Fellow Liberians: As I speak to you today, I am most
gratified by the calibre of the delegations of our own African
Governments, Foreign Governments, partners and local partners as well,
who have come to join us to celebrate this triumph of democracy in our
country.
I am particularly touched by those you see – our dear brothers, the
delegation from the United States, headed by the wife of President
George Bush and my friend, our mediator, who has been with us so long
and brought us to this day. We pay homage to all of you. We respect you.
We welcome you. Bien vene a tous. My dear Brothers and Sisters of
West Africa: You have died for us; you have given refuge to thousands of
our citizens; you have denied yourselves by utilising your scarce
resources to assist us; you have agonised for us, and you have prayed
for us. We thank you, and may God bless you for your support to Liberia
as well as for your continuing commitment to promote peace, security,
stability, and bilateral cooperation within our sub-region – and
beyond.”
-President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf (excerpts from her inauguration speech)
Shortly after inauguration, Sirleaf was on a Thank you visit to the
United States and addressed a joint session of Congress thus: Continue...
“But our ties greatly exceed the historical connection. I stand
before you today, as the first woman elected to lead an African nation,
thanks to the grace of Almighty God; thanks to the courage of the
Liberian people, who chose their future over fear; thanks to the people
of West Africa and of Africa generally, who continued to give hope to my
people. Thanks also to President Bush whose strong resolve and public
condemnation and appropriate action forced a tyrant into exile and
thanks to you – the members of this august body – who spurred the
international effort that brought blessed peace to our nation.”
Which brings me to my point. This was the Liberian President in 2006
giving credit on two different occasions to George Bush in particular
and the US in general for services rendered to her country mainly by
Nigeria. For who does not know that ECOMOG is a synonym for Nigeria’s
petro-billions and Nigerian limbs? Yet, in both speeches, one could
barely make out the silhouette of Nigeria, lost in broad remarks about
West Africa and Africa.
Before Liberia, you could possibly count 50 something other
ungrateful lepers across the continent who, at various points in
Africa’s postcolonial trajectory, have been beneficiaries of the
bottomless pit of petrobillions of Abuja, only to run to Washington,
London, Paris, or Lisbon to give thanks upon being healed. At least, one
of the 10 lepers returned in the Bible to give thanks to his healer. In
Africa, Jesus heals them and they run to render thanks unto Caesar.
I am therefore “maniacally bewildered” (apologies to Patrick
Obahiagbon) that, upon the latest insult by South Africa, Nigerians are
behaving like they’ve only just discovered this fact today. From
Abakaliki to Zungeru, the din of our outrage is threatening to invade my
second ear. South Africa, folks claim correctly, seems to have
forgotten the source of the petrobillions that funded the liberation
struggle in the 70s and the 80s and has given the funeral oration stage
to those who put Madiba and the African National Congress on terror
watch lists while money that should have been invested in our roads and
other infrastructure went to buy ammunition for Umkhonto we Sizwe and to
provide Federal Government scholarships for thousands of black South
Africans to study free in Nigerian universities. All of this is true.
But why are we behaving like it has only just started to happen?
Nigerians have this irritating habit of going to bed every night with
indignity for decades only to wake up one day in the middle of the
afternoon and scream: “Mr. Indignity, what the heck are you doing in my
bed? How did you get here?”
It means that those who are screaming today about the insult from the
South Africans aren’t even aware of the previous insult from the
Liberians. In short, they do not know when, where, and how the rain
began to beat us. All these cries of insult remind me of Tortoise who
fell into a pit latrine and was there for seven years. Then one day, his
neighbours discovered where he was whereupon Tortoise began to scream,
asking them to get him out quickly lest the stench killed him. Folks, we
have been in this stench of Africa’s ingratitude for our incurable
habit of “Santa Clausing” our petrobillions for a very long time.
The point is not to scream outrage today. Your responsibility is to
think very critically about why and how we got here. Are there any
connections between this state of affairs and the quality of Nigeria’s
leadership, especially since 1999? If we had leaders who could think and
deploy critical intelligence, would this be happening to us? What is
your own role in canonising mediocre and intellectually inferior
semi-gods in our political process? Are you contributing directly or
indirectly to this state of affairs when you display a programmatic
hostility to any criticism – no matter how justifiable – of the quality
of service and leadership of your canonised political gods?
Perhaps, in 2015, you should vote in folks with enough brain power to
understand that you cannot buy love and respect with petrobillions.
Perhaps, you should vote for those who understand that if your citizens
are healthy and well-fed and gainfully employed, if your infrastructure
is world class, if your universities in 2013 don’t look like the
University of Timbuktu in the 12th century, respect and global esteem
shall be added unto you. There are connections between things. Let us
think urgently about all these connections and make something
constructive of today’s insult. I salute you.
-This article was written by Prof Adesanmi for SaharaReporters.
Source: Punch Nigeria
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