Dead applicants, Moro and the Nigerian

When members of the Nigerian Collective, issued an open letter at the beginning of this week, I didn’t hesitate to add my name to the long list of signatories. The petition demanded the sack of Nigerian Interior Minister, Abba Moro, for his insensitive comments, in the wake of the killing of young Nigerian applicants at the weekend. I was returning home from a trip abroad last Saturday, when I ran into a scrum and what I thought was the Nigerian traffic jam; but it was rather different and more anarchic.

Sixty-eight thousand applicants had besieged the 60,000 seat National Stadium, Abuja, for placement in the Nigerian Immigration Service. That was in fact a tip of the iceberg because it turned out that 7 million young Nigerians had actually applied for the 4,000 vacancies to be filled. The immoral content of the whole process was located in the fact that those who organised it, collected N1,000 application fee each from these desperate citizens, thus raking in N7 billion, most of which would be stolen anyway.

In a typical expression of official incompetence, just one gate was left opened for this huge multitude.  At the end of the scandalous process, 8 of the 68,000 in Abuja died; 3 of the 11, 000 in Niger state were killed; 5 of the 35,000 that turned out in Port Harcourt lost their lives; of the 15,000 that showed up in Kano, 7 were injured; 4 people slumped in Osun state; 10 of the 30,000 fainted in Plateau; 3 of the hopeful 28, 000 in Edo state lost their lives; while 1 of the 22, 500 in Oyo state and 4 in Ogun state slumped on that horrible Saturday. In response to the monumental tragedy, the Minister of Interior, the clown who calls himself “Comrade”, but lives a life of perpetual servitude to Senate President, David Mark, chose to disrespect the dead and injured and insulted grieving Nigerians:

“The applicants”, Moro stated, “lost their lives due to impatience; they did not follow the laid down procedures spelt out to them before the exercise”. The insensitive minister was not done: “Many of them jumped through fences of affected centres and did not conduct themselves in an orderly manner to make the exercise a smooth one. This caused stampede and made the environment insecure”.

The chap who got a ministerial appointment simply as a David Mark hireling, could not find the comportment, composure and culture to show remorse for the loss of lives amongst desperate, young people, many of whom were home, years after graduation and national service.

It was clear that Moro was far more interested in protecting his job and the so-called “laid down process”, which had been farmed out to a Drexel Nigeria Ltd., allegedly owned by Moro’s godfather’s family! It was far more important to protect the lucrative ministerial appointment that transformed the so-called “Comrade”, from a near life longlumpen sojourn on the margins of social existence, to a nouveaux riche, from his ministerial sinecure. Individuals like Moro are too desperately wedded to the lucre of their offices, to understand that a human tragedy of the magnitude he presided over last weekend needed the greatest amount of compassion. No!

Daily Trust of Monday, March 17, 2014, reported that the 7million applicants had actually been allocated only 240 of the 4,556 jobs that were advertised. Reason was that most of the jobs had been distributed amongst well-connected politicians such as governors and lawmakers. So the poor Nigerians who lost their lives or were injured or turned out, for the so-called recruitment process; Moro’s irresponsible “laid down process”, had been part of an elaborate charade, a falsity and were duped! The minister was therefore rubbing salt on injury by his heartless and irresponsible statement. It was the anger and indignation which Nigerians felt at his statement that led to the national outcry for the removal of the minister.

For too long in Nigeria, those occupying positions have become unable to take responsibility for failures under them. They arealways desperate to keep obviously lucrative positions, which more often, than not, transform near-paupers into stinking rich overnight. The transformation becomes almost total, in a very short period, and therefore they would do everything to remain in those positions.

The obverse of that position and one that reinforces it is that those occupying those positions, never see themselves as serving the Nigerian people. The people do not matter or are expendable! We have seen several examples all through the Nigerian public space. It was such arrogance that made Moro spew out some of the most unfortunate statements anyone could, faced with such a monumental tragedy. This is why the chap must be sacked! If Goodluck Jonathan refuses to bow to the national outcry seeking Moro’s sack, he would have done tremendous damage to his own presidency. So we are on the watch, awaiting Jonathan’s decision on that tragic event.

There is a far more fundamental matter arising from the tragedy last weekend. About 7 million young Nigerians had applied for 4, 500 jobs. Now that expresses the seriousness of the unemployment situation in our country. The Nigerian economy has been touted as growing very rapidly and as part of the worldwide delusions being bandied by the high priests of neoliberal capitalism, Nigeria is now being described as part of a new MINT (Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria and Turkey) countries, that will allegedly become the next economic giants. Those who live their economic lives by the propaganda of imperialist institutions and countries are naturally delighted. But in truth, these are elaborate delusions.

The Nigerian economy is not creating the jobs that millions of young people need in the 21Century. Ours is a young country, with 75% of the population under the age of 35. It is this broad category of citizens that mainly trooped out for those Immigration jobs last weekend. Nigeria is sitting on a powder keg of unemployed, desperate young citizens. The useless propaganda of MINT has not and cannot work for them. It might allow AlikoDangote to make $10 billion in just one year, as the 2013 Forbes magazine reported, but it is not working for Nigeria’s poor and the young.

This is what should scare the ruling elite stiff! Boko Haram insurgency; kidnappings; low level warfare in many parts of the country; internet scams; ritual killings; prostitution abroad; desperately seeking greener pastures abroad and the anger all over the place, are symptoms of the injustice, inequality and hopelessness accompanying the choices the ruling class made for Nigeria. These choices are killing our country!