In his independence day speech, @MBuhari failed to mention anything about the doctors' strike that has paralysed the health sector, kidnappings, which have become a frighteningly regular occurrence in the country, or the unemployment crisis.
These three in many ways have contributed to the "japa wave" that we are currently witnessing, something which he only mentioned in passing to refer to "so-called leaders run abroad to hide".
These three things I mentioned, health, security, and jobs, more than a lot of other things, symbolise hope lost by young Nigerians.
And it is the potentially productive middle-class, that is running.
The elite, as always, have one leg in, and one leg out, because #Nigeria is their farm, and as in the days of old, you work on the farm and take the fruits elsewhere to enjoy.
Pretty much every Nigerian that can afford it now has a second passport.
Hypocrite that @MBuhari is, it has not occurred to him that he is just the same.
All his kids are schooled abroad, his wife lives in Dubai, and whenever he has a headache, he goes to London.
He will probably move there after his eight ruinous years are done in 2023.
There are many other examples of people from the area that became #Nigeria, or from Nigeria itself since 1914, that achieved their potential in other climes, and therein lies the rub, something that @MBuhari has made a lot worse in his six years of maladministration…
Four years ago, my friend, @tundeleye wrote about why many Nigerians were getting out: bit.ly/2WvirUH
Basically, to put their kids in a position where they could achieve their potential in life, and this is what is fuelling a lot of the current migration.
Tragic.
Since independence, #Nigeria has witnessed four great periods of mass migration.
The first one started in 1966 and ended in 1973, brought about by the mayhem of 1966 and the subsequent war and was in the main by people from what we now call the South-East and South-South.
It reversed when #Nigeria saw an "oil boom" and there was "more money than we knew what to do with it".
Essentially, that first migration wave was brought about by hopelessness and ended by the return of hope. Most of those who took part in it returned.
Then the economy collapsed in 1980, and the next year, the second great wave began.
First, when we chased away the Ghanaians in a wave of xenophobia, and then by the time Buhari came to power, it had accelerated into the "Andrew-don-check-out" phenomenon.
This wave grew even bigger after Buhari was kicked out, and IBB started his ill-fated structural reforms. Unlike in the first wave, most who left in the second wave did not return.
Some of them have never even set foot in #Nigeria since they left.
This second wave saw, for the first time, other countries deliberately targeting Nigerian professionals.
I remember growing up on a university campus in the late 1980s, and pretty much every week, we knew of one doctor or the other who had moved to #SaudiArabia to work.
By the very early 1990s, this second wave had slowed to a trickle because most of those left behind could not afford the cost of migration.
Yes, migration is costly, legal or illegal, and for the most part, those who can afford it tend to be the cream of society.
The third wave started under Abacha and it was caused by suffering, pure and simple.
This meant that rather than being middle class-driven, it was driven by the lower classes, and as a result, saw the advent of a huge number of illegals.
Again, growing up in Benin City, I saw this happen. Many people saw the few young girls and boys who had gone to "#Belgium" return with wads of forex and build houses. Even as it became clear what they had to do in those foreign lands to make money, many just didn't care.
For them, a "little bit" of prostitution or gang activity was a small price to pay to avoid death by poverty, and many paid it.
The third wave is sometimes indistinguishable from the first because the gap in between them was less than half a decade.
As of 2008, there was a phenomenon called "Africa Rising".
The sub-prime crisis in the West, and the economic growth we saw in places like #Nigeria, engendered a sense of hope such that for the first time there was a flood of people returning.
Many of the kids of those who had left in the second wave, and many like myself, people who had grown up in #Nigeria, went abroad to study and stayed to work.
There was real hope in #Nigeria's future, and then we did something foolish, and 2015 happened, followed by the fourth wave, which, as I said earlier, is arguably the most dangerous for Nigeria.
You see, our British overlords left us a functional, if not broad-based educational system in 1960. This system was, for its purposes, capable of producing an adequate number of people to fill in the gaps left by the first wave of post-independence mass migration.
#Nigeria's educational standards began to deteriorate. By the time the economy collapsed, education was one of the things that started to suffer from funding gaps. Even after the second wave, the education sector could still fill the gaps created by people leaving.
Now it can't.
#Nigeria has a jobs creation problem, true. But often not talked about is Nigeria's lack of skills problem. Our education is simply not fit for purpose, and if the current trend continues, we will simply have no doctors (for example) to fill the gap created by those leaving.
The excellent trainers who trained the current crop are all either old and retired, or ageing and retiring, or tired and are leaving like their students.
At some point, we simply won't have lecturers to train enough new doctors, and the Saudis will stop organising medical fairs to recruit Nigerian doctors.
It's called terminal decline, and it's affecting all sectors in the country, not only the health sector.
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In all the hullabaloo about the Twitter ban, Pantami, and Biafra boys, an important matter got lost in the noise, and that was a kerfuffle over banks v the telcos, mainly personified by MTN.
Two weeks ago, I talked about it in my BusinessDay column, then forgot about it, so here is the link: businessday.ng/columnist/arti…
Basically, the controversy over the returns on the use of USSD was triggered by MTN reducing the banks' commission from 3.5% to 2.5%, and the banks threw their toys out of the pram and blocked MTN users' ability to recharge their phones via bank channels.
This quick thread is dedicated to @maazi_ogbonnaya who on occasion does good work, but who like any young person, needs the guidance of those who have gone before him.
His heart is in the right place, but your heart being in the right place is often not enough.
A few months ago, I asked about Okonkwo, and unfortunately, most Igbo people think he was a hero.
Newsflash, he was not. Okonkwo was that person who didn't have the ability to think. Even Prof Achebe once said that he'd prefer if we were like Obierika.
I've read a lot of the comments here. Let me give my two kobo, and most of it is reflective…
The reality is that Buhari dares not speak to the South West, the North or the South in the condescending tone he addresses the SE and #Nigeria's youth.
The man shows more deference to even #BokoHaram, bandits and other terrorists than he does to these two demographics.
It shows that the South-East political class have a lot to reflect on.
Why the disrespect from all sides?
The answer is simple: our political class are orphans and people like Buhari know it.
The SE political elite does not have the support of South-Easterners, and why is that?
Over the weekend, Ladipo Market in Lagos caught fire. The majority of the affected people were Igbo.
The Sharia discussion is necessary because it shows how low the level of trust is in #Nigeria.
It also shows the hypocrisy of many of its proponents. How many of them will gladly, today, pack their bags and move to Zamfara, the state that started political Sharia in Nigeria?
But this Sharia debate, as important as it is, overshadows an even more important issue.
It is, perhaps, a coincidence that Zamfara that did something this past week that bears a long discussion when @GovMatawalle revoked all land titles in the state. bit.ly/3bVPRAj
This is a most important story because property rights in #Nigeria are insecure, one of the banes of our economic development.
I stand to be corrected, but the issue of the Land Use Act was not brought up in any of the constitutional hearings this week.