scheme, which was meant to encourage inter-cultural relations and patriotism to the fatherland no longer serve the purpose but rather has become a mere exercise and platform for meting serious injustices against the present Nigerian youth. Olulade observed that on no account must a young person lose his/her life for being an NYSC member, adding that the scheme is no longer dignifying, as refugee camps are often better than orientation camps across the nation.
    Olulade, who is the Chairman, House Committee on Health Services, stressed that there is no doubt that the ideology of the scheme was a good one at the beginning, adding that it is not a bad idea to review it holistically and conclude whether it is still useful or not.
    “As a parent, it is painful to see a promising youth lose his/her life in deplorable circumstance as we are seeing today in our orientation camps across the nation. It is also not dignifying to see corps members being treated like refugees at the orientation camps all in the name of a service scheme as this contravenes fundamental human rights of the concerned youth,’ he said.

  • ‘Nigerian youths can excel in Olympiads’

    ‘Nigerian youths can excel in Olympiads’

    Nigerian youths can easily be trained to excel academically on the world stage, says Mr. Sabri Unal, Deputy Managing Director (Academics) at Nigerian Turkish International Colleges (NTIC).

    In an interview, Unal said the evidence is in the large cache of awards that NTIC pupils have won in international competitions.

    Unal said the school has won 45 gold, 50 silver and 71 bronze medals from international competitions.

    The school also hosts the International Science Olympiad (ISO), which Unal said further confirms his assertion that with the right kind of training, students can indeed excel anywhere in the world.

    “NTIC is the pioneer organiser of the ISO, an international competition in science subjects of Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, Computer and Biology, with more than 20 participating countries around the world, including Nigeria, Romania, the Netherlands, Argentina, Colombia, Ivory Coast, Senegal, South Africa, Turkey, Azerbaijan, Kenya, Bosnia & Herzegovina and the United States.

    “We have excelled at competitions such as the Informatrix International Computer Project Olympiad, International Art Competition, International Mathematical Olympiad, Pan African Mathematics Olympiad, International Science and Environmental Project Competitions and so on,” he said.

    Unal  explained that NTIC’s template for achieving such impressive results includes individual guidance for pupils, integrating technology into education delivery, small class sizes, and other techniques that help skills development, as well as extracurricular activities.

    The DMD also said the education at NTIC was not for the rich as 30,000 pupils get 100 per cent scholarships in the school’s 16 branches in Abuja, Kaduna, Yobe, Kano, Ogun and Lagos states yearly.

  • Educationist urges e-learning

    Mr Ishan Abeywardena, an Open Educational Resources Adviser with the Commonwealth of Learning based in Canada, on Wednesday urged Nigerian youths to embrace online-open-distance -learning institutions.

    Abeywardena told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos that these learning institutions have the same credibility as the conventional institutions.
    He said that the open distance learning was a very essential tool to educate the masses and increase access to western education.

    The adviser said that the world had moved from `a stage- on- a stage to a guide on the side,’ adding that online learning was the future of higher institutions of learning.
    According to him, usually in a conventional institution, lecturers or professors stand in front of their classes, dictate notes and assignments.

    They also direct their students on whatever topics they wanted their students to learn, he said.

    “However, in the open-and-distance learning, students are giving self-directed materials, which they can goggle from the internet, and study at their own pace.
    “The accuracy of the materials given out to students in the open-and- distance learning situation is better than what a lecturer or professor is teaching in a conventional institution.
    “Also in countries like Nigeria and India, with large population waiting to gain admissions into higher institutions of learning and universities, online learning is a quick solution.
    “It is not a very visible proposition for developing countries like Nigeria for its government to establish tertiary institutions of learning that can accommodate all those seeking admissions,’’ he said.

    Abeywardena urged government to provide platforms and policies that would support and encourage admission seekers to embrace online education.

    He said if policies were not formulated, discrimination and common interests would impede the growth and development of distance learning.

    The education expert urged youths, especially admission seekers, to consider working and learning simultaneously.

    He said youths could seek employment while schooling to save time and resources.

    “Why not work while you learn; nowadays, employers prefer to employ workers who are studying on part-time basis because they are more adaptable to workplace and serious situations,’’ he said.
    Abeywardena said that flexible and open distance learning would encourage youths to work while studying as part-time students.

    “Online students can adapt to different situations, they are good workers because they can hit the ground running, they come with a burden level which are secured, especially, for communication skills.

    “Open-distance learning is a very positive step; the Open University of UK is constantly ranked among the top 10 universities in the UK.

    “There is no discrimination between accredited universities and the open universities in developed countries anymore because most universities are also embracing online.

    “Very soon, there will be no line between open distance learning and the conventional learning,” he said.

  • ‘5,000 stipend is an insult to Nigerian youths’

    The Commandant-General of the Peace Corps of Nigeria, Ambassador Dickson Akor has said the campaign promise of 5,000 to Nigerian youths by the All Progressive Congress, APC is an insult to Nigerian youths.

    While commending President Muhammadu Buhari for jettisoning the idea, Akor canvassed for empowerment scheme for youths as well as legislative backing to ventures and ideas that will uplift the Nigerian youths.

    The Peace corps bill which Akor said is one of various ideas will create 800,000 Nigerian youths with jobs when finally passed into law by the National Assembly.

    Speaking on the bill which scaled through the second reading in the National Assembly last week, Akor said the bill sponsored by Senate leader, Senator Ali Ndume when passed seeks to empower, develop and provide alternative employment for the youths to facilitate peace, community services and other related matters.

    Akor who spoke with newsmen saturday in Abuja on the bill said the Senate has referred the bill to the committee on Interior for further legislative actions including organizing public hearing.

    “The bill when finally passed into law has the capacity to provide alternative employment for Nigerian youths, facilitate peace, community services and nation building.

    “The bill will provide positive engagement of the youths with a view to pre-occupy them in ventures that would make them economically productive to themselves and larger society.

    “Currently in Nigeria, we are investing a lot of energies and resources to contain the menace of insurgency, militancy, kidnapping, vandalism, armed robbery, political thuggery, drug trafficking, prostitution, suicide bombing, cattle rustling and a host of other social vices.

    “These vices no doubt constitute social challenges that have retrogressive effects and implications on the economic development and security of the nation.

    “This bill seeks to give statutory functions to the existing peace corps of Nigeria which currently has over 98,000 members with well structured network of branches in 34 states of the federation including the Federal Capital Territory and observing adequately all its stated functions, and achievement of no small measure for an NGO.”

    The Nigerian Peace Corps was established 17 years ago alongside the Nigerian Security and Civil Defense Corps (NSCDC).

    The bill successfully scaled second reading after it was put to a voice vote by the Speaker, Yakubu Dogara.

  • Nigerian youths wasting away, says research

    Nigerian youths wasting away, says research

    A study by General Electric has established that Nigeria’s young population can be put to better use.

    The study, dubbed: Skills White Paper, is targeted at improving the capacity of Nigeria to harness the potential of its growing young population.

    According to the White Paper, sub-Saharan Africa is estimated to be home to a quarter of people aged 24 and below by 2030, with Nigeria contributing the most significant number.

    The document, with the title:  ‘Building strong workforces to power Africa’s growth: The future of work in Africa’, identifies that Nigeria is unable to provide jobs and prospects to majority of its young and growing population, a situation which is buttressed by statistics putting youth employment at 50 per cent.

    General Electric Nigeria’s President and Chief Executive Officer Lazarus Angbazo advised that this situation must change “because it condemns a large number of young people to low living standards and represents a terrible waste of human capital undermining future economic growth, but also because it poses a risk to social and economic stability”.

    He said the country would reap enormous dividends from the opportunity that its human capital presents if it adequately engages this potential workforce.

    Angbazo pointed out that achieving this would propel growth positively and engender prosperity amongs the people with families having more money to spend on education and health care.

    To harness the opportunities the future presents, the GE boss said his company embarked on a thorough interrogation of the situation the country faces at the moment, and came out with recommendations in the Skills White Paper.

    The steps recommended include: A stronger education system with deliberate emphasis on science, technology, education and mathematics; more open and flexible labour markets and a broader talent localisation strategy pursued in partnership with global companies; and exploring the pipeline of skills needed to leverage the technological advances of the future.

  • Youths decry exclusion from ministerial list

    Youths decry exclusion from ministerial list

    The Ministerial list that has now been officially made public by the Nigerian senate has expectedly drawn reactions from several quarters. As a coalition of young people actively engaged in governance and democracy in the country, we are sad that we are again on a familiar road. This is the path again where we begin to advocate for proper youth representation in governance.

    We are shocked that the present ministerial nominee has no single representation of young people who were born in the 70’s or the 80’s. We did not expect that President Muhammadu Buhari’s list of 21 Ministers, which came after a long six months wait, not to have a single youth’s name on it especially when he was the Federal Commissioner – the equivalent of a minister today – for Petroleum and Natural Resources in 1976 at the age of 34. Curiously, the president seeks to retain the portfolio 39 years after.

    We hold no grudge against him for this decision as long as Nigeria is better for it. We assumed the long wait for the list was also in part due to the president’s search for capable hands. Our definition of youth is in tandem with that provided by the African Youth Charter, which was ratified by the African Union Heads of State and Government, which numerically classifies them as those between the age of 15 and 35.

    We are further taken aback by the presidency’s seeming dismissal to this demography especially given the roles several of them played towards the actualization of the President Muhammadu Buhari and his party’s political dream of getting into office through democratic means.

    The president body language and leadership in this regard does not mean well especially because state governments will quickly learn from this and also shut out young people from representative governance in the states. Beyond the ministerial list, we are also quick to note that there has not been anybody below the age of 35 that has been appointed to be part of the president’s team thus far.

    There are evidences that shows Nigeria parades some of the finest youth on the continent, who can hold their own any where in the world. We are forced to ask – is it that the country’s investment in young people is just a routine process and our country’s leadership does not believe in the capacity of this demography to lead?

    It took six months to release these list of 21. We understand that constitutionally, the president is obliged to mark up the figures to 36. We therefore hope this mistake will be corrected; and quickly. Women, despite being about half of the Nigerian population have also been poorly represented with just a meager 14% representation on the ministerial list.

    The median age of the current list is 56. The presidency can choose to correct this wrong by appointing young women into the Federal Executive Council, as this will serve dual purpose of women and youth representation. It is wrong for any government to make decisions for a group in their absence, especially when they are keen to participate.

    What the president is saying thus far with its appointment is that he has no confidence in today’s youth even when the same country gave him the opportunity to grow into leadership at an early age. Nigerian youth have earned the right to a space in the leadership of this country and we hope the presidency will listen and do the needful. When we are not given the opportunity to lead today, we are simply being denied of the experience needed to lead properly when that elusive future finally comes.

  • Nigerian youths and sport betting

    Has it been noticed that gambling has been redefined and repackaged to target more young people in Nigeria? This is a growing trend among the youth in the country. Seventy per cent of them are loyal patronisers of soccer betting. The rise of these gambles is becoming so obvious in the way the media now advertise betting. One of the catchy messages being used to attract the attention of young people to gambling is: “How to become a Bill Gates in just a day”.

    In a recent investigative report by News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), about 60 million Nigerians between the ages 18 and 40 years may be spending up to N1.8 billion on sports betting daily. The report stated that the age group invest an average of N3,000 on sports sweepstake daily.

    Dotun Ajekigbe, a bet analyst, said sport betting may be risky but it is also rewarding. Ajekigbe said about 60 million Nigerians place bets on different matches daily across the country. He said most unemployed youths have taken to betting online and in other media to make a living. According to him, these people stake an average of N3,000 on bet every day.

    Sport betting is gambling, not investing in bank shares. Almost everything in life is a gamble. But, a gamble comes with risk because it is not 100 per cent predictable. Ajekigbe said one can dramatically reduce the risk by taking calculated risks only. When a gambler takes calculated risks, he takes his decisions on prediction that may or may not come to reality because betting is by chance. The better informed the player is, the better the chance he/she has to make money.

    With the repacking of betting, youths now have to choose which football betting agencies they prefer. Some of the online soccer betting websites include Nairabet, 1960bet, bet9ja, Surebet247, Merrybet and Betcolony, which are modern media for soccer sweepstake which replace the old soccer pool. Only that these new bet agencies just added ideas, concepts and technology. Now, people can now become millionaires from the comfort of their homes, placing bets online.

    But in reality, one personal reason which I could use to testify that football betting has been to the disadvantage of our society is that, it is gradually becoming another crime-generating avenue. I know many people would not agree with this opinion, but I can justify it with claims by some gamblers.

    Mr Ambrose Obialor, who runs Yobo Viewing Centre in Lagos, told this writer that some people bet between N2,000 and N10, 000, depending on how financially buoyant an individual is. He said some people denied themselves of food after spending all they had on a bet. But when they win, they use the money to solve problems they are facing. If they lose, they will lose everything. Now, where would the loser get money to play again?

    Afeez Adigun, an agent for 1960 Bet Company in Lagos, said about 200 to 300 youths visit his office to bet on English League fixtures daily. According to him, a betting company can generate up to N20 million monthly and spend between N5 million and N7 million to pay winners. How many of the gamblers win daily?

    A representative of another betting company, Betting World, tried to justify the business, saying betting agencies have employed thousands youths in Lagos alone. He said that betting outlets are usually filled with young people. He explained that most people spend as much as N10,000 for their daily stakes, with some of them winning and others lose. But all of them return the next day for another betting.

    But for a jobless youth that did not win, stealing becomes the next option to get money to play the following day. The fact remains that football betting has never helped the older generation and will never be of help to the present generation.

    Football betting is now a cankerworm that is eating deep in the fabric of our society. With a clear view, it has tremendously promoted laziness among youths and killed many dreams. The “quick money” bet promotes unwillingness to work and dormancy among the youth. This is contributing to erosion of our values and education. Parents must play their role in orientating their children against the modern-day gambling.

     

    • Abibat just finished from Mass Comm., UNILORIN
  • Youths and Nigeria’s future

    SIR: Are the Nigerian youths prepared to take on leadership roles? Given that the world is on the fast lane of transformation, can we truly advance competitively in the comity of nations without harnessing the potentials of youth?

    Certainly, Nigerian youths have come of age; they are qualified, lettered and have what it takes to take our nation to the next level. They have left so much mark in the sand of time in their chosen professions here at home and abroad. Support, encouragement and the enabling environment to excel is what it takes to spur the youth to move Nigeria to greater heights. As a nation, the leadership potentials of the youth should be identified by the youth themselves and jointly harnessed by the society.

    In the build up to the 2015 general elections, it was clear that Nigerian youths have again been deprived of another golden opportunity to showcase their potentials as capable driving forces in the development of our dear country. It is evident in the candidates contesting various elective positions amongst political parties. To be able to make the desired change, the youth should endeavour to be faithful and loyal members of political parties of their choice and volunteer to employ right attitudes. This will afford them the opportunity to be able to force the tired to retire gracefully.  Most youth act as though they lack direction. They have become ready prey to the antics of the experienced grandfathers by their actions and inactions thus limiting their chances of assuming leadership positions. If we continue to support the old politicians for the reason of stipends they dangle as baits and even become violent tools in the hands of politicians, the expectation is for the remaining aged to march as quickly as their walking sticks could permit them into the political rings.

    As youths, any act of violence and bids by politicians to employ youths to satisfy their insatiable political thirst should be avoided.  The youths should prove that they can assume their rightful place as leaders. Nigeria can achieve greatness in the hands of her youths. What is needed is the enabling environment to excel. The shape and future of our nation is too much valuable to be assigned to the aged.

     

    • Oliver Uche Eze

    Kaduna

  • Letter to Nigerian youths

    Dear Nigerian youths,

    This letter being addressed to you through this medium (The Message)is not by design but by accident. Nigerians of my age and beyond (60+) never had an opportunity to be so addressed. Let it be known to you that except life and sound health, none of Allah’s bounties to man is as treasure-able as youthfulness. The definition of youth varies from place to place and from faith to faith. But generally, youthfulness spans from the age of puberty (at 16) to that of reasoning (at 40).

    That is the second stage of human life as it follows that of adolescence. It can be said therefore that the juiciest part of human life is what people call youth. And whoever is blessed with it is blessed with all hopes of life.

    Youth is the spur of ambition and risk. It is the period of determination and resolution. It encourages attraction between genders and engenders association across boundaries. All efforts in human life that yield results in old age are made at youthful age. To an average youth anywhere in the world, the sky is never the limit. There are still many other firmaments beyond the sky. Youth is the stage of hard work. It is the stage of planning. It is the stage of vision and mission. That is why the youths of any nation are seen as the bone marrow of such a nation and the beacons of the future. And fortunately, youths invariably constitute majority of the existing people at any given time in any given nation.

    Youths before now

    In the years past when life had meaning and culture had value, youths were seen as the pride of the nation. They were the natural arrows fixed to the parental bows which were often shot through the iron gate of life. This was the case in Nigeria before and during the colonial era. And after the country’s independence, the youths constituted the glory and hope of their parents. Their role in the family encouraged the bearing of many children as they partnered their fathers in tilling the farm land and harvesting the crops. In short, they formed the live wire of their families.

    When a father was said to be rich in those days, it was only because he had many children (male and female) who constituted the workforce of the family. The father’s pride then was not just the number of children he had but the volume of contribution made by those children to his wealth. Thus, children were considered as wealth.

    In those days, youths were not just helpers of their parents on the farms or in   their trades they also assisted them in training the younger ones. Yet, they had the highest esteem for those parents in their utterances and in their conduct. The level of discipline in those days was such that boys were handled by their fathers while girls were mostly handled by their mothers. And the mothers dared not utter a word while any child was being subjected to discipline by the father. In a nutshell the upbringing of a child was the main key to societal serenity.

    Change of trend

    Today, Nigeria is a different story altogether. The youths of yesteryears have become the elders of today. They have left the chord of discipline that escorted them into the world of decency to the new train of indecency. And that chord is no longer suitable for either today or tomorrow as the trend has changed dramatically. The current trend began in January 1966 when some uncultured youths in military uniform, spurred by blind ambition, threw the value of age and experience to the winds and killed the then leaders of the Nigerian nation in what was called a military coup d’état. By that unfortunate act they plunged the nation into a precipitate civil war that rendered the youth wild and eroded the value of youthfulness.

    For 13 years thereafter, the vagabonds remained in power using whim in place of experience. And when a brief civilian interlude came on board in 1979 for only four years, the vagabonds perched on the governance again and like hungry vultures, they fed on the carcass of democracy to their fill. Through that unbridled usurpation of power, the so-called Nigerian military weaned themselves from the ladle of integrity and destroyed whatever was left of their nomenclature.

    Here we are today, looking desperately like a starved hawk and hanging restlessly in the balance like a gagged hyena. Virtually every Nigerian has forgotten the real cause of our calamity. The cry everywhere is now about the effect of that calamity on the nation. No one endeavours to look back and see where the downfall started from.

    And without looking back, there can never be any correction as to how to rise again. A Yoruba adage states axiomatically that when a toddler falls down he looks forward (to see if there is any adult around to lift him up). But when an adult falls he looks backwards (to see the cause of his fall). That is the difference between experience and potential.

    Banking on potential to govern a nation that requires experience as did the eaglet Nigerian military can never bring any meaningful result. Both potential and experience have their role and chance in any society. But neither can take the place of the other.

    The difference

    You the youths of today are different from those of yesteryears in many ways and the differences are clear. The youths of the past were very hardworking and dedicated. They served their parents diligently and stood by them in all circumstances. They sought their parents’ advice and learned from the latter’s experiences. You the youths of today are very lazy, slothful, time wasting and lackadaisical in your attitude to life even as you are served by your parents from infancy to old age. Yet you despise those parents and treat them with disdain like nonentities. You believe that those parents had worked on your behalves and that you are only in the world to enjoy the fruits of their labour.

    The youths of the past were patient contended and full of respect for the elders. They were humble, obedient, always eager to know as they queued up to learn.  You the youths of today are very inpatient, greedily ambitious and you see yourselves as masters of knowledge when in actual fact you are slaves of ignorance. Unlike the youths of the past, you the youths of today are mostly empty-headed, very arrogant, highly materialistic and hastily avaricious.

    You always want to start your lives from the peak of your parents’ achievements without asking about what those parents had gone through before reaching the peak.

    You spend money lavishly without working for it and you never think of bearing any responsibility either in the homes or in the society. You are generally characterised by all the conducts that were classified as shame in the past. To you shame has its price. And as long as you can pay that price in coins by whatever means, you are important in your own estimation. Thus, shame, as far as you are concerned, is a vital aspect of culture which has no negative effect on your lifestyle. As a matter of fact you have taken shame for pride.

    If a few youths of the past can be described as a bunch of problems for their society, due to their misbehaviour, majority of you today’s youths are the real cogs in the societal wheel of progress. To you, life has no meaning except it is heavily coded in money.

    Your slogan that “long life is irrelevant in the absence of money” is a testimony to this assertion. That life span in Nigeria has dropped so drastically is due to your disappointing lifestyle which often creates hypertension for your parents and leads to their early death. Few parents talk of heirs nowadays because those of you who are supposed to be their heirs have long thrown away the toga of worthy heirs. In the past, mothers were not known for staying with their daughters in the latter’s matrimonial homes while leaving their husbands behind without care. This strange but new trend that has almost become a part of Nigerian culture arose because of the incompetence of today’s young women, even after many years of training, is questionable. Thus, despite the ubiquity of young men and women, there is scarcity of husbands and wives just as there is dirge of fathers and mothers.

    Virtually everything that matters to you today’s youths is devoid of our known core value. By your measure, the value of life can be found only in the volume of naira.

    Causes of generational change

    Whenever there is cause to review the generational trend with the intention of righting the wrong, you the youths of today are often quick in pointing accusing fingers mischievously at the generations ahead of you saying they caused the debacle. But while pinching the back of the elders you often forget that sooner or later you may become elders whose back will be pinched by the youths who succeed your own generation. You have forgotten that most of the scientific discoveries and technological advancement of your age which lured you into roguery were not available for the past youths. There were no such things as hard drugs, cyber crimes, armed robbery, sophisticated fraud through manipulation of figures and forgery of signatures. There were no cases of rape, child trafficking, audacious prostitution and day light murder with impunity as are rampant among you today.

    To you, all these crimes are either professions or callings in which you   actively engage. Thus, you do not believe in the existence of any demarcation between decency and indecency an indication that ‘family name’ which was highly valued in the past has no meaning to you. Unlike most youths of the past, you were sent to school but your goal was mere certificate rather than knowledge. And what you acquired in those schools in the name of education is hardly worth the paper on which your certificates are printed. For most of the years you spent in school, your preoccupation was either cultism or other frivolous activities that have no bearing with education. That is why most of you turn out to be unemployable University or Polytechnic graduates. A few of you who secured public employments have been discovered to be sheer misfits on those jobs as your competence remains questionable.

    Implications

    The implications of all these are many. While most of you are not quite useful to the present you are also not hopeful about the future.

    There is hardly any major crime in Nigeria today that is not principally committed by you today’s youths all in the quest for money. It seems that the only language you understand is money and only those who can speak the language of money command your respect.

    Many centuries before our time, an Arab poet intuitively came up with a sonnet fits perfectly into today’s Nigerian situation. He said: “Here is the era against which we had been warned through the admonitions of Ubayy Bn Ka‘ab and that of Abdullah Bn Mas‘ud; an era in which truth would be totally rejected while falsehood and insurgence would be glorified and held aloft; Should this era linger without any change (of attitude) neither cry at a funeral nor smile on the announcement of a new birth would be experienced”.

    Which of the situation expressed in the above poem is not applicable to Nigeria today. What impact does religion have on the society again?

    We used to know of motor spare parts. Today, spare parts are no more of motor but of human beings. And the most active merchants of this queer business are you the youths of today. When we talk of illegal oil bunkering, it is the business of the youths. When we talk of kidnapping, it is the business of today’s youths. When we talk of suicide bombing and terrorism, it is the business of today’s youths.

    And all these are for money and nothing else. Where is Nigeria going from here?

    Conclusion

    The aim of this expository article is not to malign or denigrate the youths of today. All the children of this columnist are today’s youths who do not constitute a separate island. But preaching is like a mud surrounded by men and women in immaculate regalia. No one of them will be spared if the mud is splashed. As a onetime youth and now a father qualified to be called an elder, it is not expected of my type to start throwing stones while residing in a glass house. But truth knows no boundary. It cruises on like a surging train without minding whose ox is gored. To rekindle Nigeria’s old hope or create a new one for the future, the youths of today must return to the established values of the past. It was through those values that the tranquility of the world was solidly upheld. And it was through deviation from it that the world became as restive as it is today. If tranquility must return as wished by many, you the youths of today must change your loins. And that is the only atonement that the world requires to return to tranquility.