Instead of focusing on building effective systems to tackle insecurity, economic hardship and governance failures at home, the Nigerian government has chosen to spend an outrageous $9 million of taxpayers’ money on a lobbying contract in the United States. This decision is not only indefensible; it is deeply embarrassing.
The question Nigerians must ask is simple: how did we get here? Why does our government believe Nigeria’s problems can be solved abroad rather than through decisive action at home? Many of the crises confronting the country today were not accidental. They are the product of years of reckless politics, driven by an obsession with winning elections at all costs. In the process, greed for power has plunged the nation into chaos, while those who speak truth to power are branded enemies for daring to challenge the status quo.
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Nigeria is abundantly blessed with natural and human resources, yet the majority of its citizens wallow in poverty while a privileged political class lives in obscene luxury. This tragic contradiction is both painful and shameful. It is difficult to justify spending millions of dollars on foreign lobbyists when hospitals are collapsing, roads have become death traps, and insecurity continues to claim lives daily.
What exactly is being laundered abroad, Nigeria’s image or the conscience of those in power? The real crisis is not perception; it is corruption. With corruption entrenched in both public and private sectors, some government apologists have simply found another pathway to drain the national treasury under the guise of lobbying and public relations.
The rot has gone so deep that questionable characters are now celebrated and rewarded. Even more disturbing, some politicians boast openly about looting public funds without fear or remorse. When a society loses its sense of shame, it descends into moral bankruptcy.
The critical question remains: will Nigeria continue on this path of disgrace? How did a nation with so much promise sink so low?
The time has come for collective introspection. Nigerians must look inward, confront hard truths and halt the looting rampage that is destroying the country. Institutions meant to protect and serve the people have failed; instead, they now shield corrupt politicians and entrench impunity.
Nigerians must wake up. We must reject the crumbs handed out by politicians who are systematically destroying the nation through greed and corruption. Citizenship comes with responsibility. By standing against corruption in all its forms, we can begin to reclaim our country and stop this menace before it consumes everything.
Written by Festus Edovia, anipr, ficm.
