Stop Milking Nigeria Like A Cow, It’ll Soon Dry Up, Obi Of Onitsha Tells Politicians

Obi of Onitsha, His Royal Majesty, Igwe Nnaemeka Achebe, on Monday warned that with the increasing level of corruption in the country which is akin to milking a cow, the cow would soon die if incorruptible milking was not stopped.

Igwe Achebe, who spoke in Abuja at the public presentation of a book, ’Bold Leap,’ authored by Senator Chris Anyanwu, also charged the political class and those in leadership positions to put public interest above personal and individualistic interest if Nigeria as a country must grow beyond its current position.

He lamented the insincerity the political class has exhibited towards accountability and good governance, likening it to the ignoble attitude to milking the cow continuously without replenishing and sustaining it.

At the presentation of Bold Leap which is an autobiography of Senator Anyanwu with 600 pages, three parts, and 19 chapters were President Bola Ahmed Tinubu (represented by the Minister of Special Duties and Inter-Governmental Affairs, Zaphaniah Jisalo), the Chairman of the event and former President Olusegun Obasanjo (represented by former President of the Senate, Senator David Mark); former President Goodluck Jonathan (represented by ex-President of the Senate, Senator Anyim Pius Anyim), the Emir of Kano, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, Jaja of Okpobo, former Senators, former Anambra State Governors, Chris Ngige and Peter Obi; Pan Niger Delta Forum (PANDEF) Spokesperson (Dr. Obiuwevbi Ominimini), Senators, Captains of Industry, among others.

The respected Obi of Onitsha said: “Should we continue milking the cow, it will die. In this country, since independence, we’ve been talking and talking and talking and talking and talking. I think it’s time we begin to think about doing something because we have two alternatives. Keep milking the cow until it dies, because of our sectional interests, which we tend to protect, and our personal interests. People go into public service, not to serve the public, but to serve their interests.

“Either we keep doing that and milk the cow to death, or we do the opposite and place Nigeria above everything else.

“And I would like to add that time is not too much in our favour. It’s either we milk the cow to death very, very fast, or we can turn around the country very, very fast.”

Speaking on “How Do We Fix Nigeria-System, Structure, Institutions and Leadership?: A Panel Discussion,” former Ekiti State governor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, who was one of the four panellists, tongue lashed the political class, describing the current political and governance system as operational in Nigeria as “electorialism” and not democracy.

Fayemi, who also served as Minister of Solid Minerals during the administration of President Muhamnadu Buhari, said: “On the systemic issues we have to confront, beyond going into the nature of the system we are operating, liberal democracy, parliamentary or presidential system, who cuts the substance of the question you ask? For me, the excuses are always going to be legit, why we are not operating right as a country. Is it the system, the institutions, or the leadership, or in fact, some would even say colonialism, because we must provide our own foundation. That’s why we have found ourselves in that situation.

“We have been fighting to forge what in political science we call elite consensus, but we need to go beyond elite consensus to national consensus and how do we get to national consensus without asking the national question, which is, who are we? What do we want for ourselves? Where do we want the country to be in 10 years, or 20 years, or 50 years? Every country that wants to really develop starts with a national vision and mission.”

Human rights activist, Annkio Briggs, who advocated the restructuring of the political system, said: “We need to restructure our political system. We need to restructure the people we put in politics to represent us. And we have a problem with that. The problem originates from the Independent National Election Commission, INEC. INEC has let Nigerians down.

“I’m one of those Nigerians that INEC has let down. When you have a voters card and you cannot vote, it means that you’re not choosing the people who are representing you. Therefore, they owe you nothing. We are at the very worst stage that we can be as a nation. Patriotism is not the national anthem. A lot of people can’t even sing all the verses of either of the national anthems.

“So, patriotism is about what you do for your country, but specifically what it is that your country is also doing for you because you are. We’re all Nigerians. We’re not Ghanaians. We’re not British. We’re Nigerians. So, a country is to give and the citizens are also to give.”

She also described as a great error that activists and those who fought for democracy left the politicians to run the show.

“So if we are to succeed, then we must, as a people, as the electorate, make the decision as to who are these people that we are going to put in the position of power that we are investing in them to hold for us in trust, to make the right decisions and make the right policies for Nigerians. I have just one example which will tell us where we need to go.”

On his part Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe, who stressed the need to have the right people in the right place, decried the weak institutions, citing a case where a public officer who was prosecuted for embezzlement only received a slap in the wrest.

He said: “Last week, the former head of the police pension fund embezzled, according to the court, N23.2 billion. He was tried by the court and the court fined him N323 million and then imposed a two-year sentence on him for which he also gave, at the same time that they imposed that two-year sentence, a fine of N250,000, so that he can go free. So, someone embezzles N23 billion, then he wakes up and pays back N315 million and he works free to now take N22 billion and walk away.

“Now, we are talking about an illegal institution versus the person who was imposing that sentence. So, as far as I’m concerned, if we don’t have the right people, we will never get an institution right. And that is the only way we can go forward.”

On his part, Dr. Aminu Gamana, who noted that the country needed value reorientation, said: “We need societal reorientation in order to get things right. Otherwise, you will conduct elections every four years, people will come out and collect indomie or spaghetti and vote for someone who does not care about them.”

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