
Festus Edovia
It is deeply troubling that many of the people suffering the most from bad governance are often the same ones defending the failed leaders responsible for their hardship. Even worse, they sometimes attack citizens who try to speak the truth about the real cause of Nigeria’s problems; poor leadership, corruption, and years of failed governance.
One of the saddest realities in Nigeria today is watching people passionately defend politicians who have contributed little or nothing to improving their lives, all because of temporary handouts or political patronage. This culture of dependency has allowed many leaders to manipulate vulnerable citizens instead of empowering them with opportunities, education, and economic growth.
It is painful to imagine people supporting leaders accused of diverting public funds meant for hospitals, schools, roads, electricity, and social welfare into private pockets. Yet, during elections, some politicians distribute small amounts of money or food items to gain loyalty from citizens already struggling to survive.
Election periods have become seasons of grand promises. Politicians speak about transforming Nigeria, creating jobs, improving security, and fixing the economy. But after elections, many of those promises disappear, while citizens continue to face rising poverty, unemployment, insecurity, inflation, and poor public services.
Meanwhile, many political elites and their families enjoy comfortable lives abroad. Their children study in expensive foreign schools, and they seek medical care in top hospitals outside Nigeria; facilities funded indirectly by wealth generated from the same country they failed to develop. The ordinary Nigerian, however, is left to struggle with inadequate healthcare, poor infrastructure, and declining living conditions.
Nigeria cannot move forward if citizens continue to defend bad leadership at the expense of truth and accountability. A nation grows when people demand competence, transparency, and responsible governance and not when they blindly support politicians because of ethnic loyalty, party affiliation, or short-term benefits.
The time has come for Nigerians to reject the politics of manipulation and poverty. Citizens must become more conscious, more informed, and more willing to hold leaders accountable for their actions and policies.
Nigeria belongs to all Nigerians, and its future should not be sacrificed for the interests of a privileged few. The country can only progress when leadership is based on service, integrity, and genuine commitment to national development.
Written by Festus Edovia, ANIPR, FICM
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