Gentlemen,
This was the concluding paragraph of an SLBS essay competition which Sylvester Ekundayo Rowe won (I must have been in the third form in Secondary school and had my hopes, but here are his concluding words (from memory) :
“The tragedy is that whereas a child’s dream to become a man is realised, the man’s dream, to escape from the wonderful realities of manhood into the exciting innocence of childhood, remains a nightmare!”
When I look back, what is most painful is the nostalgia, how innocent and confident we were about the future, and the kinds of hope that we had at Independence. I regret that I didn’t join the military, like JJ Rawlings.
Today, our eyes are wide open and no one has any illusions, especially not the rascals who are doing their best to deceive us and would like everybody to vote for them so that they can control the cash flow, some say, into their own pockets and the pockets of their clients. But if we have any interest in the future of the 180 million plus people of Nigeria – then we have to climb out of the deep dark hole of despair and do something.
At every election time we have always said that it’s our democratic right and our duty to choose from the options that are available to us and it’s mostly the duty of choosing the lesser of two evils. Right now at this Nigerian Presidential Elections 2015 there’s the d-evil that we know and the people must decide whether they want another few more years of the same or whether it’s time for a change for the better. Let’s wait and see who will represent the APC and who the running mates of both the PDP and the APC will be.
In my opinion, there is a qualitative difference between the front runners, between Goodluck Jonathan whose lackeys say that he is the best leader that Nigeria has ever been blessed with, and my man Muhammadu Buhari, a man who Jonathan can certainly not accuse of corruption. The other leading contenders in the APC are also impressiv and should the APC win - and I hope that they do, then the pressure on them to perform will be enormous – and so might be the resilience of the PDP who might try to sabotage the APC’s best efforts at good governance.
I’m still unable to figure out what the incumbent government’s arms scandal in connection with the arms purchases in South Africa is all about. President Jonathan has not been clear about this.
Goodluck Jonathan says, “Come follow me, I`m your leader!” as if he’s the Pied Piper who is going to drown all the rats. In fact I don’t for a moment believe that Goodluck Jonathan believes that he is the best leader that Nigeria has ever been blessed with. What I do believe is that some of the sycophants that surround him are trying to sell him that notion and I’m even more convinced that Goodluck Jonathan would be willing to defend his record in a debate with any for the APC‘s leading contenders if he believed that, but as you can see, he lacks that kind of confidence. and is afraid to debate and to surprise us all , even if he is slipped the questions in advance.
We are on the brink of the abyss.
I should say that a vote for the APC is a vote for peace, because ( and I’m not superstitious) should it turn out that this coming election is rigged, such will be the outrage that it will be impossible to stop the total and complete disintegration of Nigeria until the wave of violence has run its course.
|
S/N |
Political Party [with Party Acronym] |
|
1 |
Accord [A] |
|
2 |
Action Alliance [AA] |
|
3 |
Advanced Congress Of Democrats [ACD] |
|
4 |
Allied Congress Party of Nigeria [ACPN] |
|
5 |
Alliance For Democracy [AD] |
|
6 |
African Democratic Congress [ADC] |
|
7 |
African Peoples Alliance [APA] |
|
8 |
All Progressives Congress [APC] |
|
9 |
All Progressives Grand Alliance [APGA] |
|
0 |
Citizens Popular Party [CPP] |
|
11 |
Democratic Peoples Party [DPP] |
|
12 |
Independent Democrats [ID] |
|
13 |
Kowa Party [KP] |
|
14 |
Labour Party [LP] |
|
15 |
Mega Progressive Peoples Party [MPPP] |
|
16 |
National Conscience Party [NCP] |
|
17 |
New Nigeria Peoples Party [NNPP] |
|
18 |
People For Democratic Change [PDC] |
|
19 |
Peoples Democratic Movement [PDM] |
|
20 |
Peoples Democratic Party [PDP] |
|
21 |
Progressive Peoples Alliance [PPA] |
|
22 |
Peoples Party of Nigeria [PPN] |
|
23 |
Social Democratic Party [SDP] |
|
24 |
United Democratic Party [UDP] |
|
25 |
Unity Party of Nigeria [UPN] |
|
26 |
United Progressive Party [UPP] |
Timing is always important.
Okey and Moses make good points. Elections are only a few months away however. The question must be whether this is the best time to mount their posts. The questions they pose should have been addressed at the last national conference. There were not meaningfully addressed because of the fraud that Nigeria’s “leaders’ continue to perpetrate on the Nigerian people.
Nigerians I believe, will be better served now and the immediate future, if they focus on having successful, free and fair elections. The enduring issues of the purpose and utility of corporate Nigeria as it presently operates, may be revisited after the elections as it should be. That Nigeria does not work for a majority Nigerians, Africa, the world, and the human race, is not in any doubt. It is too grave a matter to be attended to at this time. It is not conceivable that the forthcoming election may be postponed except of course, some truly grave untoward event happens.
oa
“… a couple of months to the elections, the APC is still not sure of a flag bearer. They are not serious. Of course not.”
Do you really mean that the APC is not serious? Are you sure you do not mean the APC cannot be serious? Are you being politically correct this time? I know you usually are not. What is going on?
More seriously, I am with you. If the PDP and the APC are at all problems, they are at their worst peripheral problem of Nigeria. They are effective vehicles for the continuous plundering of the Nigerian state. Does anyone know of a more effective vehicle for that singular purpose In a phony democratic dispensation? The addition of a third leg to a wobbly two-legged stool is not likely to make the stool sturdier.
The preponderance of evidence suggests that Nigeria works as it is designed and intended to work. The country’s constitution was written by coup plotters- anti-constitutionalists, and their cronies to maintain their hegemony. It is not a people’s constitution. Its implementation is anti the people.
The hope is that someday, a movement to redesign, not reform or restructure the state, will start and be successful. What is needed is a reconceptualization of the Nigerian experiment. You do not save a disease-ridden farm animal. You replace it.
oa