See the rest of what he wrote after the cut...
This tragedy mirrors the desperate situation of Nigeria.
One only hopes that this unfortunate loss of lives, coupled with the
incessant Boko Haram killings and other youth-based violence, would
serve as a wake-up call to the summiteers, that this country needs a new
governance paradigm. If the conference cannot produce that, then the
over N7 billion invested in it would amount to another colossal waste of
our scarce national resources.
It is an irony that each
delegate would earn a whopping N12 million for the 3-month duration of
the conference. By conservative estimates, N12 million is enough to
provide self-employment for 12 resourceful graduates, and N7 billion
could do likewise for thousands, some of whom perished under chaotic
conditions in stadia around the country, while waiting for a poorly
organised aptitude test by the NIS. The young graduate job-seekers who
turned out for the tests filled up many stadia around the country, as if
they came to watch high-profile football matches.
These
hapless chaps paid N1,000.00 (One Thousand Naira) processing fee each.
So, the Nigerian Immigration Service must have made quite some money,
considering that in Lagos and Abuja alone, over 125,000 applicants
turned up. We may be looking at millions of Naira that this monetised
recruitment exercise generated for the NIS. There was record turnout in
each of the 34 states for just 45,000 slots that the NIS advertised. The
alarming job application horror is a clear evidence of the inability of
our public institutions to manage events, resulting in poor crowd
control and avoidable deaths through stampede. This is not an isolated
case, it is a regular occurrence.
When things go wrong, our
leaders seldom take responsibility. The NIS has tried to duck charges of
culpability, by claiming that it outsourced the recruitment exercise to
a private firm which actually collected the N1,000.00 levy. As usual, a
panel would be setup to investigate this incident, followed by a white
paper, and then, the report may end up gathering dust in a cabinet
somewhere in Abuja, while government officials focus on the more
important 2015 general elections in a country where competition for
political power is about resource control, not the promotion of the
general good of the people.
The fact that four expectant
mothers died in this incident, with about 700 others reportedly injured,
is enough reason why those who organised this event should not escape
appropriate sanctions. Unfortunately, the Jonathan Administration is not
known to punish errant public officials, although the NIS boss and the
Internal Affairs Minister have been queried. In other countries where
human life is valued, the President should compensate the victims and,
more importantly, prevent a future re-occurrence. But the Federal
Government has other priorities.
For me, and also for the
FRESH Democratic Party, which I lead, nothing else matters in our quest
for a functional, self-accounting and representative democracy, than a
fundamental change of the prevailing order which is responsible for our
national predicament. It should be reasonably assumed that delegates to
the conference would know this, but I have my fears.
Many
commentators have observed that the composition of the delegates to this
National Conference is skewed in favour of the old politicians, and
some of those who ran this country aground. How can we expect any
meaningful change from this set of people? 20th century ideas cannot
solve 21st century problems. If you look critically, the composition of
the participants in this conference reflects the geriatric propensity of
our polity.
All the progressive nations of the world,
especially those who have graduated from under-development to emerging
markets, are being governed today by new sets of leaders, whose
orientation reflects the new world order, and are thus able to
successfully confront the challenges they encounter in their respective
nations.
As this NIS recruitment tragedy shows, our meal
ticket educational system is not designed to drive industrial
development or produce resourceful, self-employed folks who can create
opportunities, rather depend on employment. The belated introduction of
entrepreneur studies in the newly remoulded college curricula is like
putting the cart before the horse. While vocational studies have been
introduced, there are no teachers to instruct carpenters, electricians
etc.
I have long been advocating a shift in the paradigm of
our educational sector, which should be anchored on Human Capital
Development. Science subjects are foundation of technology. If I were
the President, this would be the mantra that would drive my reform
agenda because without a solid, qualitative, continuous stream of local
production of graduates in the technical, or science-related courses,
our dream of industrial revolution as recently articulated in a widely publicized launch by Mr. President, would be a mirage.
The secret of Asia industrial miracle is that, leaders of that continent
sent their students to Europe and America. The returning Asian
students, who went to learn the technological wizardry of the West, laid
the foundation of the technological revolution that produced the
Tigers, who now threaten the scientific dominance of Europe and America.
This is a model we could learn from.
Rev. Chris Okotie, a Pastor-politician wrote from Lagos
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