Editorial
At independence in 1960, Nigeria was a promising bait. A land with the arable richness of the Nile valley, oil reserves to rival Saudi Arabia, and minds as brilliant as any in Cambridge or Ibadan.
The founding fathers—Herbert Macaulay, Nnamdi Azikiwe, Obafemi Awolowo, Ahmadu Bello—dreamed of a federation that could rival the Commonwealth itself. But sixty-five years later, Nigeria remains an arrested giant: rich in potential, poor in reality. And still trapped in the past heroes’ dreams.
The tragedy is not that Nigeria failed by accident. It failed by design. And by policy.
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The pivot to import substitution industrialization in the 1960s was supposed to launch self-sufficiency. But Nigeria built factories with no infrastructure, industries without competitiveness, and policies without patience. The result? A bloated, inefficient economy unable to stand without state crutches.
Then came the oil boom of the 1970s—and with it, the curse of complacency. Oil became lifeblood and blindfold. Agriculture died. Manufacturing shriveled. When oil prices fell in the 1980s, Nigeria panicked into the arms of the IMF and swallowed the bitter pill called Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP). The medicine turned out to be poison for the poor.
Like Venezuela, Nigeria grew fat on crude but forgot how to grow food. Like Congo, it let its wealth become a curse. Like Zimbabwe, it politicized policy until the market fled. Nigeria joined the club of countries that should have soared but sank instead.
The recent statement credited to the 2023 Presidential Candidate of Labour Party, Mr. Peter Obi that the labour of our heroes past is in vain should not be lost in the wasteland of criticisms, and thoughtless rantings.
In truth, Obi’s vision is not wrong; it is just incomplete. Crystals can show what’s possible, but only commitment can make it real. Nigeria will not be rebooted with speeches, but with sweat.
Lest we forget, Singapore, under Lee Kuan Yew, was a swamp of poverty and ethnic strife. But Lee governed not with sentiment but with steel. He did not merely suggest change; he imposed it. Meritocracy replaced mediocrity. Corruption was not reformed—it was eradicated.
Rwanda, too, rose from the ashes. Paul Kagame, for all his critics, understood that trauma needed order, and order required clarity. He trimmed bureaucracy, invested in human capital, and imposed zero tolerance on tribal games. Kigali became clean not by miracle, but by will.
South Korea transformed from war-torn ruin to technology titan by investing in education, discipline, and export-driven strategy. The state did not float on oil; it climbed with sweat.
These countries did not escape history—they rewrote it.
So why can’t Nigeria?
Because vision, on its own, is not enough. It must be coupled with execution—with grit, not grace. A crystal can show what is possible. But only calloused hands can build it. Obi is noble, yes. But Nigeria does not reward virtue. It consumes it.
But all is not lost. Even wounded nations can rise.
To become great, Nigeria must diversify its economy—not just in speech, but in soil. Agriculture, not oil, must feed our future. Manufacturing must replace import obsession. Let small businesses breathe through credit and fair taxes.
Next, Nigeria must fix its power sector. No economy thrives in darkness. Privatization must go beyond ownership to performance. Off-grid solutions must light up villages where the national grid dares not go.
Education, too, must be rescued. Not with certificates, but with skills. A country with millions of idle graduates is a time bomb. Vocational training, digital literacy, and STEM must become the new ABCs.
More importantly, our land must be safe, secure and free from the invasion by terrorists, Jihadists and hunters masquerading as herdsmen in grabbing land, kidnapping for ransom and spilling innocent blood.
Yet, reform means nothing without rebuilding governance. Corruption in Nigeria is not merely a vice; it is a system. The bureaucracy must go digital. The fight against corruption must leave the tabloids and enter the budgets. Institutions must be stronger than individuals.
Constitutional reform is also overdue. The 1999 Constitution was a military memo, not a people’s charter. True federalism—where states control their resources and shape their destiny—is the only path to sustainable development.
Lastly, we must rediscover national purpose. Nigeria’s greatest deficit is not in dollars, but in direction. We must teach civic values, demand accountability, instill moral ethos, and revive the idea of Nigeria—not as a flag or anthem, but as a common dream worth fighting for.
The time for lamentation is past. What Nigeria needs now is imagination, execution, and courage. The founding fathers lit the match. It is for this generation to keep the flame.