Etcetera reviews the situation in Abia State,
South East Nigeria.
Musician
cum Writer Etcetera is at it again! In this week’s edition of Etcetera Live, a
column in Punchng.com, the social writer takes a look at the development
situation in Abia state.
Ladies
and gentlemen, the four nominees for the most underdeveloped state in Nigeria
are: 1. Abia State 2. Abia State 3. Abia State and 4. Abia State. And the Award
goes to none other than Abia State. Hurray!!!...Continue
I
was holidaying at my cousin’s shop in Aba, Abia State when news broke that Gen.
Sanni Abacha was dead. In fact I was at the centre of the popular Ariaria
market that evening. Sixteen years on, I still see the worried faces of the
traders as they hurriedly closed their shops as uncertainty took hold of the
town. The look on my cousin’s face as he dragged us out of the market is
something I still tease him about till date. Back then in 1998, what really
caught my eye was the simple but very industrious people of Aba. I saw a people
living and fending for themselves in a city with very little government
presence. Going back to Abia State after 16 years feels no different. If
anything is to be said, the state is in a more terrible condition than it was
when I left in 1998. More disturbing is the fact that the government seems
unperturbed by the sordid condition of the state.
I
remember vividly how the people were filled with hope when it was announced by
Gen. Abdusalam Abubakar that the country was going back to democratic rule. At
first I was wondering why the people made so much fuss about a return to
democracy, then I was told that Abia State saw the last infrastructural upgrade
as a part of Imo State under the civilian regime of the late Sam Mbakwe. Now
It’s over 15 years of the current democratic dispensation and the people’s
elephant is still languishing in limbo. The democratic dividends that everyone
dreamt of remains a lingering illusion.
From
our drive through Enugu to Owerri, the government presence we felt in those
places seemed to diminish as we got to Abia. All roads in the state were
totally waterlogged, hampering vehicular and pedestrian movement. What was most
baffling is the uniformed cloak of surrender and defeat worn by the people.
There were military patrol vans everywhere which painted a picture of a state
under emergency rule. Can the military presence be the reason why Abians are
afraid to speak out? How can a people known all over the world for their
outspoken and fearless nature become so docile and defeated? Or have they
become accustomed to this infrastructural decay? I am certain that if Abians
decide today that they want a change, they will have a change. They are living
in rot today but the coming general elections present a huge opportunity for
rectification. It is time to create a new beginning for themselves and their
unborn children. Few weeks from now, it will be left for them to decide if they
prefer a tin of rice and another eight years of stagnation.
My
advice is that Abians shouldn’t give up as they walk through this wilderness.
But they also must not fail in the coming months to choose a Moses with the
right staff to walk them through. Because another eight years of this same
political hiatus might be too costly.
Source: PUNCH

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