By Tope Fasua
The debate raged last
week about Governor Akinwunmi Ambode’s attempt to recruit 1,000 Nigerian
university graduates as bus conductors in Lagos state.
Ordinarily, Ambode is one
of Nigeria’s ‘performing’ governors, and he has effectively and shockingly
shaken off the legendary shadow of Raji Fashola, who is himself getting
demystified by the problems of the three ministries which were dumped on him in
Abuja. Going to Lagos these days could actually be an enjoyable
experience.
Lagos continues to get neater, traffic is
often light, and there is generally a new, refreshing ethos that Ambode
imported from his sojourns around the world. But for me, this bus conductor
business is a no-no. And my reasons have nothing to do with some foolish pride
which university graduates possess.
First, the policy was announced by the Chairman of the Bus
Conductors’ Association of Nigeria (BCAN), Comrade Israel Adeshola. I am
usually suspicious of these people who form associations so easily.
Nigerians form associations for everything these days and usually
in order to grab power and money. I heard this Chairman, like his colleague in
the ‘okada’ business, drives an expensive SUV with a personalized plate number.
These guys remind us of what happens to motorists who have any collision with
the ‘okada’ bike guys. No matter who is at fault, the okada riders begin to
gather and will usually lynch the motorist. In Nigeria, it is every man for
himself.
Unfortunately, in what is supposed to be our season of
renaissance, human lives have become even cheaper, and our attitudes more
combative.
In Abuja, the more different associations sprung up in the
Jonathan era that claimed they were in charge of cleaning the environment, the
dirtier Abuja became.
So these associations are just Mafia groups. And the so-called
Chairman was allowed to gloat at the famed ‘uselessness’ of Nigerian graduates.
It is not enough that we daily denigrate our graduates –
especially the ones from the public universities that our leaders and elites
deliberately killed while using corrupt money to build private ones and forcing
parents to be corrupt so that they can afford the crazy fees being charged in
those places, now we throw those hapless graduates into the fangs of some
fly-by-night Chairman of Bus Conductors’ Association to further denigrate them.
What the Comrade did was basically to say “shebi they said we
bus conductors are useless, but see us now, we are employing graduates”.
For effect, the Chairman dropped the amount that his
association, in conjunction with the Lagos State Ministry of Transport, were
going to pay any of these lucky graduates – N50,000 per month.
And so many ‘intellectuals’ weighed behind that policy, some of
them abusing and insulting any graduate who hesitates to send in an
application. One guy was even very ingenious, asking that between a graduate
who works for two years as a bus conductor, and one who sits at home, which one
would one as an entrepreneur hire?
It seems obvious that one should go for the bus conductor, who
was pragmatic enough to try and earn something, but what about attributes of
perseverance?
Rather than jump at any work just because it pays some money, is
there any value to having a vision and defining some barriers about what one
will not do?
Is life all about the money these days? Mind you, the commercial
buses of Lagos are legendary in their craziness. Certainly, there aren’t enough
BRT buses in Lagos to post 1,000 university graduate conductors to.
And if the government
wanted only university graduates in those BRT buses, they can be sure of a
protest from the conductors’ association, whom they have given so much
prominence.
If it was impossible to employ the children of
the poor in all these posh public agencies, why bring them even lower to join
the vermin of the earth, while your own lucky children float to the top and
become leaders over these unfortunate ones.
Some prominent Nigerians – many of them living abroad – chipped
in and regaled us with how they did menial work when they arrived in their
foreign locations and were trying to find their feet. Some spoke of working as
labourers as sweepers and so on. See, it is different.
Very few were able to talk of how low they sunk with their
university degrees in hand here in Nigeria. And that is exactly the point.
Sometimes, when you give up on yourself and decide to sink, it may be
impossible to recover yourself and regain your dignity. If this project is
carried through, there is every likelihood that 80 percent of the graduates
will be subsumed in the rough ways of Lagos bus drivers and conductors in no
time, and perhaps become permanently traumatized such that they would forever
feel inferior in the corporate world.
We even have evidence. All the state transport schemes in
Nigeria started off with well-dressed drivers, complete with suits and ties.
But today, some of them are the roughest drivers, and are usually high on whatever
it is they drink.
Lack of vision
It is this lack of vision that is our problem in Nigeria. The
simple thing to do is for government to focus on creating employment for school
dropouts, and secondary school leavers.
By so doing, they create employment opportunities for graduates
who will supervise these younger people and retain their dignity. The graduates
can do some menial work, but we needn’t strip them of their self-respect.
As a matter of fact, if graduates choose on their own to do
these jobs, it is better than being forced, coerced, insulted, and made to look
lazy, before they take up such jobs out of necessity. Running a society demands
the vision of an artist. The work of governance is like painting on a blank
canvass.
It is that vision that those who purport to lead Nigeria
painfully lack. They should try inverting the process of sticking Nigerian
graduates under bus conductors and okada riders and see what happens.
Mind you, Nigeria has invested on these graduates, by sending
them to university and training them with intellectual capital. Why throw good
money after bad? Why throw that investment into the fire?
The children of the rich get
the plummest Jobs
Another argument against this brainless idea, is that in the
last 15 months, Nigerians have seen scandals involving the employment of the
children of the rich and connected into the best jobs in the country, with much
impunity. We have seen the culture of nepotism and partiality writ large.
There was no statement whatsoever from those on whom we hoped
for a Nigerian reorientation. It was a case of ‘woe betides the poor’. Nigeria
has changed for the worse in the past two decades.
If it was impossible to employ the children of the poor in all
these posh public agencies, why bring them even lower to join the vermin of the
earth, while your own lucky children float to the top and become leaders over
these unfortunate ones.
It used to be that through the public school system, Nigerian
children mixed together and benefited from one another. Now, with the
deliberate destruction of that system by our elites, Nigeria is evolving into a
proper class society which will culminate in serious disaster.
Trauma Effect
While all this was going on, there appeared a clip where
Nigeria’s most famous senator; Dino Melaye boasted that he once hawked “Kunu”
in Kano. Now, let us juxtapose that background against his present penchant for
Byzantine luxury. That is what happens when people go through trauma.
The very few of them that ‘make it’ never cease to want to prove
a point. Many people in Nigeria’s ruling class were traumatised, hence they
have become monsters devouring everything in sight.
Look at Jimoh Ibrahim who is playing the spoiler in my Ondo
State. He too cannot shake off the poverty of his past and the trauma he went
through. We cannot keep producing dangerously traumatised people.
Let us just drop the idea and quit messing with our young
people.
‘Tope Fasua, president,
Institute for Service Excellence and Good Governance could be reached on: topsyfash@yahoo.com.
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