Connect with us

Forgotten Dairies

The King Who Ate While The Kingdom Burned: Insecurity And The Politics Of Delay -By Isaac Asabor

The lesson of folklore is clear: leadership is not about indulgence; it is about sacrifice. The true king is the one who drops his meal to save his people. Nigeria needs leaders who will act now, not later, who will confront insecurity as a matter of life and death, not as a political distraction.  

Published

on

Akpabio

In African folklore, the tortoise is often portrayed as cunning, calculating, and self-serving. One particular tale tells of a time when the tortoise was crowned king of all animals. Whenever trouble arose in the kingdom, whether an invasion or unrest, the emissaries would rush to inform him. Yet, if he was eating, he would instruct them to wait until he finished his meal before addressing the crisis. The kingdom could be burning, but the tortoise’s stomach came first.

This story, though ancient, resonates profoundly with Nigeria’s present political climate. It mirrors the recent remarks by Senate President Godswill Akpabio, who declared that insecurity in Nigeria will “end after the 2027 elections.” According to him, the current wave of violence and unrest is politically motivated, designed to discredit President Bola Tinubu. He assured Nigerians that once the elections are over, the attacks would “fizzle out.”

The tortoise’s leisurely indulgence while chaos brewed around him is a metaphor for the political class’s tendency to prioritize power games over urgent national crises. Akpabio’s statement, whether intended as reassurance or political rhetoric, inadvertently underscores this troubling reality: insecurity is treated not as a humanitarian emergency but as a political inconvenience, one that can be tolerated until the ruling elite finishes its “meal”, in this case, the electoral cycle.

In the tortoise tale, the king’s refusal to act promptly endangered the entire kingdom. Similarly, Akpabio’s assertion that insecurity will vanish after elections suggests that the suffering of ordinary Nigerians is secondary to political calculations. It implies that the violence is not being confronted head-on but rather endured until it serves its purpose in the political chessboard.  This raises unsettling questions: If insecurity is politically motivated, why should citizens endure bloodshed until 2027? Should governance be reactive to electoral cycles rather than proactive to human lives?  Is the promise of security after elections not an admission that the government knows the roots of the problem but chooses to wait until it is politically expedient to act?  Given the foregoing folkloric view, the tortoise’s delay was selfish; Akpabio’s delay, if taken literally, is dangerous.

Nigeria’s insecurity is not an abstract concept; it is lived reality. From banditry in the North-West, insurgency in the North-East, farmer-herder clashes in the Middle Belt, to kidnappings in the South, the toll is measured in lost lives, communities displaced, and economies shattered.

Advertisement

To tell a grieving mother that her child’s death is part of a political distraction until 2027 is to trivialize her pain. To assure a farmer whose land has been ravaged by bandits that relief will come after elections is to mock his livelihood. Insecurity is not a campaign slogan; it is a national emergency.  The tortoise’s meal could wait; human lives cannot.

Akpabio’s statement reflects a broader pattern in Nigerian politics: insecurity is often weaponized. Political actors exploit violence to weaken opponents, justify military spending, or rally support. In this narrative, insecurity is not a failure of governance but a tool of political maneuvering.

Yet, this approach is shortsighted. Violence, once unleashed, rarely obeys electoral timetables. Militias, insurgents, and criminal networks do not dissolve simply because ballots have been cast. To assume that insecurity will “fizzle out” after elections is to underestimate its complexity and resilience.

The tortoise believed he could pause reality until his meal was done. Nigerian leaders risk believing they can pause insecurity until elections are over.

The obsession with electoral cycles is one of Nigeria’s greatest governance flaws. Policies are framed around winning votes rather than solving problems. Infrastructure projects are timed for campaign seasons. Reforms are delayed until they can be politically advantageous. And now, even security is being tethered to elections.

Advertisement

But governance should not be about 2027, it should be about today. The farmer in Zamfara, the student in Kaduna, the trader in Onitsha, and the commuter in Abuja need safety now, not after ballots are counted. Leadership is measured not by promises of future relief but by immediate action in times of crisis.

The tortoise’s reign was marked by negligence. Nigeria cannot afford leaders who eat while the kingdom burns.

Akpabio’s remarks risk normalizing insecurity as an inevitable feature of Nigerian politics. If citizens are told that violence is simply part of the electoral process, they may begin to accept it as routine. This is dangerous. It erodes trust in institutions, undermines democracy, and perpetuates cycles of violence.

Insecurity should never be seen as a political distraction; it should be treated as a national disgrace. To normalize it is to betray the social contract between government and governed.

The story of the tortoise teaches us that leaders who prioritize personal indulgence over collective safety are unfit to rule. The kingdom needs a leader who will drop the spoon and respond to crisis immediately.

Advertisement

Nigeria’s leaders must learn this lesson. Insecurity cannot be postponed until after elections. It must be confronted with urgency, sincerity, and accountability. Citizens deserve more than promises tied to political calendars; they deserve action tied to human dignity.

Akpabio’s statement may have been intended to reassure Nigerians that insecurity is temporary. But it reveals a troubling mindset: that governance can wait until politics is convenient. Like the tortoise king, Nigeria’s leaders risk eating while the kingdom burns.

The lesson of folklore is clear: leadership is not about indulgence; it is about sacrifice. The true king is the one who drops his meal to save his people. Nigeria needs leaders who will act now, not later, who will confront insecurity as a matter of life and death, not as a political distraction.

Until then, the kingdom remains at risk, and the people remain vulnerable. The tortoise may finish his meal, but by then, the kingdom may be gone.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

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

Trending Contents

Topical Issues

Senate Senate
Breaking News11 hours ago

Oyo School Abduction: Obi Pleads for Victims’ Release as Senate Demands Urgent Rescue

Former presidential candidate Peter Obi has appealed to abductors to release schoolchildren kidnapped in Oyo State, while the Senate demands...

Leonard Karshima Shilgba Leonard Karshima Shilgba
Forgotten Dairies15 hours ago

Rumours, Ignorance Of The Law, And The Danger Of Trivializing Democracy -By Leonard Karshima Shilgba

The Electoral Act 2026 entrusted candidate selection to registered party members because democracy is not merely about voting on election...

Forgotten Dairies19 hours ago

AIG Jimoh Olohundare’s NUJ Award Is Well Deserved, Regardless Of Sowore’s Rants -By Adewole Kehinde

The attempt to undermine AIG Jimoh Olohundare's achievements through social media outrage cannot erase the record of a police officer...

Dollar-and-Naira Dollar-and-Naira
Breaking News19 hours ago

Naira Holds Steady Against Dollar Across Official, Parallel Markets

Check the latest dollar to naira exchange rate for June 3, 2026. The naira remained stable at around ₦1,373.25/$ in...

Wike, Lere, INEC and Emeka Ike Opinion Nigeria Wike, Lere, INEC and Emeka Ike Opinion Nigeria
Politics19 hours ago

THE COMPROMISED COMMISSION: How Tinubu, Wike, and Their INEC Boys Are Plotting to Steal 2027 -By Jeff Okoroafor

We must also recognize that the Electoral Act, 2026, and all the legal frameworks in the world mean nothing if...

Tinubu & Classroom, School Children Tinubu & Classroom, School Children
National Issues21 hours ago

Nigeria’s Children Under Siege as Politics Trumps over Governance -By Blaise Udunze

The pursuit of political power cannot become more important than the survival of the republic itself. The death of Michael...

Isaac Asabor Isaac Asabor
Forgotten Dairies21 hours ago

We Get The Leaders We Deserve: Nigeria’s Followership Failure -By Isaac Asabor

It is time to retire the lazy lament of "bad leadership." It is time to embrace the harder, more heroic...

Buratai Buratai
Breaking News21 hours ago

Buratai Links Rising Insecurity to Political Interests, Calls for Reforms

Former Chief of Army Staff Tukur Buratai has alleged that some politicians benefit from terrorism and banditry, warning that insecurity...

IPOB Leader - Nnamdi Kanu IPOB Leader - Nnamdi Kanu
Breaking News21 hours ago

US Lawmakers Urge Nigeria to Uphold Due Process in Nnamdi Kanu Case

US lawmaker John James has called on Nigeria to ensure that legal proceedings involving IPOB leader Nnamdi Kanu comply with...

Soludo Soludo
Breaking News21 hours ago

Anambra Opens Power Sector to Competition as New Regulatory Framework Takes Effect

Anambra State has introduced new electricity regulations aimed at boosting power supply, attracting investors and ending monopoly in the sector,...