A thought provoking article
written by my brother and friend: Offor Honest. I couldn’t agree less. The earlier
the party, APC realizes that it owes this country the responsibility of
changing their mantra of change into reality; the better for them.
The leadership impasses in the
National Assembly is nothing but a show of shame; and a clear inability of the
APC to manage victory, due to the excesses of some political gladiators and the
vested interests in the party.
Read Mr. Honest’s opinion after
the cut…
Nigeria gained the respect and
admiration of advanced democracies when on March 28th with the power of the
thumb; we effected a change that was uncommon in African politics. The
commonsense revolution that ended the 16 years reign of the PDP was predicated
on the need for change. Barely one month after that progressive change, the new
party in charge, the All Progressive Congress, has shown that the only thing
has changed is the name of the party in power.
It is the same transactional
politics of greed that saw 16 years of civil rule yield scant dividends that is
fuelling the power sharing crisis in the ruling party. The shameful fight on
the floor of the House of Representatives is about who gets what and who
assumes what position. They are not concerned about the upsurge of terrorist
activities in the North East, they are not worried about the violent flood that
is threatening major cities, the ugly plight of internally displaced persons is
not causing them any discomfort neither are they troubled by the scandalous
level of unemployment in the country.
It has become clear that unless
urgent and drastic citizenship action is taken, the change we voted for will be
hijacked by the same elements that have held our progress by the jugular. The
various interests that congregated to dislodge the PDP have drawn their daggers
to carve out their share of the national cake even when it is evident that our
economy is in tatters. It behooves on ordinary Nigerians whose votes conferred
the legitimacy and authority on these legislatures to call their
representatives to order.
Certain behavior should not be
condoned on the hallowed chambers of the national assembly and when such
unbecoming misdemeanors are displayed, they should be met with appropriate
sanctions by the citizenry. In 2010 when the House of representative witnessed
a fiasco of this sort, the key actors in that shameful debacle ought to have
been sanctioned. Unfortunately, one of them has gone on to become a senator and
is even nursing the ambition to become a governor. Until a member is recalled
by his constituents for actions that embarrass decency, commonsense will not
prevail in the way business is conducted in the National Assembly.
The point being made here is that
the ruling party has so far shown that they lack the coherence to enforce the
change on which premise they rode into power. It is discomfiting that nearly
one month after inauguration, the new government is yet to come up with an administration
that can tackle the myriads of problems facing our country. Nigerians must
therefore move quickly to assert their authority as the real custodians of
power and must demand from the ruling party a change in the way government is
run. Citizens must prove the truism in the assertion that 'the power of the
people is stronger than the people in power'
Starting from the National
Assembly, the era of fiscal profligacy and opaque handling of salaries and
allowances must give way to transparency and fiscal conservatism. Nigerians
must insist that financial books of the 8th Assembly should be an open secret.
The era where ministers are ferried in private jets and are lodged in luxury 5
star hotels should have ended with the last administration. The new Ministers
in this dispensation of change must accept to live by a different set of rules
dictated by financial prudence, accountability and discipline. Governors cannot
revel in opulence when civil servants and citizens are hungry, such inhumane
actions should be confronted with civil disobedience.
The duty of citizens did not end
with the elections, in fact, it started with the elections. We must vigilantly
guard the revolution we kick started on March 28th to ensure that it yields the
positive change we desperately desire. The ruling party will do well do get its
act together or be ready to face citizenship action. Time is ticking and the
patience of our countrymen is waning!
offorhonest@gmail.com

The problem in the national assembly shows you the disadvantage of rebellion. a rebel is a rebel. They felt GEJ was overshadowing them, so they teamed pushed him away and now, they are regretting it...
ReplyDeleteAPC will bounce back. All these are natural in every democratic setting
ReplyDelete