Nigerians are used to being treated like orphans. They have a long history of neglect, abandonment and being despised. This is so much that many have come to accept these as articles of ‘fate’ and that their state is unchangeable.
So deep is their conviction, that they evolved the acronym, OYO (On Your Own). It reflects their belief that every Nigerian is on his or her own. Very much like the trite: ‘Every man for himself, God for us all,’ Nigerians have suffered so much indignity and dehumanising treatment abroad that many concluded that their government will not defend them.
It must have therefore come as a shock to most Nigerians to be treated like royalty recently, with government officials falling over themselves to serve.
In South Africa, February 2017 was another season of xenophobic attacks. This time, the attacks were so well organised that a day, February 24, was fixed as commencement date. As usual, Nigerians were a primary target, and our compatriots resigned themselves to self-defence, believing nobody cares for them. What they did not realise is that ‘Parade don change,’ our leaders were no longer going to allow the South Africans think that our fellow compatriots are orphans.
The problem is thatthe Airport road in Lagos is a federal one and the state needs the consent of the Federal Ministry to translate its dreams into reality. Butthe Federal Ministry also has its own plans to rebuild the same road. For a road that has been neglected for so long, it is good seeing two governments wrestling to fix it
After the attacks, came wide condemnation across the country and to further show our indignation, the House of Representatives and the Senate made quite powerful statements. They also decided to immediately embark on ‘Legislative Diplomacy’ by deploying powerful teams to engage the South African Parliament. It was a thing of national pride to find both chambers wrestling to go defend Nigerians abroad.
The House set up a sixperson powerful delegation, headed by House leader, Femi Gbajabiamila while the Senate’s seven-person committee was to be led by Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu. They were to be serviced by a 12-person team from the Foreign Ministry. It is not certain which other aides were to make the team, whose size would have reflected the fact that we are the most populous Black nation in the universe.
However, the snag was – who will lead this powerful legislative delegation? We really need a team leader to confront the tough South African parliamentarians from the ideologically correct African National Congress, the astute Democratic Alliance, the highly combative Economic Freedom Fighters and the warriors of Inkatha Freedom Party.
The Senate must have assumed that as the upper chamber, it was the natural leader, but the House was not ready to be subsumed. You see, the 360-member House cannot bow to the 108-member Senate.
So, rather than the dog being treasurer to the tiger, it is better for each to hunt on its own. The House was the first to indicate its decision to travel to Pretoria, so it decided to do so on its own rather than being diluted by the Senate. On hearing this, the latter announced through Senator Ekweremadu, “On our trip to South Africa, we noted that the House of Representatives insists on going to South Africa independently. We thought we could lead a single and harmonised delegation of the National Assembly to avoid the embarrassment of multiple delegations. The Senate therefore decided to pull out to allow the House delegation to proceed.” It really feels good that parliamentarians are ready to trample on themselves to serve Nigerians. On a different turf was another tussle to serve Nigerians.
Although Nigeria was not mentioned in the defunct and new American Executive Order on Immigration, there were reports of Nigerians being turned back by American Immigration.
Concerned about these reports and perhaps the unpredictability of President Donald Trump, the Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora, Mrs. Abike Dabiri-Erewa advised Nigerians who had no compelling or urgent reason to travel to ‘God’s Own Country’ to postpone their travel plans until the Trump policy becomes clear.
A travel advice is what the Americans routinely issue on various countries. For exam ple, if an American diplomat witnesses a public fight between two lovers, it could indicate insecurity and a travel ban advice can be issued to Americans.
But the Foreign Affairs Minister seemed furious about the advice. He said Nigerians were free to travel to America. He said, “I can tell you to ignore any call or advice to reconsider travelling to the US because there is no basis for that.” Well, we wait and see if there is any basis, but it sure feels good that our leaders are scrambling to serve us.
The other show of love for country and compatriots came from Governor Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos State who wants to rebuild the road from the Murtala Muhammed International Airport to Oshodi. As he correctly analysed, this road that welcomes international visitors to the economic capital of the country, is a “national embarrassment.”
Ambode sure has good plans for this vital road; he has a design of 10 lanes with an interchange and fly over, an appropriation from the State Assembly, ready cash and a contractor ready to hit the ground running. The only snag, he said, is the tollgate to the idea constructed by the Federal Ministry of Works headed by his predecessor, brother Lagosian and fellow chieftain of the ruling All Progressives Congress, Babatunde Raji Fashola.
The problem is that the road is a federal one and the state needs the consent of the Federal Ministry to translate its dreams into reality.
But the Federal Ministry also has its own plans to rebuild the same road. For a road that has been neglected for so long, it is good seeing two governments wrestling to fix it.
I am not clear why the two eminent Nigerian political leaders cannot discuss this behind closed doors and reach an amicable compromise. Also, Ambode did not explain whether his administration’s reconstruction of the road is Free of Charge or it will ask for reimbursement from the Federal Government.
On the other hand, Fashola has not explained whether the Ministry has the required funds like Lagos State. What I am also not certain about, is whether this road, if reconstructed by Fashola, will not be tied to his usual campaign of ‘Public Private Partnership’ under which public funds will be used to build infrastructure, which is then handed over to some businessmen and women ‘for management.’
Under this guise, the public, whose funds have been used in the first place, will be forced to pay prohibitive tolls. I love Fashola, but not his privatisation of our lives. Whatever the issue, it feels good that public officials are in a tussle to serve Nigerians. We may not be orphans after all