2012, Good or Bad Year for Nigeria?
With few days remaining in the year 2012, we can look back at the year
and see how it went, sincerely speaking, the joy of Christmas has taken
flight from many Nigerian homes. Instead of marking the season in high
spirits as in years past, Nigerians are struggling under a heavy yoke of
fear arising from violence (armed robbery, kidnapping), terror attacks,
a terribly-rundown economy, road and air crashes.
Although there may be a muted celebration, the general fear of
insecurity and erosion of personal income is weighing heavily on most
families.
The Goodluck Jonathan Administration set the tone for 2012 by yanking
off petrol subsidy on New Year’s Day – when many were still in bed –
thus pushing up the price of petrol from N65 to N142 per litre.
Two weeks of protests headlined by Occupy Lagos made the Federal
Government to beat a retreat: the FG scaled down the price to N97 per
litre, but businesses and the citizens have yet to recover from the
crisis, which later led to a full-blown fuel scarcity across the country
since September.
Today, petrol sells for as high as N120 per litre in the South-South and South-East, and N140 in the North-East.
With the economy contracting to 6.8 per cent from a peak of 8.6 per cent
in 2010, job losses were rife in the course of the year, an act that
reduced the income of the average family.
In the banking sector alone, more than 7,000 workers were sacked as a result of mergers and acquisitions.
The Occupy Lagos spun a rash of probes, with the House of
Representatives and the Aigboje Aig-Imokhuede panels indicting major
firms and individuals, who were said to have collected about N300bn in
subsidies for fuel that was not supplied.
While corruption marred the year in many areas of national life –
Transparency International rated Nigeria as the 35th most corrupt nation
in the world – no serious effort has been made to punish the alleged
offenders by the FG, including the offenders who stole about N200bn
pension funds.
As the economy contracted, violent crimes, and terror instigated by the
murderous Boko Haram Islamist sect made many cities, especially in the
North, difficult places to live. According to the Economist Intelligence
Unit, the terror attacks, which began early in January when Boko Haram
launched a massive operation in which about 200 residents were killed in
Kano. Nigeria will be the worst place for a child to be born in 2013.
During one of such simultaneous terror attacks by Boko Haram in Kaduna
and Yobe states in June, President Jonathan, who could have inspired
hope among the citizens, travelled to Brazil, literally junketing as the
country burnt.
Since the beginning of the year, Boko Haram – Western education is an
abomination – has killed more than 800 Nigerians, with the group
employing several devious methods, including killings on the streets in
broad daylight in the North.
Strikingly, the high level of insecurity made Jonathan to first sack
Hafiz Ringim as the Inspector-General of Police, and later the late Gen.
Andrew Azazi, who died last Saturday in an air crash, as the National
Security Adviser on his return from Brazil.
Nigerians, going through a tough economic time, suffered a huge loss on
June 3 when a Dana Air plane flying from Abuja crashed some minutes to
landing in Iju-Ishaga, Lagos, killing all the 153 people on board and no
fewer than 10 others on the ground.
The country has also witnessed two major helicopter crashes: DIG John
Haruna and others died in a crash in Jos, Plateau State, in March, while
the second one on Dec. 15 claimed the lives of Kaduna governor Patrick
Yakowa; Azazi and four others.
Taraba governor Danbaba Suntai is still in a German hospital receiving
treatment after a plane he was flying crashed in Yola in October.
As terror-related killings rage in the North, armed robbery and
kidnapping mar the landscape in the South, forcing many South-Easterners
not to venture to return home for the annual Christmas rituals.
With the situation on the ground, many citizens are also cautious on the
way the country is headed under the leadership of Jonathan, who
convincingly won the presidential ballot for a four-year term in April
2011.
However, several commentators believe it’s not a lost cause for the country.
Jiti Ogunye, a lawyer, says that in spite of the hydra-headed problems
facing the country, “it is worth celebrating that we’re alive.”
“The hope is that Nigerians will one day be free of this heavy yoke on
their shoulders and will see the resources of the society harnessed for
the development of the country,” Ogunye said.
He added, “Yes, things appear miserable in the country: life is nasty,
brutish and short; people are dying on the roads, they are dying in the
hospitals, they are being killed by Islamist insurgents, people are
being kidnapped, and there are people who can’t go to their own part of
the country.
“But Nigerians individually must do a lot of soul-searching because no
government is powerful enough to hold the people in perpetual chains if
the people themselves are not complicit. Nigerians themselves have the
responsibility – in our churches, our homes, schools and the workplace –
we must ask ourselves the kind of society we want.
“Colonialism wasn’t strong enough to keep us in perpetual bondage; it
was not even near enough to keep slavery from being abolished, so why do
we think that bad governance is strong enough to hold our people to
ransom?”
But in his analysis of the year 2012, Prof. Pat Utomi, an economist and
presidential candidate in the 2011 general elections, said, “There were
opportunities for improving Nigeria, yet one in which by acts of
omission and commission, we’re trying very hard to roll back the
progress.
“As I said a few weeks ago, the future is looking so bright for Nigeria
that if we don’t all wear eyeglasses we’re likely to get blind.
“But the danger is that we’re being badly managed that we run the risk
of snatching the defeat from the jaws of victory. We may, out of our own
doing, prevent the extraordinary future before us through the failure
of leadership.”
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