Former Minister of Aviation, Osita Chidoka, has lamented
that successive administrations have failed to build a modern Nigeria.
According to him, despite the enormous resources available,
many past and present leaders had failed to utilize them for the betterment of
the country.
Osita aired his view in an opinion tiled ‘My Thoughts on
Nigeria’ and shared on his Facebook page on Saturday.
He said that at independence, Nigerian leaders failed to
define the qualities of an exceptional country so diverse yet so similar.
He wrote:
“At independence our leaders failed to define the qualities
of an exceptional country so diverse yet so similar that other African
countries can discern a Nigerian no matter the ethnic origin.
The emphasis was on replacing the colonial masters and
enjoying the benefits of a distributional and extractive governance philosophy
primarily designed to enrich the home government of the colonialist.
In adopting that philosophy without the administrative
competence of the colonial administration it was only a matter of time before
the vacuous organising principle of the new state led to Africa’s worst pogrom
and civil war.
The end of the civil war offered an opportunity for the
wining coalition to redefine the organising principle of the Nigerian state and
propose new ideals upon which, a state exceptional in its combination of three
strong and many other small ethnic groups that had overcome a civil war, can be
founded.
Yet again we missed it. Administration after Administration
we have failed to build a modern Nigeria based on ideals that derive from our
essence and quest for nationhood.
Today, confronted by a dire economic situation; antagonised
by separatist agitations and religion inspired terror; and challenged by
weakening subnational governments and global hostility another opportunity
presents itself to redefine the essence of the Nigerian State.
This redefinition is not all about restructuring (if we can
agree on the definition) but may include it, it is not all about governance
structure and distributional formula, though it may be an aftermath, it is
principally about a union freely founded on ideals of respect for individual
rights, freedom to achieve individual potential and respect for multi-cultural,
multi-ethnic union that allows for unity in diversity indeed.
The Nigerian state so redefined and freely subscribed to by
a majority would definitely endure and overcome all the challenges that plague
any nation so constructed.”
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