NIGERIA’S UNFORTUNATE INDICES….STILL A BROKE COUNTRY! FEMI OJO
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President Buhari. Picture courtesy of Getty Images |
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Picture courtesy of Google |
Nigeria is such a country of
paradox, we are richly endowed yet nearly half of our population swim in
paucity. Our case is such a collectives
of distinctive miseries. An oceanic country of avoidable privation and at the
same time a land full of great assets in both human capital and conservational
supplies. Our case is like an overfloggged matter by clique of levelheaded
solons but whose condition remains unyielding to tenacities.
For a long period, I almost concluded that
Nigeria’s many maladies have been overfloggged but recently, I had a paradigm
shift from this over flog theorem and peep the country’s façade in another
perspective and rescinded that there is no way we can over flog some of the
strategic issues that have defied solution especially on some of the
unfortunate indices that have plunged nearly half of Nigerians into the ocean
of poverty. And I have come to the
conclusion that the more we talk about these house of rubles the better for
our nation and posterity.
Among some of the indices that
still make Nigeria a ring leader in the comity of a destitute nation is the
current rating by Brookings Institution, Washington D.C, United States of
America on countries with extreme poverty. It is appalling that a nation so
blessed like ours could as a matter of reality be found among chronic laden and
unfortunate nations with about 87 million Nigerians swimming deep in the ocean
of poverty. Worst still is that in every minute daily, poverty grows in Nigeria
with 6 people admitted into this unfortunate social class. What this means is
that about 360 people become poor per hour daily in Nigeria and 8640 enter into
paucity life within 24 hours every day. In every month of the year about
259,200 enter into poverty industry while 3.110, 400 penurious Nigerians reel
into extreme hardship. Statistically speaking, that’s about 50% of the
estimated 180 million Nigerians in deep shit of privation!
I heard some folks said that
statistics could not be right, may be Brookings Institution was economical with
the truth but should we concur with these folks that International Monetary
Funds also lied by validating the former’s concern about the growing millions
of Nigerians who daily dive into extreme poverty ocean going by IMF’s fact on
Nigeria in her “The World Poverty Clocks” document? Someone is definitely
lieing to us on this but clearly not the Brookings Institution nor the IMF?
The current rating of Nigeria
on Global Peace Index is something that should give any genuine citizen some
discomfort. Among 163 countries that were rated, our beloved country came 149th
position. For any thinker, the negative implication of this reality is so broad
not only on the economy, food security, foreign and direct investment
opportunities, infrastructural development, psychology and the emotion of the
citizen but the negative impact that this unleashes on the efforts of
government to eradicating poverty and ensuring that there is shared prosperity
for all is equally huge!
In Nigeria today, the
probability that a newly born baby will die before he/she reaches age 5 is very
high. Unfortunately, our country is still among the first 10 countries in
Africa where an estimated 69.8 infants per 1000 live births die in the first
year of life. This horrible statistics
still continues as a result of many factors such as illiteracy, lack of
equipable primary health care facility, poverty, lack of adequate pregnancy care just to mention but a
few. Again some folks also impulsively argue that Nigeria’s growing population
connotes that the issue of infant mortality rate is declining and that we are
actually better off than other countries. Well. I concur with a caveat! We all
know in Nigeria especially in remote places there are a number of unfortunate
infant child mortality that still go unrecorded and this happens almost on
daily basis and worst still; is that in this part of the world, it is arduous
to have right statistics even on the most plainest thing …our situation scoffs
logic in Naija!
For a country whose politicians
always at any given international forum hype her democratic dividends delivery
at home and often try to impress international community and global proximate
actors of her efforts at meeting Social Development Goals on or before year
2030. It is pertinent for Nigeria’s government to truly develop a coherent and
comprehensive reforms across many key sectors that will combat the pathetic
situation that currently threatens meeting such a tall dream and projection.
The Buhari administration must continue in his anti-corruption war and be
speedy in developing policy action that can lead the truckloads of almost half
of the population out of chronic poverty.
Gazing at the pictorial image of
Nigeria’s objectionable tragedy, no one illustrates it fittingly than my
friend, brother and a nascent scholar in his right, Oyekunle Oluseye Oyewo who
recently opined:
“Family life: Compromised
Education: Compromised
Religion: Compromised
Security: Compromised
Health Services: Compromised
Followership: Compromised
Every ingredient of a sick
society is complete in this country. May God bless and strengthen every
Nigerian that remain committed to the course of humanity” To which I say a big
Amen!
Femi
Ojo is a Political Scientist by academic training, a serial entrepreneur by
choice whose business interests are in: PR/Media Communications, Auto Sales
& Logistics and Agricultural Value Chain brokerage. He is one of Nigeria’s
nascent public intellectuals who writes for a number of media communications
platforms in Nigeria as well as writing thought provoking articles on politics
and entrepreneurship on his blog femispremise.blogspot The nascent public
intellectual currently lives happily with his family in Lagos, Nigeria.
This is real Nigeria situation. I hope we get out of these precarious situation with a sober reflection from our Leaders. Welldone for this piece!
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