I attended a dinner party last week, and when I introduced myself to one of the guests, he called me troublemaker, then offered me a job in a federal establishment.
I declined, and then he threw the following gem at me: “Guys like you are comfortable with staying on the sidelines to criticise. Knowing what you know, why don’t come and help? Come join us and change things from within.”
To be honest, I’ve had this argument with myself before, and very early on in this particular government, I came close to joining government but ended up not getting it because I gave a condition that they were unwilling to meet.
Time has made me say, “Thank God” for that because, given the job description back then, the possibility is high that my small reputation would have been in tatters by now.
But having said that, this paradox is something that needs close examination, and I talk about it, as well as my reasons for declining this latest offer in today's @BusinessDayNgbit.ly/399kEcj
I gave three reasons: first, the “soldier come, soldier go, barracks remain” mentality that is rampant in the civil service is such that almost anyone with a genuine intent to change things is sure to be fighting a losing battle.
Our civil service in Nigeria, federal and state, have been fucked since Murtala Mohammed sent more than 10,000 public officials on their way back in 1975. bit.ly/3nRaq4u
Yes, in my entire lifetime, #Nigeria has not had a functional civil service.
The second reason I gave was of money.
The money government has to pay people like me has effectively created a parallel civil service funded by grants. This has in turn made career civil servants unhappy, which has in turn fuelled the corruption that eats the institution up.
At some point, we will have to have that conversation about letting go of most of the existing civil service so that those that remain can be paid properly.
For the record, I’m a believer in the Oronsaye Report.
The third reason I gave was simple, and this one I’ll expand on here (for the other two, read the BD piece).
There is a thing about this government. We have all seen how better brains than mine have flopped after being added to the current federal government.
Buhari appointed an economic advisory team last year,. Brilliant guys like Rewane, Salami and Soludo.
At the time, I put out a tweet expressing doubt that they’d succeed and was pilloried for that tweet by the usual party online supporters.
It's been a full year after the hype that ushered them in. The borders are still closed, and Buhari has delivered yet another recession, this time under their watch, thus soiling their reputations.
Simply put, in a very hierarchical society like #Nigeria as currently structured, everyone takes their cue from the leader.
To state unequivocally, the people in, and the advisory team have been practically rendered useless especially with the policy and cognitive dissonance that have come to characterise the Buhari regime, simply because Buhari himself does not believe the “rubbish” they are saying.
The govt's resistance to criticism has made it insular to advise.
The criticism of @cenbank’s policy by the @officialNESG and the vitriolic rebuttal by the former is a sorry incident that leaves a sour taste in one’s mouth.
You can’t wake up someone pretending to be asleep.
No sane person would expect me to take up a position in this government, especially seeing how critics who attempted to venture into the same government in a bid to help, were hounded out.
We all watched how APC hate groups waxed hysterical about both appointments leading to their sack.
For these persons, there is no middle ground.
Everything is viewed with partisan lenses which makes it needlessly difficult for a genuine person trying to make a difference.
In a parallel universe, the best brains are incorporated into public administration. We had that parallel universe before July 1975 when Murtala destroyed an already decaying civil service that had continued the colonial practise of hiring the best minds out of our universities.
From my point of view, the decrepit nature of #Nigeria’s decrepit public service system is not where a person looking to make a change and influence policy from within should be aspiring to.
With partisan hacks acting as wolves guarding the door to a not so beautiful promised land (symbolised by the national cake syndrome), it reads a clear danger sign of “keep out”.
When one duly considers the evolution of @FemAdesina from hero to zero, it is hardly any incentive to commit one’s reputation to take a solid beating, and especially not after reading what @abati1990 had to say concerning the superhuman forces at Aso Rock.
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#Nigeria’s problems are deeply structural, and not many things show this up as the official reaction to the #EndSARS protests and the #LekkiMassacre.
What both show is that Nigeria as currently structured exists only to protect those in power.
Consider this — during the height of the protests, @HQNigerianArmy's leadership pledged loyalty, not to #Nigeria or to its Constitution, but to the person of the President.
This shows that our security forces need a complete reorientation.
The manual under which our armed services are trained and operate has to be thrown away and a new one rewritten.
But that in itself brings up more questions, one of which is who, or what, do they pledge their loyalty to?
In September @officialNESG and @cenbank had a public spat over #BOFIA, yet, the law was still signed telling me that feedback mechanisms have been starved to death by this govt.
The key phrase for me in the entire story is the point where someone told @GuardianNigeria that the banks would murmur in silence as nobody wants to be seen as confronting @cenbank.
For me, that is the crux of the matter.
The lily-livered behaviour of our bankers will hurt all of us.
Your bank declared a profit before tax of ₦74 billion, but can't resist an illegal government directive to block the accounts of a few activists?
Are you compromised or what because I don't understand.
It's amusing to see a lot of pro-government misters trying to spread the disinformation that the #EndSARS protests of October 2020 were "hijacked" and turned into some sort of orgy of violence.
The facts, as recorded in this world of digital media where it is now difficult to hide, is that @NigeriaGov, unable to find "leaders" to either bribe, intimidate or otherwise coerce, cynically turned to thugs to disrupt (not hijack) the protests.
The govt's strategy succeeded to some extent, but the jury is still out, and it is increasingly looking like a case where they won a battle in order to lose a war.
I was in #America for almost the whole of last month, and one of the places I visited was El Paso in Texas. El Paso is just a wall away from Juarez in Chihuahua, #Mexico.
Both were once the same town until the Texas Revolution in 1835. Then, they went their separate ways.
The contrast between both cities today is the result of the different economic systems they run, something I talk about in @FinancialNG
Talking about this is very depressing for me because it portends a very bad future for #Nigeria. You see, like Nigeria, #Mexico is a rentier economy that runs based on the whims of a powerful elite and their criminal associates.
The irresponsibility of business leaders in #Nigeria has enabled bad behaviour.
In October 2017 for the 50th anniversary of the #AsabaMassacre, an event in which my grandfather was killed by @HQNigerianArmy, I was invited to talk about the event on @NigeriainfoFM.
The host of the show, @nellylaoni, felt, quite rightly, that it was important to shine a light on this important part of our history.
Knowing how sensitive the topic was, I kept to the facts. You can watch the show here and judge for yourself:
But that was not good enough, and in addition to chasing me out of the studio, @nbcgovng fined the station ₦500,000 ($1404 in 2017 naira).
Now, this is where the irresponsibility of the leadership of @NigeriainfoFM came in...