Connect with us

Africa

Politicians As Nigeria’s Worst Headache! -By Ugochukwu Ejinkeonye

It is quite clear that what most of these politicians are merely bemoaning each time they fail to win an election is their failure to secure or re-secure looting rights, so I see no reason why they should cause any trouble in the polity and drag us all into their personal misfortune. This is what every Nigerian must know now, act aright and send the clear, correct message to these fellows who have become our country’s most malignant affliction.

Published

on

Ugochukwu Ejinkeonye

Now, let’s face it. Despite all the empty (and, often, very exasperating) noise about being driven by patriotism and “desire to serve my people” that usually saturates the atmosphere at each election season, a careful, conscientious search on the political terrain can only yield about less than one percent (and one is being really generous here) of aspirants motivated solely by genuine desire to improve the lives of the citizenry and make society a better place.

For the majority, the sole incentive is the golden opportunity politics offers them to gain access to government coffers and cart away as much free money as they could possibly grab before their tenures elapse. This is just the raw, plain truth – a simple case of organized banditry! Indeed, every politician in Nigeria is fully aware that most Nigerians know this. But they always bank on what I would like to refer to as the “collaborative passivity” of the citizenry.

There is a very insignificant few who, although also inspired by the same primitive craving for the very selfishly remunerated political jobs, are content to just go home every month with only their abominably jumbo salaries and allowances. But their own grievous sin is that they do not find the very outrageously inflated pay packets they have allocated to themselves in the midst of widespread poverty and pain very obscene and criminal, even though a few of  them are able to often recoil from the mad, free and fair looting that has become the distinguishing feature of political office in Nigeria. The brazenness with which the looting is perpetrated and the most revolting manner its prodigious proceeds are often flaunted before everyone underline the unmistakable impression that shameless stealing has received an official endorsement as part and parcel of governance, a kind of official culture.

What makes the matter even more egregious is that these callous looters are always able to use some tiny crumbs or the usually very reliable intoxicants, namely, ethnicity and religion, to get the same shortchanged and impoverished citizenry to rise to their defense each time there are attempts to pry into their hideous activities in office. It is only in Nigeria that this kind of thing makes sense – that someone among the populace would want to fight and even die for an unrepentant enemy of the people who has so wickedly exploited, dehumanized and grossly diminished him!

And that is why we hear our politicians always threatening blood and fire if they are “rigged” out during elections. But the tragic irony is that you would always find some poor, long-suffering human beings with brain in their skulls eagerly electing to be the murderous agents whose hands the out-rigged politicians would always deploy to shed the innocent blood of mostly their fellow impoverished Nigerians (who have not done them any wrong) and set fire on properties mostly obtained through honest labour by hardworking citizens in a country where life has become a nightmare because of the failure of character and leadership on the part of our largely wayward rulers at all levels.

Advertisement

Now, look at it this way: a man is looking for access to where our commonwealth is dumped in order to plunder and cart away huge bags of unearned wealth, but he is outsmarted in the process by a more desperate and smarter opponent. And then the pathetic victim of all the devilish scheming will foolishly lay down his life to fight for one of the prospective plunderers. Is this not madness?

When will Nigerians wake up from their self-induced slumber and learn? When will they cure themselves of this self-inflicted blindness? When will they come into the liberating awareness that the real power lies in their hands and that what happened was that they only foolishly and willingly relinquished it to a few heartless men and women who are now using it to horribly oppress and impoverish them? But when will it settle in their hearts that just as they willingly gave away this power, they can as well easily take it back?

The only election Nigerian politicians will claim was rigged is the one in which they lost. They would heartily declare on rooftops that the same election was “free and fair” if they had won!

The point of this discourse is that politics has been accepted as the easiest and quickest, but most ungodly, route to self-enrichment by many politicians, but instead of going about it in a quiet, unobtrusive manner, they would always seek to disrupt our lives by brutally dragging us into their conflict  each time they lose out in a game they had ensured we remained  mere spectators – yes, we have been shut out and denied the opportunity of helping to decide or even merely observe how our God-given resources are utilised.

Let’s say it again with more emphasis! For many of these politicians, politics is just another very lucrative business enterprise from which they are hoping to reap jumbo profits. We, the masses, do not feature in their calculations at all. If you see them building any road or repainting a school building, it is either another opportunity to accumulate immense dividends from an inflated contracts or something they felt they must hurriedly (and often very poorly) do to buy our support for the next elections.

Advertisement

That is why such roads are often so substandard that the next rains after the elections would wash them off. Virtues like concern, compassion or altruism do not exist in the hearts of most Nigerian politicians. It is all about them, their relatives and friends, nothing more, nothing less. The whole ennobling idea about seeking to be treated fairly by history and earning and sustaining a good name are just strange, uninteresting notions that would never be able to win their admiration.

Now that it has become all too clear to everyone that they are mostly in this for power and wealth acquisition, why then should a politician outsmarted by his opponents begin to threaten to make the country ungovernable which is a direct threat to our peace and existence?

Imagine such audacity? 

What exactly makes him think that he is too important that his personal loss should become our collective problem? Ungovernable for whom, by the way? The most annoying thing is that by the time he is making these threats, his family has been sent far away to some very safe, well-run country and himself has made solid travel and security arrangement to escape once the country goes up in flames as the deluded people he is instigating to pour into the streets to fight for him start mowing themselves down.

I seriously think that Nigerians have been deceived enough and should now put a halt to all this nonsense. They must realize that in the minds of these politicians, they are nothing but mere cheaply procured and dispensable instruments for power and wealth accumulation.

Advertisement

Nigerians must, therefore, hasten to clearly underline this point to the political gladiators, namely, that Nigeria belongs to all Nigerians, and not to the few of them, and so, they have no right whatsoever to go ahead to threaten or unleash any form of violence because their more desperate and smarter colleagues had displaced them in the clearly self-serving race for Nigeria’s resources.

It is quite clear that what most of these politicians are merely bemoaning each time they fail to win an election is their failure to secure or re-secure looting rights, so I see no reason why they should cause any trouble in the polity and drag us all into their personal misfortune. This is what every Nigerian must know now, act aright and send the clear, correct message to these fellows who have become our country’s most malignant affliction.

*Ugochukwu Ejinkeonye, a commentator on public issues, is the author of the book, Nigeria: Why Looting May Not Stop (scruples2006@yahoo.com)

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

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

Trending Contents

Topical Issues

Abba Dukawa Abba Dukawa
Africa16 hours ago

Reciprocity in Conflict: How Covert Attacks Provoke Resistance -By Abba Dukawa

Governor Abba Kabir belongs to every Kanawa and to no one – he's the people's governor, above political affiliation. One...

JAMB and UTME JAMB and UTME
Forgotten Dairies19 hours ago

The Role of Technology in Nigeria’s Education System -By Alheri Una

To fully maximize technology in education, government investment is crucial. Public-private partnerships can help provide internet access, digital devices, and...

Egbetokun Egbetokun
Africa19 hours ago

Setting The Record Straight On The So-Called “IGP’s Boys” Narrative -By Danjuma Lamido

Nigeria deserves a Police Force that is firm, fair, and accountable, and a media ecosystem that reports responsibly. We must...

Russian-Indian Business Dialogue, December 2025 Russian-Indian Business Dialogue, December 2025
Forgotten Dairies20 hours ago

Russia–India Dialogue Provides Platform for Strengthening Bilateral Entrepreneurship -By Kestér Kenn Klomegâh

Participants noted the development of Russia–India cooperation and implementation of joint business projects will continue at major international platforms, including...

David Sydney David Sydney
Africa20 hours ago

The Importance of Proper Legal Documentation in Business -By David Sydney

Where a business relationship is undocumented or poorly documented, even a legitimate claim may fail for lack of proof. Oral...

Bola Oyebamiji Bola Oyebamiji
Politics1 day ago

The Deputy Question: How APC’s Choice Will Shape Osun’s 2026 Contest -By Kolapo Tokode

A Christian, Oke offers religious balance to Oyebamiji’s candidacy. He is widely regarded as financially buoyant and politically influential, particularly...

Forest Forest
Africa1 day ago

The Devastating Impact Of Deforestation -By Favour Haruna

We can mitigate deforestation's effects by adopting sustainable choices and supporting conservation.Reduce paper usage, choose sustainable products, and spread awareness....

NEPA - DisCos NEPA - DisCos
Africa1 day ago

Electricity Tariffs in Nigeria: Who Really Pays and Who Benefits -By Jennifer Joab

To fix the system, Nigeria needs more than just tariff reviews. There must be transparency in band classification, rapid rollout...

Kate Henshaw Kate Henshaw
Africa1 day ago

You Can’t Photoshop Discipline: Kate Henshaw, Fitness, And The Hard Truth We Keep Dodging -By Isaac Asabor

Kate Henshaw did not say anything new. She said something true. And truth, especially when stated plainly, unsettles people who...

Rivers - Wike and Fubara Rivers - Wike and Fubara
Africa1 day ago

How Wike, Fubara and Rivers’ Lawmakers Are Disrespecting President Tinubu -By Isaac Asabor

What Wike, Fubara, and the lawmakers have done, collectively and individually, is to tell Nigerians that the President can speak,...