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Home Opinion

When Hope Dies at Home, the Sea Becomes an Option By Festus Edovia

by NewsOnline Nigeria
December 28, 2025
in Opinion, Top Stories
0
Festus Edovia

Every week, Nigerian youths climb onto rickety boats bound for the Mediterranean or vanish into the vast silence of the Sahara. Many never return. Those who do often come back broken—physically, mentally, and economically. Yet the tragedy persists, not because young people love death, but because hope has been systematically murdered at home.

No one leaves their country lightly. No one chooses the desert, where bodies disappear without names, or the sea, now a watery grave for Africa’s brightest dreams, unless staying feels like a slower form of death. These perilous journeys to Europe are not acts of adventure; they are votes of no confidence in the Nigerian state.

At the heart of this crisis lies leadership failure—persistent, shameless, and unaccountable.

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Nigeria is a nation rich in resources but bankrupt in priorities. While those in power stash public funds abroad, their children study and live comfortably in the very countries Nigerian youths are dying to reach. The irony is cruel. The contradiction is criminal. Leaders who have turned governance into a family enterprise lecture the masses on patience and patriotism.

Unemployment stalks the land like a curse. Graduates roam the streets clutching certificates that have become mere decorations. Skills are wasted, dreams postponed, and frustration normalised. In such a climate, the promise of “greener pastures,” however dangerous, begins to sound like salvation.

Let us be clear: this is not a youth problem; it is a governance problem.

Our education system is disconnected from economic reality. Our economy is hostile to small businesses. Access to credit is reserved for the connected few. Merit is sacrificed on the altar of nepotism. Corruption has become so entrenched that honesty now looks like rebellion.

Even more troubling is how failure has been normalised. We mourn briefly when boats capsize, issue hollow condolences, and move on until the next tragedy. There is no serious policy response. No accountability. No national soul-searching.

If Nigeria truly seeks to halt this deadly migration, slogans will not suffice. Border patrols will not help. Fear campaigns will fail. People do not flee because they are uninformed; they flee because they are trapped.

The solution begins with restoring hope at home:

  • Jobs that pay living wages

  • Education that leads to real employability

  • Transparent governance that serves the many, not the few

  • Legal and regulated migration pathways—not death routes

Beyond government action, society must also reflect. We must stop glorifying foreign survival while ignoring local struggle. Not everyone who makes it abroad succeeds; many live undocumented, exploited, and invisible. We must tell the full story, not just the curated social media version.

Still, while leadership bears the greatest responsibility, young people must also recognise that individual escape cannot solve a collective failure. Nations are rebuilt not only by those who leave, but by those who stay, organise, demand accountability, and insist on better governance.

Nigeria is bleeding its future. Every young life lost in the desert or at sea is an indictment of a system that has failed its most productive generation.

A country that gives its youth nothing to live for should not be surprised when they risk everything to leave.

Until leadership becomes service and public office regains its true meaning, the Mediterranean will remain an escape route, and the Sahara will continue to swallow Nigerian dreams—silently, relentlessly, and shamefully.

Written by Festus Edovia, anipr, ficm

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