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- <text id=93TT2181>
- <title>
- Sep. 06, 1993: Shamed By Their Nation
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Sep. 06, 1993 Boom Time In The Rockies
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NIGERIA, Page 36
- Shamed By Their Nation
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Nigerians are fed up with rulers who squandered their patrimony
- and killed a dream of greatness
- </p>
- <p>By JACK E. WHITE/LAGOS
- </p>
- <p> There once was a Nigerian dream almost like the American Dream,
- and Dapo and Bola Thomas shared it. They had a bounding faith
- in the future of Africa's most populous, proud and pugnacious
- country. They believed that by earning university degrees, finding
- good jobs and working hard, they would live better than their
- parents had, and their own children would do better still.
- </p>
- <p> That dream has vanished in a nightmare of relentless inflation
- and widespread shortages. Dapo, a 33-year-old journalist, lost
- his job several months ago and cannot find a new one. The fees
- at his four-year-old son's religious school have risen from
- $23 to $114. The rent on the family's modest flat in Lagos has
- doubled to $36.50 a month. A bag of cassava flour that sold
- for $13.60 when the couple married in 1988 now goes for $50
- or more. "Five years ago, I thought that by now we would have
- a fine home and two cars," says Dapo. "Now I wonder if I can
- ever have those things."
- </p>
- <p> The blighted hopes of the Thomas family reflect the failure
- of a nation whose oil wealth and industrious people once promised
- to make it black Africa's first world power. Decades of misrule
- by the military has wrecked the country, which is sliding into
- the worst crisis since the civil war of the 1960s claimed 1
- million lives. Much of the nation's wealth has been squandered
- through lavish government spending whose main effect is to create
- new opportunities for kickbacks. Food has grown so expensive
- that even a university lecturer who earns 10 times the average
- annual wage of $219 says his children have forgotten how meat
- tastes. Though Nigeria is the world's 10th largest oil exporter,
- motorists line up for six hours to buy gasoline--and then
- must bribe the attendant to fill the tank. Propane for cooking
- is so scarce and expensive that city dwellers are scrambling
- for firewood or electric teakettles to boil their drinking water,
- provided the water is actually running and the erratic Nigerian
- Electric Power Authority is having one of its rare good days.
- "If things keep on as they are," says Joseph Garba, a former
- Foreign Minister, "Nigeria will go back to the Stone Age."
- </p>
- <p> The plunge in living standards has finally driven many of Nigeria's
- 100 million people to turn against President Ibrahim Babangida,
- the army general who has ruled the country with an arbitrary
- hand since 1985. He has repeatedly promised to restore the democratic
- government Nigerians believe they deserve; just as often he
- has gone back on his word. Since he annulled the results of
- a presidential election in June won by one of his handpicked
- candidates, Moshood Abiola, on the ground of alleged electoral
- fraud, Babangida has convinced the public that he will never
- willingly step aside.
- </p>
- <p> So there was no rejoicing in Lagos last week when Babangida
- announced his retirement from the armed forces and installed
- a new "interim" government that is plainly intended to serve
- as his puppet. The transitional government promised to hold
- another presidential election by the end of next year, but Nigerians
- dismiss the new businessman-President Ernest Shonekan, one of
- Babangida's closest cronies, as a front behind whom Babangida
- will continue to exercise real control.
- </p>
- <p> Determined to prove the new government cannot rule, the Campaign
- for Democracy, a human-rights group leading the opposition,
- brought the boisterous city of Lagos (pop. 6 million) to a standstill
- for the second time in three weeks by calling a stay-at-home
- protest. The Nigerian Labor Congress announced a general strike
- by its 4 million members, including oilworkers, starting Saturday.
- Both groups say they will keep demonstrating until Abiola, who
- vowed to return to Lagos this week and begin consultations to
- form a new government, is sworn in as President.
- </p>
- <p> For many Nigerians what is really at stake is not whether Abiola
- takes office, but whether they will ever have a country they
- can be proud of. Democracy advocates detest Babangida and the
- other soldiers--who have ruled the country for 23 of its 33
- years of independence--for diminishing the Nigerian soul.
- Endemic corruption; the narrowing opportunities in the country
- that once held out so much promise; the exploitation of bitter
- rivalries among the three largest ethnic groups, the Yoruba,
- Ibo and Hausa-Fulani--all have sapped the nation's resources,
- its cohesion, its confidence. Instead of building a nation,
- the democrats charge, the soldiers have prevented it from being
- born. Says Didi Adodo, a labor leader: "The colonialists did
- not do as much damage to the Nigerian psyche as Babangida did."
- </p>
- <p> The damage is most evident among Nigeria's battered middle class,
- the true believers in the Nigerian Dream. To survive these days,
- they are more likely to make deals than make things. Young Amie,
- a 34-year-old Yoruba who graduated from the University of Lagos
- with a degree in chemistry, was fired from his job at a grain-milling
- factory after the government banned imported wheat. Unable to
- find another post related to his training, he began importing
- "fairly used cars," as Nigerians call preowned automobiles.
- "The country would be better off if I were to engage in the
- production of items people can use, like soap," he says. "But
- there is no encouragement in this country for entrepreneurs
- or people who have learning. Money, quick money, is the only
- thing that matters." For most people, there is only one way
- to make a fast buck: from government contracts awarded on the
- basis of favoritism and kickbacks. Says Femi Adefope, the American-educated
- owner of a travel agency in Lagos: "If you do business honestly,
- no one will do business with you."
- </p>
- <p> This is nothing new in Nigeria where "dash," or bribes, have
- been a regular source of income for government officials since
- long before independence. But the current level of corruption
- dwarfs anything in the colonial past. The result, says C.S.
- Whitaker, a Nigeria specialist at the University of Southern
- California, is a complete disconnection between honest effort
- and rewards. Nigerians see that a small number of well-connected,
- self-styled yuppies have enriched themselves enough from graft
- to own fleets of Mercedes color-coordinated with every suit
- in their wardrobe, while college graduates cannot find work.
- Many young Ibo men, traditionally among the best educated in
- the country, are abandoning college to pursue more lucrative
- professions like drug smuggling. "The result is a tremendous
- loss of talent that Nigeria cannot afford if it is to compete
- in the modern world," says Claude Ake, a political scientist
- at the University of Port Harcourt.
- </p>
- <p> Many Nigerians who once brandished their nationality as a badge
- of honor now feel only shame. Those who travel abroad are shocked
- to learn that foreign customs officers regard all Nigerian travelers
- as potential drug couriers. Some foreign countries, including
- the U.S., have been quietly warning businessmen to beware of
- scams in which executives are lured to Nigeria by the promise
- of rich contracts, only to be kidnapped and held for ransom.
- </p>
- <p> FOR SOME, THE SHAME OF BEING NIGErian has cut so deep that they
- are willing to contemplate what almost everyone in this fiercely
- proud country would have previously dismissed as unthinkable:
- inviting outside interference. The Campaign for Democracy has
- called for an international boycott of Nigerian oil until a
- democratic government takes office, even though that would push
- the economy into an even deeper slough. "We were advocates of
- total economic sanctions in South Africa, and we believe the
- sanctions were the main reason why apartheid is giving way to
- democracy there," says Chima Ubani, the Campaign for Democracy's
- general secretary. "It should be no different for Nigeria. It
- will place hardship on the people, but there is no freedom without
- sacrifice."
- </p>
- <p> The brave words mask major weaknesses in the pro-democracy movement.
- International oil customers, hesitant to offend an influential
- supplier or harm their own recession-plagued economies, are
- not likely to embargo Nigerian crude. More fundamentally, democracy
- leaders have been unable to overcome the ethnic rivalries that
- have stood in the way of a true sense of Nigerian nationhood
- since its creation. Support is strong in the Yoruba-dominated
- southwest and almost nil in other parts of the country.
- </p>
- <p> Still, pro-democracy leaders believe that international pressure
- combined with massive passive resistance in Lagos will force
- Babangida from power. They have warned their followers to keep
- off the streets so that soldiers will not have an excuse to
- shoot.
- </p>
- <p> But as long as he remains in command of the only sources of
- wealth in the country, Babangida will not be easily dislodged.
- Already some thoughtful Nigerians have suggested that the interim
- government, though a sham, should be given a chance to solve
- the country's manifold problems; to do otherwise would risk
- more bloodshed. Yet such a prudent course may only delay the
- day of reckoning, when Nigerians who dream of democracy will
- have to risk their lives to make it come true.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-