4th
October, 2014
SALAH MESSAGE:
MURIC INVITES LEADERS TO MAKE TANGIBLE
SACRIFICES
Nigerian Muslims will
today join millions of others across the globe in marking the Id ul-Kabiir.
The Muslim Rights
Concern (MURIC) seizes the opportunity of this grand event to felicitate with
the leadership of the Nigerian Muslim community, Alhaji Muhammad Sa’d Abubakar
III, the Sultan of Sokoto and President-General of the Nigerian Supreme Council
for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA), all Nigerian Muslims and every Nigerian citizen
who is witnessing the occasion today.
We remind Nigerian leaders of the core lesson in Id
ul-Kabiir which is sacrifice. Prophet Ibraheem (peace be upon him)
who is the father of the Ibrahimic faiths remains a universal model today
because of the huge sacrifice he made by offering to sacrifice his son.
His exemplary role
therefore became a model for both Muslims and Christians because the same
Ibraheem (Abraham) was the father of both Ishaq and Ismail (Isaac and Ishmael,
peace be upon both of them) who were the forebearers of Islam and Christianity
respectively.
Our leaders must ask themselves why the Nigerian
president have ten aircrafts when the American president has two only? What is our
president doing with twenty five official cars when the British Prime Minister
has only two?
Why does a Nigerian
senator earn N245 million per year when his counterpart in the United States
collects a meager $6,000 (approximately N990,000 @ N165 to $1) annually. Why
must Nigeria have about 42 cabinet ministers when the US has 24 only?
Excellence is being
sacrificed on the altar of mediocrity. Nigeria is being mortgaged unless our
leaders follow the Abrahamic model. Except for a few among them, the present
leaders are not making the necessary sacrifices. Neither are they living by
example. Otherwise the case of the missing $20 billion would not have been
swept under the carpet. Neither would those who preach cashlessness siphon
$9.3m to Pretoria. International criminals are granted state pardon and given
national awards.
Anti-corruption
agencies have taken the cue from our leadership, treating corruption cases with
kid gloves. MURIC is shocked that at a time when the Ghanaian president fired a
minister for merely wishing to be rich (February 2014), President Jonathan on May 5, 2014 described
70% of corruption cases in Nigeria as “common stealing”.
No wonder, therefore,
that Ekpo Nta , the chairman of the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission
(ICPC), one of Nigeria’s anti-corruption agencies, taking the cue from his boss
in Aso Rock, said “stealing is erroneously reported as corruption” even by the “educated”.
How then can we expect ICPC to seriously tackle any corruption case?
Nigerians have no business being poor if it is true that
this country produces 2.4 million barrels of oil per day and sell the oil at
N93.61 per barrel. No Nigerian should sleep under the
bridge if it is true that we make $224 million per day from the same oil alone.
This daily income from oil gives us $81 billion or N12.8 trillion per annum.
Paradoxically, Nigeria remains the 20th hungriest nation and the 26th
poorest country in the world.
If our budget for year 2014 is N4.6 trillion and our
annual income from oil alone is N12.8 trillion, what business have we going out
to borrow a single dollar from outside? The sum of $1 billion loan approved by
Senate for President Jonathan to buy weapons to fight Boko Haram was therefore a
prodigal adventure.
70% of Nigerian school
children failed in the last West African Examination Council tests. 1 million
Nigerians are totally blind. 32 million have river blindness. 300,000 die of
malaria every year. 30 million are hypertensive. 4 million suffer from diabetes.
80 million Nigerians live below poverty level. The average Nigerian lives on
less than $1 per day. Per capita income is around $300. Life span in Nigeria which was 74 before independence is now 47!
So where are we going? Forward or backward?
MURIC therefore
invites Nigerian leaders, from Aso Rock to the local government councils to
reflect on the sufferings of millions of Nigerian citizens and make palpable
sacrifices before it is too late. We call the attention of President Jonathan to
Article 14:2(b) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria
which says inter alia, “the security and welfare of the people shall be the
primary purpose of government”.
Finally, we offer the following pieces of advice for the
way forward in Nigeria:
1.
There must be huge cuts in government’s spending at all levels.
2.
The salaries and other emoluments of public officers and members of the
National Assembly should be drastically reduced.
3.
Corruption agencies must be given full autonomy in such a way that their
appointment, funding and dismissal should not be in the hands of the Nigerian
president.
4.
No public office holder should be allowed to train his children or wards
abroad (this will make them pay attention to the education of Nigerian
children).
5.
No public office holder should seek
medical attention outside the country. This will compel them to improve the health
sector at home.
6.
Public officers should be banned from using helicopters or private jets to
shuttle from one part of the country to another. This will force them to build
good roads for us.
Qur’an 33:68 attests to the fate of corrupt and inept
leaders on the Day of Judgement when their citizens will accuse them of
mismanaging their affairs and they will ask Allah to double the punishment of
such leaders (rabbana atihim di’fayn minal adhab).
Professor Ishaq
Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern
(MURIC)
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