OUR
politicians never cease to amaze. Their trip to a Washington policy
forum on Nigeria’s plans and preparations for the 2015 elections leaves
many wondering what America has to do with how Nigerians are governed.
The affinity for rushing abroad to ventilate feelings about Nigeria
must have more motives than the patriotism that people tend to wrap
round it. Why do the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP
, and the All
Progressives Congress, APC, believe Americans are the best audience
about their concerns over the 2015 elections? Will Americans vote in the
elections? Will they be the ones to live under the cruel conditions
politicians have subjected Nigerians to since 1999 when they began the
new round of unfulfilled promising to improve the country? Have we not
seen the country degenerate to increasing poverty and collapse of
infrastructure that should support employment generation?
What were they doing in Washington engaging in schoolchildren debate,
waiting to win the approval of their hosts and possibly secure more
invitations to more debates in America? Has Nigeria finally proven
unsuitable for discourse on Nigeria? What was the Washington outing
meant to achieve when the parties are not engaging the electorate? Who
paid for the waste?
The Washington-based Centre for Strategic and International Studies,
CSIS, is an intelligence centre fishing for information for the good of
Americans. It has no interest in Nigeria, like most international
organisations, beyond a semblance of stability that continues to
guarantee the interests of America and her allies.
Another concern of Americans is that further degeneration of Nigeria
could lead to mass migration abroad with the US as a target. If
Nigerians understand these, they would stop jumping at opportunities to
rehash the country’s challenges abroad to titillate audiences that are
part of those sowing the divisiveness that denies our country greatness.
The United States, contrary to popular expectations, would not want
Nigeria to attain greatness for it would minimise some of America’s
influences round the world.
Fora like the CSIS’ are meant to check how the divisive agenda on
Nigeria is working. CSIS and their principals would be glad to see
Nigerians tearing themselves apart. If they were that vicious against
each other abroad, the bigger fight would be back home.
Nigeria’s ambassador to the United States, Professor Ade Adefuye,
warned the contending sides about washing the country’s linen in public
and raised questions about the propriety of Nigerians coming to the
United States to discuss their problems.
The bigger question is what the ambassador was doing at the forum. He
should have declined the invitation with the same points he raised. His
eminent presence conferred official approval on the disgrace in
Washington.
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