Nigerians have been urged to prepare for another round of protests against corruption, greed and ineffective leadership.
Convener, Save Nigeria
Group, Pastor Tunde Bakare, former member of the House of
Representatives, Mr. Dino Melaye, and a former Minister of the Federal
Capital Territory, Mallam Nasir el-Rufai, made the call on Monday at a
second State of the Nation Lecture organised by SNG in Lagos.
An Associate Professor
of Literature and African Studies, Pius Adesanmi, on the occasion, also
spoke on ‘Reparations: What Nigeria owes the Tortoise’
.
.
Bakare noted that the
protest must be a revolution where protesters would demand justice in
religious institutions as well as from serving and retired leaders.
He said, ‘‘Revolution
must begin. Democracy is preceded by revolution and then development
comes. It must begin with you, it must begin with me. All general
overseers including myself must go to jail and by the time we are out,
Nigeria will be better. I think December is too late for it and January
is too far.’’
He noted that many religious leaders control millions of people without impacting on them positively.
According to him, people
have asked him at various times about his role in protests; and why as a
pastor he cannot pray for the country and stay out of the political
arena.
Bakare added that he
could not be quiet and watch the nation taken over by ‘‘godless and evil
traducers, who, if allowed to continue to carry out their monkeyshines
would not only destroy the country’s political fabric, but also
obliterate her soul.”
Also, Melaye urged the citizens to wake up and ensure that the country occupied her rightful place.
He stated, ‘‘Refuse to listen to those criticising you. They are commercialised characters who have monetised their calling.’’
El-Rufai said the
elite’s belief that they could use money to buy themselves comfort in a
nation with myriad of problems would not work.
He called on the people to demand justice and ask salient questions from the leaders.
Chairman of the event
and former President of the Nigerian Bar Association, Priscilla Kuye,
urged parents to teach their children good morals so that they would be
responsible individuals.
Adesanmi, who lectures
at Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada, employed the symbol of the
tortoise as a greedy animal, saying its traits of greediness and
selfishness were akin to the attitudes of Nigerian leaders.
According to him,
successive generations of Nigerian leadership have approached the
‘national cake’ only from the perspective of how to gorge on it and how
to share it wantonly like tomorrow would never come.
Adesanmi said, ‘‘Nobody
comes to that federal theatre of debauched gorging sparing one second to
think about how to bake that cake, where to get the flower and the
icing and ensure continuous supply of the material and labour necessary
to bake the said cake.
“If you look at our post-regional
history, you will easily determine that we have produced at least three
generations of leaders whose ethos and philosophy of governance devolve
from wantonly plagiarising the playbook of the tortoise.”
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