The celebration mood started in January, when the authorities
decided that Abuja should have a ball, to celebrate the centenary of our
journey as a country.
The amalgamation of the Northern and Southern protectorates that brought the two sides of the Nigerian divide together, in spite of its imperialist stamp, in the wisdom of Aso Rock Villa, was a milestone that no nation keen about unity and development should ignore. And with a multi-billion naira showpiece that was largely funded from private purse, reportedly, Abuja and the rest of the country won’t forget in a hurry that there was a grand ceremony.
The amalgamation of the Northern and Southern protectorates that brought the two sides of the Nigerian divide together, in spite of its imperialist stamp, in the wisdom of Aso Rock Villa, was a milestone that no nation keen about unity and development should ignore. And with a multi-billion naira showpiece that was largely funded from private purse, reportedly, Abuja and the rest of the country won’t forget in a hurry that there was a grand ceremony.
It is unlikely that the recording of that grand-ball, well edited
and informative enough to serve as a resource tool for researchers, tourists or
anybody with a faint interest in Nigeria, is available for sale anywhere, 10
months after that costly celebration. But we should remember the centenary
celebration in a positive light anyway, when the typical ebullient Nigerian spirit
defied the marauding onslaught of the terrorists that have struck several times
in the nation’s capital and have kept the October 1
Independence Day
celebration off the Eagles square for the fourth consecutive year.
Like the World Economic Forum hat held in Abuja without a security
hitch, the centenary ball affirmed that Nigeria could secure a choice venue
against the marauders. If the approach to further tackle the insecurity menace
looks a bit timid, it is not because we are not aware of the open secret that
the real enemies could be those within the fold, who leak information, identify
targets and even provide finance to the pawns that strike when we least expect.
It is simply the style that Aso Rock has adopted in fighting the enemy. Let
those who disagree with that style remember that the dreaded Abubakar Shekau is
at least dead and it took barely two months to contain the Ebola scourge.
The nation is in an apparent celebratory mood and in spite of
President Goodluck Jonathan’s yearly call for sobriety in celebrating our
independence as a sovereign nation, a
harsh self-appraisal is not ideal for a time like this. If we could fete
unhindered in January, why should we fret in October, in a month where at least
three public holidays are guaranteed?
It is bemusing that the tendency to judge ourselves harshly has
become something of a national pastime.
Even when we acknowledge the need for dialogue, we shout across the
table rather than reason together. When we talk at all, it is often to talk
down on each other. We have
become accustomed to abusive language, temperamental conduct and cynical
outlook. But we must learn to overlook once in a while the numerous foibles in
conducting the affairs of a complex nation like Nigeria and acknowledge little
efforts towards progress. We
should at least count our blessings first, one by one, before debating how to
equitably apply them for the benefit of all.
And so we should recognize that the point about somber anniversary
is a cliché that distorts the President’s message every year. It has become the
odious introduction to his October 1 address since last year as if all we do is
mourn. That somber word is alien to the happiest people on earth.
These happiest people, by the way, happen to enjoy the status of
having the largest economy in Africa now, and sitting on the 26th position in
the world by virtue of rebasing the economy. With a Gross Domestic product of
$510bn and an increase from 10 per cent to 60 per cent of indigenous
participation in the provision of goods and services in the upstream sector in
the last four years, no one should fail to see the correlation between a
growing economy and the new kids on the block owning private jets and drawing
the largest traffic of champagne and choice liquor to Nigeria.
Do we not deserve to celebrate after four months of National
Conference where each participant, with the exception of one or two, earned in
a month the equivalent of the monthly take-home pay of the Deputy Prime
Minister of Great Britain? They disagreed to agree, returned knotty issues of
resource control and power devolution to the President to find his own answers
and succeeded in adding another important document to the growing list of
recommendations on the President’s table.
Yet, the Confab report came in good time, just before a new set of
national honours awardees was announced. It won’t matter if your specialty is
to steal a state blind, run your businesses aground, service the powers that be
with your endowments or know how to cook good delicacies; you deserve to join
in the perpetual celebration.
And like the clergy who also celebrate milestone years with
fanfare, award honorees also know how to spread the joy, with congratulatory
adverts coming as bumper harvests. Vainglory sure looks nice in agbada,
babanriga and woko with a Niger Delta bowler hat in tow.
We celebrate because we are all, directly or indirectly, partakers
in the devouring of this proverbial buffalo of Africa called Nigeria.
Hopefully, we would recover from the stupor and remember that by far the
biggest problem plaguing the nation remains corruption. Every other malaise, be
it impunity and the slow pace in winning the battle against terror and
insecurity, derive from that monster we are either afraid of, insincere in
talking it or just plain clueless in confronting it headlong.
But it is well with my country. Happy 54th independence
anniversary!
Steve Ayorinde
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