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Written By Yushau A. Shuaib
THAT
SUFFERING AND SMILING AWARD
Daily Sun Oct21, Nigerian Tribune Nov, 2003
Hurrah...Hurrah...hurrah! Nigeria is declared
as the happiest nation on earth. The cheering announcement was a result of study
conducted by World Values Survey and published in the recent edition of New
Scientist Magazine. According to the report the present generation of Nigerians
is the happiest in the whole world. Unlike other researches, the survey carried
out in more than 65 countries between 1999 and 2001, is a worldwide
investigation of socio-cultural and political changes conducted about every four
years by an international network of social scientists.
It is timely reward that coincides with our
Independence Anniversary and the hosting of 8th All African Games in addition to
our rating as the Second Most Corrupt Nation in the world. There is a need for
special public holiday to celebrate it since the award is not from some
home-based social clubs and cultural institutions that are professional
praise-singers in getting their palms greased. It was also neither from Sao Tome
nor Guinea Bissau, where some mischievous people could have thought that we
intimidated them to give us the honour. The news was broken from the United
Kingdom, the land of our colonial masters and the Second Superpower as
recognized by American Bushman.
Some unpatriotic Nigerians have described the
recent happiness medal to the country as an award for suffering and smiling.
Even at that, every winner must have suffered before the victory. It is
compelling to recall that in the past Nigeria is only receiving Gold Medals for
the Most Corrupt Nation on earth apart from its categorization in the comity of
poorest nations. It is therefore gladdening to hear the new tidings that the
country harbors the happiest people in the world. Upon the breaking news, most
Nigerians beam smiles whether out of astonishment, amazement or joy, but a smile
always depicts happiness.
Many factors are known to trigger happiness,
not necessary in pecuniary gains but in personal success, self-expression,
fulfilling family and societal expectations. It may be added that Nigeria did
deserve the happiest people recognition because it people can endure any
hardship even if the right of an individual is unjustly threatened. They
persevere in the face of endemic poverty and take joy in their downfall. Our
optimism is an endowment that points to the fact that majority of our populace
seeks refuge at worship centres to frolic and keep the faith for better
tomorrow. Just think about better future and you forget the present.
But some columnists the like of Reuben Abatis,
Sani Zorros, Abiodun Abdulrauf and Kabir Babatundes instead of devoting their
writings and pages to eulogize the Happiest Award, have consistently castigated
it. The joyous Nigerians may not be surprised that the critics are those who
lost out from the recent sharing of political booties in which few of their
colleagues were appointed into plump public offices. If they were appointed
spokespersons, their voices would have reached the heavens in commending the
rare international recognition. By the way who gave the media the right to speak
on behalf of fortunate Nigerians over the deregulation of the downstream sector,
when the press have selfishly deregulated their cover prices to the joy of their
readers?
We know the sponsored of the campaigns of
calumny over our enviable Happy and Corrupt Awards. They are defeatists at the
last fleece and fare election, where most of the incumbent contestants where
almost return unopposed by cheerful Nigerians. Instead of going to the World
Court in the Hague, the unhappy and guilty oppositions, prefer to pretend in the
Nigerian Court, where they may negotiate with the winners for settlement.
Some unpatriotic Nigerians too, have joined
the chorus of skeptics of our prestigious awards that make us the envy of the
rest of the world. They childishly claimed that Nigerians are suffering from
marginalisation and deprivation. It is necessary to tell these cynics that
suffering is synonymous with sacrifice. And to sacrifice in the Nigerian
context, is to emulate the most patriotic and hardworking Nigerian who publicly
and honestly declared that he sacrifices by spending 240 cowries for staying in
a hamlet within an unpopular ghetto, while the rest of happy citizens dwell in
palatial habitations. Please the cowries he spends are equivalent to kobo-coins
not in millions of Naira.
Credits should go to our politicians who
engage our youth into full employment as political thugs, bodyguards and crowd
boosters in organized rallies and solidarity visits. That is the reason there is
no complaint of unemployment even amongst the jubilant youths. The cheerful
entrepreneurs and industrialists are also helpful as they close their companies
and invest heavily in sponsoring godsons to emerge as public administrators. In
return, the godsons transfer monthly dividends from state coffers to the
personal accounts of godfathers and the rest of us remain happy.
In the mood of our happiness we are worried by
the greediness of the so-called pensioners who complain regularly of unpaid
entitlements. After collecting salaries and allowance all their lives, these old
pensioners should spare the young generations and forsake their entitlements.
They should go to sanctuaries where they could easily pray for quick passages to
reduce the overgrown population. The fate of pensioners is similar to teachers
whose rewards, as we have been told repeatedly, are in heaven. If the teachers
insisted on receiving their salary here on earth, they should be advised to
resign their appointment immediately and join politics where they may be
appointed into lucrative positions. Some prophets of dooms complain that Nigeria
is unsafe because of our friendly communal and religious clashes, resulting to
elimination of very few weak souls. We should deport the detractors of our
cordial brushes to neighboring Liberia, Cote Di'voir, Sierra Leone and other
brotherly African countries to be experimented in the traditional medical
laboratories where their limps would be given face-lift.
We have sufficient impassable and un-motorable
roads that give succor to jobless youths and children, who either gladly hawk
their wares or gleeful beg on the streets and highways to eke-out living. Also
in an effort to encourage self-reliance, the epileptic electricity generation
and water supply by public corporation, have boosted our local producers of
candles, firewood and pure water for family sustenance.
Though government may ignore the service of
public utility, the enthusiastic Nigerians have hailed the recently launched
Nigerian Space Satellite which could run shivers of fear into the veins of
lesser, though arrogant and ambitious African countries. America and Russia, the
Ogapatapatas in space technology have used the same frightening expeditions and
explorations to intimidate the rest of the world.
The angry nations may envy Nigerian for not
recording a dose of suicide bombing against bad policies and programmes. Even
the faceless militants who clamour for resources control and selfish elders who
campaign for a sovereign national conference could not stake their life in their
agitations but pretend in the struggle for selfish enrichment through secret
negotiation with the so-called persecutors. While public officers hardly resign
voluntarily in the face of indictment or nonperformance, some legislators
recently embark on delightful hunger strikes over deprivation, where they keep
adding weight from the effect of the excessive air they breathed during the
protest.
To maintain our position as the number one
Happiest Nation, we may encourage proliferation of worship centres including
shrines to give succor to the poor souls. Our public officers too, known around
the world for buying houses and lodging public funds in private accounts abroad
should be honoured for making us proud. Afterall it is through the display of
such opulence of the few in foreign lands that the world would know that we are
truly happy here at home.
As we try to promote our traditional medicine
we should encourage our herbalists to take over those ill-equipped hospitals to
prescribe their AIDS Cure therapy, life-prolonging herbs and may even start
producing Happinesine capsules and Smiledol tablets for export to many angry
nations around the world as our major sources of foreign earning.
In conclusion, we should thank the effective
leadership of the labour and academia who embark on consistent strikes that
enable workers and students ample opportunity for extra vacations to supplement
the few public holidays. At least wage-workers received their remunerations for
the days and months they are on strikes. We should hail the workers' strike on
the deregulation of petroleum products which is indirect way for a deserved
holiday, for joyous Nigerians, to celebrate the Happiness and Corruption Awards.
Happiest Corrupt Nigerians indeed.
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