Connect with us

Forgotten Dairies

2027—And They Will Deceive Us Again -By Prince Charles Dickson Ph.D

And the children; my God, the children are not in school. They trek to the minefields instead, those treacherous places where hope and hazard sleep on the same mat. Once upon a time, those were pits for minerals. Today, they are also killing fields, swallowing boys whose names will never make a headline.

Published

on

Nigeria-Election

The road into State XLocal Government YCommunity Z is not a road. It is a long, angry paragraph written in the handwriting of neglect. Every sentence is a pothole. Every comma is a gully. Every full stop is an erosion crater daring your shock absorbers to fear God. We did 10 kilometres in more than an hour, crawling like penitents on pilgrimage. At some point our vehicle began to ask philosophical questions about destiny: “What exactly did I do to deserve this combustion-engine wickedness?”

By the time we arrived, we were no longer human beings. We had turned into red-dust sculptures; our black car had converted to fire-brick brown. Even the Toyota logo on the grille seemed to whisper, “Now you understand why politicians love Hilux. See your life.”

But this is not just about bad roads. It is about a broken covenant between leaders and the led. It is 2Baba’s lament unfolding in real-time, in real dust, before real people who deserve better.

Because, truly: “E be like say dem wan tell us wetin we never hear before…”

Community Z has no water. Not that the water is poor. It is nonexistent. The sun sits on their heads like a tax collector. Climate change is not a conference term here; it is a daily bully. You can see it etched into the cracked earth, the exhausted farmlands, the choking harmattan haze, and the children’s eyes.

Advertisement

And the children; my God, the children are not in school. They trek to the minefields instead, those treacherous places where hope and hazard sleep on the same mat. Once upon a time, those were pits for minerals. Today, they are also killing fields, swallowing boys whose names will never make a headline.

Yet, by some strange twist of fate, someone once remembered this place and dropped a crumb of development; a rural solar electrification point blinking like a lonely firefly refusing to die. That is the only thing in Z that glows with dignity.

Z has a primary school. A former governor attended it. You would weep to see it now. The windows are shattered, the classrooms wounded, the desks look like they are calling for last rites. It is the kind of place where if you go in with a headache, you will come out with malaria, depression, and an unsolicited PhD in hopelessness.

Local Government Y has produced a two-term governor, a two-term senator, a House of Representatives member, a state assembly member, a commissioner, councillors, and plenty of “we are working” public office holders sprinkled across MDAs.

Yet, you cannot find one single one-star hospital in the entire space. Not even a clinic with dignity. The one we saw had window blinds broken like the promises of their politicians.

Advertisement

And hotels? The one that stood by the roadside looked like it was built by angels on suspension. Just reading the signboard felt like suicidal ideation. Even your shadow will tell you, “My guy, let’s sleep inside the car.”

This is leadership in Y: they don’t live among their people. They orbit around city centres like migrating birds and only return when the monthly federal allocation arrives. They come home the way masquerades come out during festivals—briefly, ceremonially, and never for service.

And meanwhile the billions keep coming.

As we navigated this tragic topography, 2Baba kept echoing in my mind like a prophet who warned Nigerians but Nigerians did not listen: “E be like say dem wan act another movie again oh…”

Because every election cycle, they wear new agbada, rehearse old speeches, dust their village names, invoke ancestors they abandoned, swallow saliva with artificial humility, and promise the same transformation they never delivered.

Advertisement

And we—sentimental, forgiving, hopeful citizens—sometimes allow ourselves to believe their stories again. Even when they are clearly bad actors performing the same script we have watched since 1999.

2Baba said it sharply:

“The power is nothing if your people cannot get quality education.”

“The power is nothing if your people keep on dying of disease and starvation.”

“The power is nothing if your people have no peace.”

Advertisement

In Z, power is nothing. Influence is nothing. Representation is nothing. Governance is nothing. All that exists is the evidence of abandonment.

It is the kind of place that makes you whisper, “If Jesus was born here, even the wise men would have turned back.”

Another election year will come.

They will descend from their city mansions like benevolent conquerors.

They will hold children whose names they will forget in five minutes.

Advertisement

They will sit under mango trees for photo ops.

They will shake hands with elders they never call back.

They will dance galala with hired drummers.

They will tell stories again.

They will code another coding again.

Advertisement

They will act another movie again.

They will borrow our suffering for the campaign, then return it after victory.

And the cycle will continue because the system is engineered to recycle neglect.

Somewhere between the dust and despair, I found myself laughing. Not because anything was funny, but because sometimes humor is the last surviving muscle of sanity. When your car is praying for deliverance, the hotel is auditioning for “Most Haunted Building,” and the clinic blinds look like they fought Boko Haram and lost, what else can you do?

A villager even told me, “Oga, if una wan stay for hotel, better sleep for motor. Na advice I dey give you.” Wisdom from the trenches.

Advertisement

But beneath the laughter is a truth made of granite: Nigeria should not be like this. Z should not be like this. Our people should not be like this.

And yet, unless something shifts in our collective spine, in our civic memory, in our refusal to be manipulated.

They will deceive us again.

And again.

And again.

Advertisement

Until we decide that dust roads and broken schools are not our destiny—May Nigeria win!

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Trending Contents

Topical Issues

JD-Vance JD-Vance
Breaking News5 hours ago

US Warns Iran Ahead of Pakistan Talks as Ceasefire Strains Persist

Vance cautions Iran to negotiate in good faith as US-Iran talks begin in Pakistan, with tensions lingering over ceasefire violations...

Northern Nigeria Northern Nigeria
Forgotten Dairies5 hours ago

Banditry In Northern Nigeria: Crime, Conflict, Or Terrorism? -By Ochim Angela Odije

As Nigeria confronts this growing threat, it must also confront the underlying realities that sustain it. Banditry is not an...

ISAAC ASABOR ISAAC ASABOR
Forgotten Dairies5 hours ago

Are Political Parties In Nigeria Merely Formed To Win Elections? -By Isaac Asabor

Politicians, for their part, must move beyond the culture of opportunistic defection and commit to strengthening the parties they belong...

Breaking News11 hours ago

Immigration Boss Orders Suspension of Officers Amid Seme Border Extortion Probe

Immigration Service begins probe into extortion allegations at Seme border, suspending top officers and urging public to report misconduct.

Nigeria Police Nigeria Police
Breaking News11 hours ago

Abuja Terror Claim False, Police Say; One Arrested for Spreading Panic

Police say a viral video claiming a terror attack in Abuja is false and misleading. A suspect has been arrested...

Plateau State Plateau State
Breaking News12 hours ago

Eight Feared Dead After Late-Night Attack on Plateau Village

Eight persons have been confirmed dead following a late-night attack on Mbwelle village in Plateau State, residents say.

NEPA - DisCos NEPA - DisCos
Forgotten Dairies13 hours ago

Orchestrated Darkness? Why Nigeria’s Power Sector Still Fails-And Why This Moment Demands Courage -By Adeniran Taiwo Olugbenga

When failure is followed by continuity, when poor outcomes carry no visible consequence, when systems that do not deliver are...

Forgotten Dairies13 hours ago

2027: The INEC Nigerians Want -By Isaac Asabor

If INEC is independent in fact, not just in law; if it operates with integrity, not just procedure; if it...

INEC - Amupitan INEC - Amupitan
Politics13 hours ago

The Electoral Act 2026 and Our Courts -By Tochukwu Jimo Obi

In this regard, commendation should go to the Nigerian Bar Association President, Afam Osigwe, SAN, for his recent public statements...

John-Egbeazien-Oshodi John-Egbeazien-Oshodi
Forgotten Dairies14 hours ago

Ojoro Psychology: The Unwritten System That Slowly Teaches a Nation How to Betray Itself -By Psychologist John Egbeazien Oshodi

Across Nigeria, across Africa, and within training institutions, professional bodies, and leadership programs, there must be a deliberate effort to...