Forgotten Dairies
From Nepal to Nigeria: The Unlearned Lessons of a Complacent Generation -By Jeff Okoroafor
The cruise is over. The house is on fire. It is time to pick up a bucket, not a dance move. The future of Nigeria will not be won by the most viral skit, but by the most resilient will. Let us learn from the mountains of Nepal and finally choose to fight for the plains of Nigeria.
While Nigerian youth were engrossed in another viral dance challenge on TikTok or debating the latest celebrity gossip on X (formerly Twitter), a revolution was brewing 6,500 kilometers away in the Himalayan nation of Nepal. What transpired there is not just a foreign news snippet; it is a stark mirror held up to the face of Nigerian Gen Z, reflecting a devastating image of squandered potential and political apathy.
For weeks, thousands of young Nepalis, predominantly students and Gen Z, flooded the streets of Kathmandu and other cities. Their demand was clear and unequivocal: the reinstatement of corruption charges against their political leaders. They were not protesting fuel prices or university fees alone; they were demanding the most fundamental pillar of democracy: “accountability“. They mobilized without a single central leader, organized through social media, and displayed a raw, courageous commitment to confronting the rot in their system.
Meanwhile, in Nigeria, the response to a deepening crisis of governance has been a collective shrug, masked by the hashtag #CatchingCruise. This phrase, which colloquially means to relax, not take things seriously, or simply go with the flow, has become the anthem of a generation choosing memes over movements, and comic relief over concrete action.
The Nigerian Malady: Governance by Theft
The empirical facts of Nigeria’s predicament are not hidden; they are brazenly published by the very institutions meant to safeguard the nation’s integrity.
1. The Corruption Quagmire: According to Transparency International’s 2023 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI), Nigeria ranks 145th out of 180 countries, scoring a dismal 25 out of 100, where 0 is highly corrupt. This places us firmly among the world’s most corrupt nations, behind countries like Mali and Iran. This is not perception; it is a reality felt in every failed public service.
2. The Grand Theft of Public Funds: The figures are staggering. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) itself has reported that between 1960 and 2005, a mind-numbing “$20 trillion” was stolen from the public treasury. More recently, the alleged looting of over $2.1 billion meant to fight Boko Haram terrorists, as well as the countless scandals within the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) and the humanitarian ministry, show that theft is not an anomaly but the central operating principle of governance.
3. The Human Cost: This corruption has a direct, mortal impact. The World Bank estimates that over 80 million Nigerians live below the poverty line—the highest globally. Our public universities are routinely shut down for months due to strikes, our hospitals are glorified mortuaries, and our roads are death traps. The national grid collapses with tragicomic frequency, and inflation, at over 33%, has made basic sustenance a luxury for millions.
The Great Distraction: #CatchingCruise in a Burning House
In the face of this existential threat, one would expect a furious, organized, and relentless demand for change from the generation with the most to lose: the digitally-native, populous Gen Z. Instead, we have perfected the art of distraction.
Social media, a tool that powered the Arab Spring and now the Nepal protests, has been reduced to a digital opium den for Nigerian youth. Our timelines are flooded with:
The “Soft Life” Aesthetic: A curated performance of escapism that ignores the harsh economic realities making such a life unattainable for 99% of young Nigerians.
Influencer Culture: A obsessive focus on materialism, vanity, and the pursuit of clout, creating a generation that values vanity metrics (likes, retweets) over tangible political power.
The Meme-ification of Suffering: Every government failure—from a fuel shortage to a naira note scarcity—is met not with organized resistance, but with a barrage of memes. While humor is a valid coping mechanism, it has become the only response, effectively deflating anger and converting it into passive entertainment for the very leaders being mocked.
This behavior is a gift to the corrupt political class. A distracted, entertained, and non-threatening youth is exactly what they need to continue their plunder unimpeded. They laugh all the way to the bank while we laugh at the memes on our timelines.
The Nepal Lesson: A Blueprint for Power
The young people of Nepal offer a masterclass in how to use the very tools Nigerian youth waste.
1. Clarity of Purpose: Their demand was specific—accountability for corruption. It wasn’t a vague cry for “better governance.” They targeted a clear enemy: the culture of impunity.
2. Strategic Use of Technology: They used social media not for cruise, but for coordination, information dissemination, and mobilization. Their platforms were war rooms, not comedy clubs.
3. Fearless Civil Disobedience: They faced down police batons and water cannons not for a fleeting trend, but for a future they believed in. They understood that freedom is never given; it is taken.
4. Leaderless Movement: Their mobilization wasn’t tied to a single politician or party, making it resilient and purely focused on the issue, not personality. This neutralized the classic government tactic of co-opting or discrediting opposition leaders.
A Call to Action for Nigerian Gen Z: Swap the Cruise for a Cause
The potential of Nigerian youth is undeniable. We have shown we can #EndSARS, a powerful testament to our power when focused. But that energy cannot be a one-off event. It must become a sustained, relentless campaign.
It is time to log off the trivial debates and log on to a new mission:
Educate and Agitate: Use your platforms to dissect budgets, expose corrupt projects, and name and shame complicit leaders. Follow the money and demand answers.
Organize Locally: Change doesn’t only happen in Abuja. Attend local government meetings. Question your council chairman. Hold your state assembly members accountable for their allocations.
Register to Vote and Vote Smart: The 2023 elections showed your power. Now, double down. Not voting is not a protest; it is a surrender of your power to those who will happily vote for the highest bidder.
Channel Your Creativity: Direct the immense creative energy used for skits and memes towards creating compelling content that educates the masses on their rights, government policies, and the true cost of corruption.
Nepal’s youth have shown that the power to demand accountability does not reside in age or political experience, but in courage and collective will. The question for Nigerian Gen Z is no longer “What is our government doing to us?” but “What are we going to do about our government?”
The cruise is over. The house is on fire. It is time to pick up a bucket, not a dance move. The future of Nigeria will not be won by the most viral skit, but by the most resilient will. Let us learn from the mountains of Nepal and finally choose to fight for the plains of Nigeria.
Jeff Okoroafor is a social accountability advocate and a political commentator focused on governance, accountability, and social justice in West Africa.