| Why Looting May Not Stop In Nigeria |
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| Saturday, 15 July 2006 | |||||||||||||
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The Nigerian state thrives on a very a solid foundation and enduring, pervasive culture of very crude selfishness. Maybe, selfishness is not the most appropriate word to convey the exact meaning I have in mind. But there is this consuming desire and deep craving by the average Nigerian to always have an unfair advantage over his neighbour, to ensure and emphasize the exclusive nature of whatever he does or possesses, and ultimately become the envy of others. This should, however, not be confused with healthy striving for excellence and distinction. Rather it is this mindset that makes someone to value whatever he has, only when he has established that no one else has it, or that only a select, privileged few have it. I have observed that the average Nigerian derives peculiar animation, and in some instance, consolation, from constantly calling to mind some evidences of the advantages he has over his neighours, and some privileges he presently enjoys which his neighbour can only dream of. Mind you, this is not an exclusive habit of the affluent and highly-placed in society. Even the very marginal advantage the poor, suffering fellow thinks he has over his neighbour automatically constitutes the little flame that keeps his heart aglow, and makes him feel like a king in the neighbourhood. He derives profound, refreshing feelings of joy by the fact that he has, and can, at least, flaunt what his neighbour doesnt have. Many years ago, when heavy traffic on Carter Bridge consisted of several new Raleigh bicycles racing along, some motorcycles and a couple of cars, a man returned to his village from Lagos, with a well tailored new dress, with which he hoped to cause a stir in Church the following Sunday. As his kinsmen converged to welcome him, he brought out the dress and told them he was sure no one had won that dress in the entire community. In fact, only very few people, he declared, had at that time possessed it in the whole of I dont know whether it was the British that planted this insidious seed in Nigerians or merely helped to water and tend it, for their own self-serving reasons. The British had created the Government Reserved Areas (GRAs) and several other segregating and divisive facilities, and took some special natives, the educated and privileged few, away from their own people, put them in those secluded areas and planted in them a mindset that made them regard themselves as special and different from the rest. This may have helped them to perfect their divide-and-rule policy, but also succeeded in engraving in the minds of those lucky natives that they were indeed better than the others. And so, when the British unwillingly granted what they called In This situation exists in degrees and categories, as I mentioned earlier, and it has created a craving in everyone to strive, not just to better his lot, but to show how he is better than he his neighbour. And that is why, at the slightest opportunity, anyone with access to the common wealth will seek to use it to corner all the juicy advantages to himself, and create another world of limitless comfort for himself, and perhaps, his relatives and cronies, which would automatically place them far above the rest of the people, instead of providing essential amenities for the benefit of all. This is the situation that produced the big-man syndrome. Recently, one of my ardent readers sent me an email to say that in Warri where he grew up, what they call these toy generators from This mentality appears to be what guides the conducts of public officers in
I-better-Pass-My-Neighbour. Thats the mindset that rules the Nigerian rulers mind. The Nigerian ruler was once asked why he banned tokunbo vehicles during a phone-in radio/television programme some years ago. He did not know when he let out his grouse, which was that there were too many cars competing for space with his convoy on the streets of
If the intentions were genuine, we would have seen plans to build local plants, and create enabling environments for them to flourish, so tokunbo could go, and many Nigerians could have brand new cars? Who no like better thing? Today, the roads are so horrible that each time you ply some of them, you may have to visit your mechanic. But in order to rub in his marked difference from the rest of us, President Olusegun Obasanjo does not use the roads to get to his home. Once he arrives at the
So, in Like I said, this mindset is at play anywhere. Go to any embassy and see how Nigerian Security men employed there will treat you. One day, while conducting an investigation for a story on the thriving visa racket at the British High commission (http://www.kwenu.com/publications/ejinkeonye/rotten_chambers.htm), I was reading a notice board outside the High Commissions gate when a Nigerian Security man, with haughty, crude arrogance, came and told me that I had stayed too long at the notice board and should leave. In fact, I had been there for less than five minutes. As I looked at him, flaunting his badge of slavery (uniforms), I knew exactly what was at play. He was working at the place where Nigerians scrambled to get visas to Mars or Jupiter, and I wasnt! I-better-Pass-My-Neighbour. Until we kill this spirit, looting will never stop in That would also ensure that during elections, the poor can easily be manipulated with little gifts to sell-off their votes. In many countries there is nothing like inferior or superior hospitals. Everybody, whether President, Governor, Senator, the jobless or school boy, is entitled to quality healthcare. But here, the craving is to show our advantage over others. Some even ensure they prepare their executive graves before they die, so that even in death, they would still be able to make the statement: I-better-Pass-My-Neighbour. Ugochukwu Ejinkeonye is on the Editorial Board of Independent Newspapers (www.independentng.com ),
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Posted by Robot| 17.07.2006 20:52