Global Reporters Vienna
On
August 8, 2012, the second International Youth Day (IYD) lecture, an annual
event organised by the African Centre for Media and Information Literacy,
AFRICMIL, held in Abuja, amid a telling spectacle of displeasure from a
generation of young minds who see their lives being shamelessly turned upside
down by an enduring chain of Nigeria’s reprobate leadership.
AFRICMIL,
a youth-focused, irrepressible civil society organisation imbued with a strong
sense of duty and sufficiently bothered by the noxious social order created by
the country’s malevolent yet impenitent (mis)rulers, appropriately stoked the
fire by going for one of the many themes suited to these times: Nigerian youth and the challenges of
Nation-Building. Of course since virtually every action of government in
decades has exposed a fundamental confusion and tragic lack of ideas in terms
of how to turn a secular, multi-ethnic nation with so much promise into an
enviable democratic polity, it is only reasonable to expect that such a
wretched country, foisted with perverse minders inaccurately described as
leaders, would need immediate help.
And
one of the ways to go, as AFRICMIL seems to have thoughtfully considered, is
the urgent task of re-building. And where else to begin, if not from seeking
the perspectives of constituents of a faction of the populace disingenuously
labelled “leaders of tomorrow?” As
expected, a thrilling array of creatively persuasive speakers, including Dr.
Sam Amadi, executive chairman of Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission
(NERC); Ifueko Omoigui-Okauru, ex-chair of the Federal Inland Revenue Service
(FIRS), now obviously making good in the private sector given her catching
belief in the turn-around of an economy hobbled by lack of productivity, and
Jonas Agwu, image-maker of the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC), were on
hand to spread the gospel of hope to a youth utterly deflated, dispirited,
disillusioned and disappointed by a successive gang of lootocrats who have had nothing to show other than unparalleled
banditry.
The
Ministry of Youth Development which ought to have registered a strong presence
as the Minister himself, Inuwa Abdul-Kadir, was billed as special guest at that
event was, not surprisingly, very conspicuous by its obvious absence. Not
surprising, because no idea, regardless of its benefits to the country, merits
the attention of any government agency if it’s not the originator. Typical of their insufferable behaviour, not
even a representative from that government office, the ultimate policy organ
and real custodian of youth affairs in the country came anywhere near the
venue.
Never
mind that the day before, officials of AFRICMIL had sat down in the office of
one of the henchmen in that Ministry, a Director for that matter, who praised
the initiative to high heavens and promised that his office would take active
part in the lecture. Unknown to the organisation, his host was selling a dummy.
And as this piece was being processed, no reason for failing to honour the
promise and no apology whatsoever had been received from that office. What a
way to promote the interest of the youth!
The
attitude of government officials in Nigeria is well-known to those who have
been unlucky enough to cross their paths. There are scant positive stories
about them in terms of service delivery. During the inglorious civilian
administration of Olusegun Obasanjo, an office temptingly tagged SERVICOM, a
sort of warehouse with a mandate to address public complaints of poor services by
government offices, was created. As of today every agency of government still
runs the office, but there has been no noticeable improvement in the way the
Ministries and parastatals do their work. There are complaints aplenty of
horrendous service, if any is rendered at all, in the civil service. Part of it
was what AFRICMIL experienced in the build-up to the youth day lecture.
Indeed,
despite the prevailing mantra of transformation, all Nigerians could see is
inertia. No clear-cut movement towards change. To this end, there can be no
question, therefore, that the overstuffed and antiquated civil service feeds
the crisis of under-development in Nigeria. And to be fair, to an overly battered
youth, there is no use wasting resources in sustaining a Ministry of Youth Development
that is virtually asleep all-year round and would not even be roused by the
extraordinary work of an organisation whose effort was largely complementary
and flattering rather than critical. Since its relevance is inevitably insupportable,
it is hereby recommended that the Ministry should be scrapped without any
further delay.
To
begin to recount the legendary levity with which officials of state, be it career
personnel, elected or appointed official, treat issues they ought to take very seriously
would be sheer waste of time. If the Minister of Youth Development neither
showed up nor sent a representative, the Director-General of National
Orientation Agency (NOA), Mike Omeri, proved a shade better. At least, he sent
a representative who, as they are wont to do, prefaced his boss’ remark with a
tenuous apologia delivered in the usual tortured cliché that is very common
among government officials who appear at occasions as representatives of their
bosses. The big man or madam who is the real invitee is forever “unavoidably
absent.”
But
the presence of the NOA boss himself would have made a world of difference
given that the event was about the youth, which are the pivot for any
successful value re-orientation in the crusade for a better Nigeria. As he is
not in the league of officials with whom President Goodluck Jonathan meets
every Wednesday morning, it would be interesting to hear from Mr. Mike Omeri that
more compelling engagement that prevented him from attending that event at which
he would have told the youth the kind of re-orientation they should be
expecting, that new process of moral re-adjustment he hopes to impose which
would ultimately reverse the pernicious system midwifed by his irredeemable
benefactors. The youth are not likely to forgive him for the missed
opportunity.
As
for Jude Imagwe, Special Adviser to the President on Youth Affairs, the event
meant little considering the way he carried himself with a swagger, the
Awo-like cap sitting jauntily on his head as he thrust shoulders forward with
every step. Coming in many hours late, a retinue of hangers-on filing behind
him, Mr. Imagwe advertised no sense of purpose other than the virulent
condescension that is common among young men and women who find themselves in
government in any capacity. He barely was seated for ten minutes before
insisting he must speak as another engagement was waiting. He promptly seized
the microphone, courteous enough to apologize for his lateness, then offered
nothing new other than the usual platitude. In another five minutes he was
done. And like Van McCoy, he stepped off the podium and disappeared through the
door, his groupies rushing to catch up with him.
All
of this, the youth in the hall which included members of the National Youth
Service Corps, civil society, and faith-based organisations witnessed and never
seem impressed. By the time they began to speak, the anger came in torrents. The
fury was unequivocal. They directed their barbs at the so-called leaders,
hitting very hard at a systemic lapse in governance that has bred injustice,
corruption, impunity, insecurity and socio-pathological crimes nibbling
furiously at the soul of the nation. One NASFAT youth was to suggest to his
peers that the best way to go is for the Nigerian youth to take their destiny
in their own hands and forget about pinning hopes on a class of selfish leaders
who show no serious sign of salvaging the nation. For now, the exhortation
seems to be not to explore the Tunisian or Egyptian example but “but to see
what we can do for ourselves.” It will be interesting to see how that can be
achieved in a forbidding environment like Nigeria.
Yet
there is reason to keep hoping for an improvement, if for nothing but for the
immense vibrancy of the youth. The scholarly intercession of Dr. Amadi
highlighted this feature; Ifueko’s moderated, distinctive anecdotes accentuated
the promise, while Jonas Agwu’s fetching interpolation, executed with stylish
aplomb, summarises a great future nurtured in optimism. Thank you, AFRICMIL, as
we await IYD in 2013.
Godwin Onyeacholem is a journalist based
in Abuja.

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