23rd April, 2018
PRESS RELEASE:
YOUTHS COMMENT: BUHARI HAS NOT SAID
ANYTHING NEW
The media recently
descended on President Muhammadu Buhari for allegedly describing Nigerian
youths as lazy in a London roundtable.
Although the media deliberately twisted Buhari’s statement
as he did not use the word ‘lazy’ in his speech, the Muslim Rights Concern
(MURIC) contends that the president’s description of the Nigerian situation
regarding its youths was apt, precise and succinct.
Nigerians need to
contextualize the president’s comment. We have seen many youths functioning as
political thugs as the 2019 general elections approach. They have started vandalizing
properties and disrupting political gatherings. Can anybody tell us that those
political thugs are old men?
What of the herdsmen who are terrorizing innocent farmers
around the country? Are they not young people? Are they not lazy? Are the kidnappers
who make life unbearable for innocent people not lazy? But are they not youths?
Has anyone seen elderly people among Boko Haram insurgents and Niger Delta
militants? What of the ‘area boys’ syndrome and the al-majiri phenomenon? Are
the Yahoo Yahoo boys not of the same age bracket? Are they not all lazy?
What of the ‘agberos’
or touts who have now spilled out of motor parks unto the streets and bus
stops? What responsible work are they doing? Are they not youths? What do they
contribute to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP)? All they do is to stand at the
bus stops to extort money from drivers of commercial vehicles. Are they not
lazy? When will Nigerians admit this reality? Who pulled the wool over our
faces?
The problem with
Nigerians is that they always run away from reality. Not known for verbosity,
our president has hit the nail on the head. Many of our youths are lazy but we don’t
want to admit it. Instead of commending this truthful leader, we started calling
him names.
Collective
amnesia appears to have gripped Nigerians. We have forgotten that Buhari is not
the only leader who described Nigerians and the youth in particular in this
manner. Governor Dickson in a media chat on 17th May, 2016 was alleged
to have said, "Bayelsans are so lazy, they want everything free, they
don't want to work".
The 25th September 2017 edition of a northern-based
newspaper also reportedly quoted Alhaji Atiku Abubakar as saying, "Northerners
are lazy" while General Babangida (rtd) allegedly opined during a BBC
Hausa service interview of 16th April, 2010, "The Nigerian
youth is useless, cannot lead." Senator Shehu Sani added flavour to
this in December 2017 when he reportedly said "Northerners are lazy and
unproductive".
During the
launching of a book written by Chief Gani Fawehinmi in 1974, Chief Obafemi
Awolowo complained that, “The trouble with many of
our youths is that they sleep too much; play too much; and indulge too much in
idle chatter and gossip.”
If indeed the above were the views of a governor from the
South South, a leader from the South West, a former military president, an ex-vice
president and a distinguished senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, all
of whom are from the North, it stands to reason that Buhari has not said
anything new. Neither is this pragmatic assessment of citizens by their leaders
limited to Nigeria. During a town hall event overseas, ex-President Barrack
Obama referred to Americans as lazy.
Islam abhors idleness and laziness. It appreciates the
dignity of labour. The Glorious Qur’an implores every man to work hard, “Tell
them to work. (If they do) Allah, His Messenger and the believers (citizens)
will appreciate their work” (Qur’an 9:105).
To round up, we invite Nigerian politicians to brace up for
a new political culture of probity, accountability and pragmatism. We call on
the youths to abandon the counter-productive race for emergency wealth, to shun
betting and to concentrate on education, training and hardwork. We charge
parents to inculcate core values of honesty, dignity and diligence in their
offsprings.
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern
(MURIC)
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