Food palliatives cannot replace genuine development. While temporary relief may help vulnerable citizens survive difficult moments, it is not a substitute for responsible governance or sustainable economic solutions.
Nigeria’s challenges run far deeper than the distribution of rice, noodles, and other consumables during political seasons. The country is battling unemployment, insecurity, poverty, poor healthcare, weak infrastructure, and unstable power supply. These are the real issues demanding urgent and consistent attention.
When insecurity is effectively tackled, farmers will safely return to their farms, food production will increase, and citizens will move freely without fear. When millions of unemployed youths are given meaningful opportunities, crime and social unrest will naturally decline. When healthcare becomes accessible and functional, preventable deaths will reduce significantly. And when electricity becomes stable, small businesses will thrive, industries will expand, and economic productivity will improve.
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That is what true governance should deliver.
Unfortunately, many politicians continue to reduce leadership to seasonal acts of charity, especially during elections. Bags of rice and token palliatives are distributed as though they are lasting solutions to structural national problems.
But food handouts are not development.
They do not create jobs. They do not improve schools. They do not build hospitals. They do not provide stable electricity. They do not guarantee security or economic growth.
More importantly, they do not restore dignity.
What makes the situation even more troubling is the way hunger and poverty are often weaponised for political advantage. When citizens are desperate, they become vulnerable to manipulation. In such conditions, temporary relief can easily be presented as meaningful governance.
But Nigerians must ask difficult questions: Do these palliatives pay school fees? Do they cover rent? Do they provide long-term healthcare? Do they secure the future of unemployed graduates? The answer remains largely no.
This cycle of dependency and political deception must end.
The Nigerian people deserve more than survival packages; they deserve opportunities. They deserve policies that create jobs, strengthen security, improve infrastructure, support businesses, and build an economy where hard work is rewarded.
Good governance is not measured by how much food is shared during hardship. It is measured by the ability to build systems that reduce hardship in the first place.
Nigeria deserves leadership that focuses on long-term solutions rather than short-term political optics.
The nation deserves better.
Written by Festus Edovia, ANIPR, FICM












