Almost a decade ago, one-time American Secretary of State,
General Colin Powel excited world bloggers with his widely publicized comments
that Nigeria was a colony of fraud and tricksters. Perhaps to prove there was
no malice to what many regarded as a sweeping slur on the integrity of the few
honest Nigerians, the General later gave an insight into his deep emotional
pull towards the continent in his published memoirs after a sweeping visit to
Sierra Leone and Nigeria in 1992. The General also raised eyebrows when he did
a jig during a ThisDay newspaper function held at the Royal Albert Hall in
2008.
It is hard to know what was playing on Powell’s mind all that
while, or what he thought Nigerians are, but one thing is beyond dispute. In
the past few years, it seems to me that Nigerians, as a collective, have done
everything to extend the frontiers of dishonesty and corruption to the extent
that it is difficult to disprove that both have become part of our national
culture overtime.
And if truth must be told, it is a tendency that has defied
even the time capsule stated above. We never needed Colin Powell to remind us
that much of our established customs and traditions, along with our legendary
criminal docility, have only served to deepen corruption in our society without
contributing to any meaningful development overtime. A few examples will
suffice at this point.
In most parts of South-East, burial ceremonies for the dead
remain expensive capital projects. Customs and traditions dictate that it must
be so, even if there is abundant evidence that the bereaved cannot afford the
costs of the elaborate ceremonies demanded. The same wasteful and demanding traditions apply to
marriages. Even in the relatively conservative North these days, wedding
ceremonies are becoming expensive undertakings with serious consequences on our
attitude to corruption and social discipline.
Nigerians not only celebrate elaborate funerals and weddings,
they also look upon both as reflections of social status of the individuals
concerned, without questioning their sources of income. But are we not setting
the stage for corruption or wetting our appetite for it when we fail to see the
injustices and zero value of those customs as they are presently? And because we have set such very low standards for our
cultural values, we award honorary doctorates and chieftaincy titles to drug
pushers, pimps and armed/pen robbers without blinking an eye. We claw at their
feet in submission and still expect the same characters to lead us out of our
pathetic state of under-development in the name of cultural expediency.
We conspire in the election and anointing of certified rogues
as our leaders and representatives and expect the country to transform to a bed
of roses overnight. We wail at the state of our collapsed social infrastructure
without recognizing our individual contributions to the rot. We hold dear to
customs that belong to the Stone Age and expect to be modern states like Dubai,
Malaysia, Japan and Singapore.
Bankers express the need to turn the country into the
financial hub for the continent publicly, and then in the night they conspire
to turn our financial institutions, which, ordinarily, should be the objects of
public trust, into de-facto Aladdin caves almost overnight.
We turn integrity on its head in the name of ethnic,
religious and regional affinity. We embrace gangsters. We honour their
invitations to commit arson, and also spill blood for their inordinate
ambitions to govern us. We dance to their tunes of ethnic bigotry and exhibit
our stupidity by calling each other parasites/hangers-on. We are blind to class
issues and even the nuances of social justice. We massage their gigantic egos,
and fail to see beyond the present. Worst still, we allow the same rogues to shape the way we
perceive important issues of national development through their ethnic prisms
and itchy-fingers. With such primitive mind-sets, government policies and
actions must first pass the test of ethnic or regional acceptability before
they become acceptable to us!
In the recent past for instance, there was a deliberate
attempt to brand the salvage action embarked by the former Central Bank of
Nigeria governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi (presently the Emir of Kano) in the
banking sector, as a northern agenda, even when the facts pointed to the
contrary. Ibrahim Magu is doing a wonderful job in the EFCC to retrieve stolen
public funds and properties, but the deadly crooks and their rogue associates
are shouting that it is a lopsided justice laced with political vendetta.
Today, without the slightest doubt, the extent of our
cultural dishonesty is at its zenith. Our leaders and elites profess the wish
for the nation to be among the twenty largest economies in the world by the
year 2020, but privately they succumb to same old vices of nepotism and
regionalism spiced with ethno-religious sentiment. They mock international best
practices in their deeds and expect the world to take them serious.
But the road to civilization and development was paved with
better values. For as long as we fail to treat each other as we wish to be
treated; for as long as we continue to succumb to primordial sentiments on
national development issues, meaningful economic development will continue to
elude us.
For as long as we uphold armed and pen robbers, drug pushers,
election riggers as well as ex-convicts as our role models in the name of
regional or ethnic expediency, the more we will continue to be victims of
under-development and social injustice.
And for as long as we fail to develop mutually acceptable
norms of ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ in the manner we respond to serious issues of
national development, the more smaller countries in the sub-continent with
superior moral and social values will continue to regard us as big for nothing.
Experience has proven that our leaders and elites are among the most corrupt
species ever known to humanity, but unless each and every one of us resolve to
change our cultural view of their excesses, they will remain passengers in our
rapidly sinking titanic and stand to be losers at the end. But da ris God (Allah dey).
By Sanusi Muhammad
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