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Of Subsidies, Strikes And The Lesson Not
Learned By Raheem
Oluwafunminiyi Posted Jan 31,2012

This writer has followed
events in the last couple of weeks and have come to a conclusion
that for all the salt we are worth as a nation and people, we
have learned nothing other than the mindless continuation of the
status quo that continues to relegate us to the background and
make us a laughing stock among comity of nations. One finds it
very hard to understand how we came to be regarded as the giant
of Africa when we cannot even solve inherent problems inimical
to the growth and development of the common man and the nation
as a whole. We have refused to see that the next man is the
single most important thing that should shape our existence in
order for a viable environment and society, devoid of hate and
repression.
It is only in Nigeria
that the powers that be, against the wishes of its people, with
total and flagrant disregard for their voices, stick to policies
that either profits political cliques or Western institutions or
how else can one explain the unfortunate event that led to a
five day strike and unnecessary protests, causing the death of
youths who would have contributed immensely to the future
viability of the country. It seems we have not learned anything
from past mistakes or actions that continues to bedevil us as a
creeping nation. We forget all the time a saying that a people
who forget their history are condemned by it.
This writer dares to
tell policy makers in Aso-Rock to look around and ask themselves
how we as a nation have fared in the last fifty years and how we
intend moving fifty
steps forward in another, so as not to repeat old age crisis and
feuds. It is quite sad that we all the time have no final
solutions to critical and even simple problems in this country,
which unfortunately has become a vicious cycle that cannott be
treated, except by making ourselves suffer in vain and willfully
drawing back the hands of time of the country.
Since the 80s, every
Nigerian government had argued that fuel prices were too small
and needed to be increased to bring a much needed soothing
relief for the vast majority of the people, which was always
rapped in the name of development, yet the development we see
had been built around massive corruption, kleptomania, sabotage
and unprecedented growth of a secret and protected oil cabal who
openly runs the country aground, by benefitting from government
subsidy.
If the government, which
emerged as a result of the goodwill of the people, believed they
were doing the right thing, arguing they wished to stop an oil
cabal from swindling Nigerians and in the process, the same
Nigerians became victims of government insensitivity, why then
have the cabal free without being prosecuted for cheating both
government and the vast majority of the people? It's an irony
that we live in a nation where people who are supposed to have
gone the way of Charles I are given immunity and protection,
despite committing crimes worse than those of the German Furher.
If the Furher was claimed to have directly or indirectly
committed crimes against humanity, causing the death of just a
mere 6 million people, he would have been better of in the alter
of conscience and natural justice than the actions of the so
called Nigerian oil cabal. In sanner climes, prosecutors would
have been stunned by the thievery of these few oil monsters, who
for decades had cheated and inflicted poverty against we the 99%
and as such commit them into the gulag.
If the zeal the
government had used to promote and fight the people to accept
subsidy removal is the same zeal used to fight massive looting
of our treasury and commonwealth, the incessant ASUU strike,
massive unemployment, insecurity and bad governance, nobody
would have raised an eyelid. We forget so suddenly that we
cannnot eat our cake and yet have it at the same time. A
government which is serious about fighting the senselessness and
madness in the oil sector ought to do have done the necessities
first by putting in place the workability of our refineries and
then the total annihiliation of those problematics inherent in
the oil sector.
If President Jonathan
had said his government was ready to get our refineries working
and committed to ensure its refining in Nigeria and then sending
the EFCC to do its job by catching the cabal, this writer is
sure nobody would have raised the roof. If Labour and other
stake holders had been made to see a blueprint where sanity
would finally be brought back to the oil industry, labour would
have refused to go on strike.
We have caused ourselves
so much hardship, pain and unnecessary death all in name of
subsidy removal. Government policies truely are meant to further
the viable course of the peoples' existence, but when such
policies are frowned at by this same people they are meant for,
common sense ought to prevail. A government who cannot pay it's
workers the minimum wage she promised for months is one
government people cannot be made to trust. A government who see
corruption thrive despite mechanisms in place to stamp it out
cannot be trusted. A government who has continously refused to
agree terms with university teachers and allowed the education
sector to further rot cannot be trusted. A government who
promised to remove subsidy by April, yet surprised it's people
with an increase on New Year day cannot be trusted. A government
who do not even have a template to repair and build new state of
the art roads after hundred days in office cannot be trusted. A
government who began it's tenure with a controversial single
tenure policy without committing it into the hands of the people
cannot be trusted. A government who cannot look elsewhere to
fund its project means it's sense of economic projection is
shortsided and for that reason cannot be trusted. A government
who cannot stem the tide of insecurity, despite billions
allocated to the sector yearly cannot be trusted and a
government whose youths are made to walk stark naked daily as a
result of unemployment cannot be trusted with funds gotten from
subsidy removal.
It is quite unfortunate
that at the end of it all, the strike and government's arrogance
has led to more animosity between the people and the government
who claim to pursue the interests of the citizen. The strike has
brought to glare the massive corruption and bogus allowances
even the office of the wife of the President earmarkes yearly
for itself. The death of those youth killed by the bullets of
the police will never be forgotten by their parents and loved
ones, while for years to come, the names of four government
officials will remain in the history books of the country for
being so insensitive to the plight of the people, despite
growing discontent and indifference by the citizenry.
Many have been made to
understand that the NLC had compromised it's stand and cannot be
trusted by the people anymore. Aside this, the people now see
their governors and their bogus allowance collecting
legislatures as back stabbers for either playing second fiddle,
playing to the gallery, keeping mute or giving their staggering
support to the subsidy removal. Since the President believed for
subsidies to be totally removed, the price of fuel should be
within the range of #141. Now that it is #97, it means we are in
for yet another impending strike soonest. Aside this, a country
like ours whose citizens despise the coins would be able to pay
for fuel, yet cannot fathom how their change would be collected
if they wish to buy a litre for #97 or even three litres for
#291.
This writer is of the
opinion that the subsidy imbroglio and its attendant strike had
been a total failure because the government did not achieve
total removal of subsidy, which means the cabal still stays with
future repercursions, while the NLC who had clamoured for a
total reversal of pump price from the very start is being seen
by many as part of government's anti-people policy. This means
we have been left miserable and unwilligly have to accept a half
baked oil policy and pump price which in turn will further leave
us in wanton poverty, abject deprivation and helplessness in the
hands of an insensitive government.
A nation whose people
remain gullible even in the sight of policies that promote the
pockets of only thos in power, is a nation that will remain
stagnant and never move away from pain, anguish and deprivation.
As the strike ends, it should become imperative as part of our
social contract to begin to question those in power, fight more
our cause like we did half heartedly during the strike cum
protest and eventually run the government aground, even as they
refuse to listen to our voices. Tunisians learned to fight that
way and are better for it today. Nigerians should be able to
follow suit.
RAHEEM
OLUWAFUNMIYINIYI is a social commentator and political analyst
who wrote from Ibadan and could be reached via
creativitysells@gmail.com
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