Letter To The President -Elect; Gen Muhammadu Buhari - GCFR
Gen Muhammadu Buhari President – Elect, Federal Republic of Nigeria Your Excellency sir, May I use this opportunity to congratu...
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Gen Muhammadu Buhari
President – Elect,
Federal Republic of
Nigeria
Your Excellency sir,
May I use this
opportunity to congratulate you once again on your successful election as
the President-Elect of the most populous
black nation on the face of the earth after sixteen years of “Loose Rulership”
of the People`s Democratic Party(PDP). As we draw closer to a smooth transition
of “mis-rule” to a perceived true democracy come May 29th which in itself is an
annual holiday for mother Nigeria in celebration of a smooth transition to
Civil Rule, I want to as a matter of urgency draw your attention to a number of
issues militating against the growth and stability of our great country Nigeria
in my own view/opinion. I am sure Your Excellency have received quite a number
of public opinions on national issues ranging from Corruption, Finance,
Petroleum, Crime and Education. It is on these areas I want to draw your
attention to and a few of others that
the average Nigerian deserves. The road ahead is still tricky and will require
a lot of patience, tolerance and level headedness. The people must be able to
rise above divisions and do what is best for the country and not pander to
partisan interests of certain individuals or sections of the society. The
country is bigger than individuals and must always be given its pride of place.
The story changes every now and then and Nigerians are confused if the
beautiful ones are not yet born. Man may be a political animal but there comes
a time in a person’s life when true service must be the ultimate goal. In the
history of our country this is the time because I am convinced you are not like
the hyenas we had in the system who are just there to accumulate wealth.
Building Mansions they never live in, buying luxurious cars they will never
drive. Let me not bore you with an old gained habit of our modern day
politician but delve into the issues that prompted this missive.
CORRUPTION:
Your Excellency, this is
the root of the underdevelopment of this country called Nigeria and it may
interest you to know that the Dr Goodluck Ebele Jonathan`s led administration
allowed so much loopholes for the Nation`s treasury to be ravaged. I listened
to your campaign slogan of change and I saw that it is hinged on fighting
corruption. Your Excellency sir, with all due respect, your government cannot
fight corruption holistically because of some very sensitive issues unless you
would also step on toes to achieve this. I am sure of 40% success in this area
but not beyond this. I speak the truth because where there is no truth, there
is no peace and I am an ambassador for peace. Our country must morally re-arm.
We cannot run a country where virtue is vice and vice is virtue. We cannot live
in a country where the looters of yester-years assume they have undergone a Pauline
conversion because they are in opposition and oppose the Government of the day.
Some of our richest men and women are to be found in politics and their creed
is, thou shall reap what thou hath not sown. Behind most of our so called
successful civil servants who have joined politics and business there is a
collapsed or collapsing public institution they once served. How do you tackle
this Your Excellency knowing fully well that one problem begets the other? The
last time I checked, our justice system in Nigeria have been grounded and now
being run by men and women who only think criminals who have the “foolish
wisdom” to loot can be spared. I am trying to be as detailed enough as I can
and at the same time manage words so as not to bore lazy readers from getting
the message though it is meant for Your Excellency for your perusal. At school
and from scholarly books on Democracy and Good Governance I have read, we were
told that “Democracy” and “Rule of Law” are intertwined but the Nigeria system
have rather refuted this scholarly principle. In modern democracy as practiced
by Nigerian politicians is hinged on “who knows who” and “who got what”. Your
escape from jurisdiction is determined by the weight of your pocket/bank
account. We live in a Nigeria where the President is Commander-in-chief of the
Armed Forces and dictates the tune of the pipe as played by the Attorney
General & Minister of Justice. This ofcourse implies that he controls the
two arms of government. We live in a country where moneys meant for projects
are squandered by Ministers and Honourable Members of the National Assembly and
we only hear of the project completion on paper but in it`s physical state
invisible. We live in a country where the Judiciary is independent on paper but
dependent in the field of play. We live in a country where a public officer
steals N30billion Naira and the court sentence him to prison with an option of
N200,000(Two Hundred Thousand Naira) fine which obviously is carved out of the
same money he is confirmed to have stolen from the Nation`s treasury. The list
is endless. Your Excellency, this is not Democracy but what I call
“Criminocracy” because it is a government that encourages criminals and paints
them white in the face of the truth. Corruption today is not only a vice but is
gradually becoming a way of life in every sector of our society. From political circles to business board
rooms to educational institutions to the health and judicial sectors. This vice
is literally dismembering Nigeria as a Democratic State.
The Goodluck Jonathan`s
led government's effort in its fight against corruption is comparable to the
efforts of one who digs a hole while simultaneously filling it up. Its efforts
will never bear fruit unless it rids itself of those corrupt government officials
that were recycled back into the new government from the previous one. I am
sure Your Excellency understands Corrution as the bane of our underdevelopment
and poverty. It has really eaten deep into the fabrics of our society and now
stinks like bad ulcer. If we think corruption is going to stopin Nigeria and
indeed Africa, then we have to think again. A police officer in Nigeria would
tell his wife to place a pot of water on the cooking stove as he goes down to
the traffic stop, and would surely come back with a bag of rice! So tell me,
who will enforce the law, when the police are the very leaders in corruption?
Your Excellency sir,the
culture of corruption has eaten deep into the very foundation of the society in
Nigeria to such an extent that an average passenger in a commercial bus tries
to cheat the conductor who collects the money, the conductor in turn tries to
cheat the driver and the driver tries to cheat the owner of the bus. Before
degenerating to this level however, it was limited to government officials.
What we need to start
doing is changing the mentality of Nigerians and this can only be tackled
through education and training within the home. We need to focus on the younger
generations. I suggest we start implementing courses about corruption and
society in schools to educate people on the negative externalities corruption
imposes on society and how we harm ourselves only by encouraging it. We need to
train law enforcers who easily partake in corruption and most importantly we
need to fight poverty.
EDUCATION
Your Excellency sir, our
educational system is now fraught with unprofessionals. We have often preached
that Education should be made job oriented and that learning should be stress
free but the reverse is the case. Our institutions have witnessed a downfall
trend in it`s academic standard as dedicated Lecturers and teachers are left
frustrated in their efforts to raise both moral and academic standards. Their
potentials have been stultified. I strongly beg that your state Governors give
serious priority to the girl child education as enshrined in the African Youth
Charter because this have left many of our young girls frustrated, uneducated
and gone into prostitution. We can adore women as our mothers, cherish them as
our daughters, love them as our wives and yet downgrade them as human beings
politically and academically. I cannot understand this paradox. I am happy we
now have a female Governor in Nigeria after
Dame Ngozi Virginia Etiaba of Anambra state who sat for four(4) months.
Verily, Verily, I tell you; any society that does not pay regard to the girl
and her education is built on a foundation of sand. Your Excellency, permit me here to bring to
your notice that there is so much fraud happening on our campuses today and our
Federal Ministry of Education seem to shy away from them. Your team of experts
can dig into that. The very essence of education is no longer sort after as our
Universities can no longer produce graduates who can defend their certificates
as opposed to the standard of education we had in the 60s and 70s. Even our
parents are now most crazy about paper qualification for their children rather
than the content of the course studied. The so-called parallel degree may be
based on noble ideals but it has also given birth to some students whose
interest is the degree certificate without more. Our Universities must have
umbilical cords with industry and society otherwise they will remain ivory
towers where knowledge is pumped into the minds of our young men and women. One
very vital area that needs to be tackled is the quality of teachers employed to
take the centre stage of our children`s academic life. With this I am referring
to Pre-Primary, Primary and Secondary school teachers round the country. If you
can retrospect Your Excellency, sometime in 2011, one of your seating Governors
carried out a screening exercise on Primary school teachers and it was
discovered that a teacher with over 20years teaching experience could not read
her own certificate she submitted to the State Ministry of Education upon her
enlistment into the profession. This exercise exposed a lot of discrepancies in
the employment of teachers in the country. That report showed that a lot of our
Primary School teachers were so gifted that they finished primary school before
they were born. In fact, some obtained their Primary School Certificates many
years later from the school in which they were employed as teachers. The
question is whether they went to Teachers’ Training College or obtained National
Certificate of Education (NCE) before they went to primary school. These are facts that have been well
documented. It is no longer news that most of our teachers no longer prepare
lesson notes before going to class. I still cannot forget how my then Agricultural
Science teacher reads directly from textbook to us forgetting that some of us
were discerning enough to know it was a wrong thing to do as a trained teacher.
The situation is worse in our Universities where you see Lecturers only coming
to class the first week of resumption to give out course outline and the next
time you see them is on exam day and what they have to tell you is that the
University is meant for the matured minds only. The issue of female students
being harassed sexually by lecturers is a story for another day. Not forgetting
lecturers who are bent on being bribed before passing students. The list is
indeed endless Your Excellency.
The incessant ASUU
strikes must be checked as it is becoming a tradition that every government
must experience it. There must be check and balance; Quality service for good
pay.Those who deter every means to have our brothers and sisters have quality
education shall continue to retard in their thinking ability. In the
utilization of public resources allocated to us we must emulate the Stoics and
Spartans of old. Education is the bedrock of every society and must be handled
with all seriousness. Admission procedures/requirements into our states and
Federal Universities should be reviewed. The Federal Government and the
NUC/ASUU should come to a consensus on outstanding issues. Government must also
show a keen interest in encouraging Science & Technology in our
Universities, Polytechnics and Technical Colleges round the country. Local
inventors must not also be left out as an investment in them would take our
nation to the next level in Technological advancement.
SECURITY
Your Excellency sir,
this is one area Nigerians are looking up to you for an immediate turn around.
Within the last years we have lost quite a number of our citizens to Bomb
blasts, Assassinations and rival court fracas resulting to destruction of
Government properties. Security threats and other unsafe conditions have
remained one of Nigeria’s major challenges till date. The mountainous and
untamed security threats have converted our beloved country into a death
theatre.
Your Excellency, since
1999, approximately 58,000 Nigerians were killed outside the law by our beloved
country’s malicious citizens operating as “State actors” and “non-state
actors”.The said unlawful deaths arose from Vigilante killings dominant in the
Southeast Nigerian States of Anambra and Abia. Others arose from the Police
violent crackdown on members of the Movement for the Sovereign State of
Biafra-MASSOB; intra-communal and inter-communal conflicts;
ethno-religious/sectarian conflicts such as Jos killings and Boko Haram
insurgency; election related violence; police custody/pretrial killings;
political assassinations/killings; kidnap killings; culpable homicides; and excessive
use of force by military/police against Nigeria’s malicious entities and
members of the civil populace.
Over 15,000 unlawful
deaths arose from vigilante killings. The ethno-religious/sectarian killings
including the Boko Haram insurgency accounted for over 16,000 unlawful deaths;
police/military unlawful or extra-legal killings accounted for 21,000 deaths;
and election violence took over 2,000 lives. Beyond this, the in-depth review
of the continued unlawful killings in our beloved country from January to May
2013, showed that more 4000 Nigerians may most likely to have been killed
outside the law, between January 2012 and May 2013.This brings the total number
of unlawful deaths in Nigeria since 1999 to approximately 58,000. For instance,
between January and April 2013, over 1000 Nigerians were killed unlawfully by
malicious elements within and outside the country’s security forces. The
killings arose from police custody killings such as Ezu River Killings;
ethno-religious/sectarian violence such as Jos killings; and the Boko Haram
insurgency.
In the area of police
pretrial/custody killings, over 200 Nigerians may most likely to have been
killed between January and April 2013. The unlawful killings included over 50
young Nigerian males of the Igbo-South-East extraction, killed by Anambra State
Police SARS in January 2013 and dumped into Ezu River in Awka, Anambra State,
South-East Nigeria. On the issue of Boko Haram insurgency, over 2000 Nigerians
have been killed since January 2013. The killings included over 220 citizens
killed on 16th and 17th of April, 2013 in the Baga (Borno State, North-East
Nigeria) violent clashes between Boko Haram militant Islamists and the
Multi-national Joint Taskforce led by Nigerian security forces in which 2,275
thatched houses were destroyed, as well as the killing of over 180 citizens,
mostly citizens of South-East Igbo extraction, on 18th day of March 2013 at the
Sabon Gari Luxury Bus Park in Kano State, North-West Nigeria.
Other unlawful killings
that took place between January and April 2013 are the Jos
ethno-religious/sectarian violence where over 200 citizens have been killed. In
May 2013, alone, up to 200 Nigerians have died in unjustified manners in our
beloved country. The May 2013 killings included the death of 90 members of
Nigerian security forces on 8th day of May, 2013 in Lafia, Nasarawa State,
North-Central, Nigeria and the killing of 55 citizens including 22 police
officers, 14 prisons officials, two soldiers, 13 Boko Haram insurgents and four
civilians.
Importantly, the
killings under reference (58,000 unlawful deaths) did not include those killed
in motor accidents. In the five months of 2013 alone, over 300 Nigerians have
been killed in motorization mishaps. Between December 19, 2012 and first week
of January 2013, according to Nigeria’s Federal Road Safety Corps, 280
Nigerians were killed in road accidents.
Your Excellency, the
cases in Delta, Edo, Ondo and Enugu are not left out as they are not far from
the mishaps in other states. Cultism took the Centre stage in our secondary
schools and Polytechnics in Delta until the Government of Dr Emmanuel Uduaghan
brought in Military personnel to quell the situation. May I also use this
opportunity to inform you sir that our Police Force needs reformation, refurbishing
and total rehabilitation. Most Nigerians would agree with me that some police
officers lack manners and it seems they never passed through the Police
College. In some developing countries in Africa like Ghana, Rwanda, Ethiopia and Tanzania that I have been to, their
policing is quite modern. Interrogations are not crudely done. It is only in
Nigeria that a police officer can call you names like criminal, armed robber,
thief etc during an arrest. In Nigeria you hear terms like “ see him eye like thief,
na una go rob for that man house yesterday abi?”. “You must go show me that
igbo wey make you dey run”. These terms are too derogatory to be used by a law
enforcement officer. It`s an indication that they have lost their manners or
perhaps ignorant of the fact that they can be sued. One other thing that needs
to be corrected about our Police force is their unkept uniforms, stations and
vehicles. I really mean no insults but most of our police vehicles are like
Vans used to convey cassava from Cassava plantations in Jesse, Mosogar and
Abraka villages. This is as a result of lack of proper maintenance. Few months
ago, His Excellency Dr Goodluck Ebele Jonathan paid a surprise visit to the
Ikeja Police College and what he was confronted with was an eye-sore. Now the
College wears a new look, but the issue is not about renovation but
maintenance. These Government properties need to be handled with care like they
were our personal properties. Our police personnels should be trained on how to
use modern security equipment in checking the activities of criminals in our
society as the world is no longer analog but digital. Our policemen and women
must be like Boys Scout and Girls Guide. They must act with the firmness that
opens eyes and not with the arrogance that inflames anger. The Nigeria I know
has a serious problem with the enforcement of laws. Most times, when a criminal
is being tried, one politician calls in to say he is interested in the case;
from that minute, the case is as good as dead. I have heard someone say “I go
kill you and stand by your dead body”. Isn`t this ridiculous? These things
cannot be corrected overnight because I know it is no magic Your Excellency,
but the Police Service Commission can handle these abnormalities and the
National Assembly must be ready to serve the purpose for which it was
established else we make nonsense of our dear Nation. Honorable members of the
House of Representative and Senate must be ready to obey the laws so enacted by
them to set as examples to other citizens of our dear Nation.
Your Excellency, there
are too many issues about Nigeria that time and space would not permit me to
express here and I am sure many other Nigerians would write much more if given
the opportunity to speak out. I am just one aggrieved Nigerian who hopes that
your Government would touch on some of these if not all to atleast gladden the
hearts of well meaning Nigerians. I know there are so many pharaohs ready to
pull you down in achieving success in your administration, my prayer is that
God will continue to abbreviate their existence so that the journey to a better
Nigeria would be smooth.
God bless Your
Excellency’ Gen Muhammadu Buhari(GCFR)
God bless Your
Excellency Dr Goodluck Ebele Jonathan(GCFR)
God bless the Federal
Republic of Nigeria
God bless the United
States of Africa.
Written by:
Hon Isiakpere Hope
Jasper
Founder/International
President
African Youths Political
Congress(AYOPOCO)
Tel:+233244914263,+2348090634913
E-mail:
ayopoco.jasper@gmail.com, jasper@ayopoco.org
Website: www.ayopoco.org
BBM: 55DC02FB
Skype: ayopoco2

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