Close Menu
National Update
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Tinubu Renames UNIMAID After Buhari in Posthumous Honour
    • Dutse Emirate Council Pledges Full Support in Fight Against Gender-Based Violence
    • Police Nab Cultists, Vehicle Thief, and Burglary Suspect in Ibesikpo, Uyo
    • KONGONET holds 5th Annual General Meeting, urges Gov. Ododo on inclusivity
    • A Mother to All: Transformative Footprints of Sefinat Usman Ododo
    • Game On: CBN Open Tennis Championship Lights Up Abuja
    • Qatar Charity Empowers 60 Jigawa Widows, Vulnerable Persons with ₦300m
    • Court Backs FCT Crackdown, Aids Anti-Vandalism Efforts — CP Ajao
    • News
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Economy
    • Entertainment
    • Health
    • Security
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    National UpdateNational Update
    Subscribe
    Friday, July 18
    • News
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Economy
    • Entertainment
    • Health
    • Security
    National Update
    Home»Opinion

    Tinubu, Remi, And Akpabio Mocking Nigerians’ Hardship

    National UpdateBy National UpdateOctober 12, 2024 Opinion No Comments6 Mins Read
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    “Neither Saint nor Sinner, Akpabio and his ilk choose to stay in Nigeria not out of love for the country but because they thrive off it and are insulated from the harm they inflict upon it”.

    BY FAROOQ A. KPEROGI

    The torment of incessantly escalating petrol prices and the consequent surge in the cost of everything have plunged Nigerians into a precipitous decline in quality of life. This dire situation is exacerbated by insensitive, almost mocking remarks from those responsible for inflicting this pain.

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, aptly nicknamed “T-Pain,” recently stated from London that Nigerians would, in the future, appreciate the wisdom of his “reforms.” Such a statement is both callous and mendacious.

    It is callous because these “reforms” are literally destroying the livelihoods of millions and causing the deaths of many. What possible benefit could the deceased derive from economic reforms that precipitated their untimely demise?

    It is mendacious because, as evidenced by the history of Structural Adjustment Programs (SAP) in Nigeria—and the experiences of other nations implementing similar neoliberal economic reforms—such policies invariably erode the middle class, exacerbate poverty among the lower classes, yet please the markets, thereby benefiting the upper classes.

    Almost without exception, neoliberal policies—such as the elimination of subsidies, deregulation, reductions in social spending, and fiscal austerity—exacerbate economic inequality and hinder sustainable development in developing economies. These policies often benefit large corporations and the wealthy, which creates an inequitable concentration of wealth in the hands of a few and widens the chasm between the rich and the poor.

    Thus, the deferred benefits for which Tinubu wants Nigerians to endure mass deaths and hopelessness are the opening of Nigerian markets to international competition—which may please global markets but will overwhelm local businesses lacking the resources and technology to compete—and the freeing up of resources to invest in infrastructure.

    However, the reality is that contemporary Nigeria is inhospitable to foreign investment due to the absence of security, social, and physical infrastructure, and because Tinubu’s policies have so impoverished the majority that they cannot afford to purchase what foreign businesses produce. This explains the mass exodus of foreign companies since 2023.

    Furthermore, given the culture of endemic corruption entrenched within the upper echelons of power, most of the funds saved from subsidy withdrawals, tariff increases, intensified taxation, and cuts in social programs will likely be misappropriated. The government will still resort to borrowing from the World Bank and the IMF to finance its operations.

    We are already witnessing this phenomenon. Despite massive inflows of cash into government coffers, no new projects are being constructed or even initiated. In fact, governments at all levels are procrastinating over implementing the ₦70,000 per month minimum wage. State governors convert the excess funds they receive from federal allocations into dollars and stash them away, thereby putting pressure on the naira.

    Now, the vast majority of Nigerians have resigned themselves to the fact that death, starvation, and hopelessness are the only certain outcomes of Tinubu’s “reforms” and are seeking a way out. Middle-class citizens are saving up to leave the country, and, for the first time ever, even the majority of northern Nigeria’s middle class is investing in plans to escape from Nigeria.

    In response, Senate President Godswill Akpabio declared that Nigerians fleeing the blazing neoliberal hellhole that Tinubu has created are ungrateful and unpatriotic cowards who should be stopped. “I believe people should place love for their country above financial gains. That is why many of us choose to remain here,” he said.

    Akpabio and his ilk choose to stay in Nigeria not out of love for the country but because they thrive off it and are insulated from the harm they inflict upon it. The professionals leaving Nigeria in droves are not doing so because they lack love for their country. They love their country; they simply abhor the raging neoliberal inferno it has become. British Somali poet Warsan Shire once pointed out, “No one leaves home unless/home is the mouth of a shark.”

    It is insulting to suggest, as Akpabio did, that Nigerian emigrants are motivated by base and unpatriotic motives. Even more insulting is Akpabio’s proposed solution to halt emigration: that dissatisfied Nigerians should reduce the number of cars they own. At times, one wonders whether Akpabio retains any functioning brain cells.

    Meanwhile, Remi Tinubu, Bola Tinubu’s wife, continued this pattern of insulting Nigerians amidst their suffering. On Thursday, she told the Ooni of Ife that her husband is not responsible for Nigeria’s current travails, which contradicts her husband’s own acceptance of responsibility for the hardships Nigerians are enduring—with a promise of an illusory better tomorrow as compensation for the pain he is inflicting.

    “We are just 18 months into our administration,” she said. “We are not the cause of the current situation. We are trying to fix it and secure the future.”

    She then inverted logic and implied that Nigerians are suffering not because her husband has increased petrol prices more times and at higher rates than any previous president, but because prior presidents did not do what her husband is doing.

    “We know that subsidy has been removed, but with God on our side, in the next two years, Nigeria will be greater than this,” she said. “Those who attempted removing subsidies before could not see it through. But with your prayers in the next two years, we will build a nation for the future.”

    The rage that overcame me upon reading this is beyond description. Do these insensate individuals utilize their cognitive faculties at all?

    I have long harbored a suspicion that the upper echelons of Nigeria’s power structure have been displeased with the emergence of a middle class since 1999. The markers of middle-class status—such as car and home ownership, fine dining, foreign education, and sartorial sophistication—have deprived the upper class of privileges they believed should remain exclusive to them.

    In the early 2000s, they used to speak derisively of “Obasanjo drivers”—individuals who could afford to own cars due to minimum wage increase and arrears of the minimum wage during Olusegun Obasanjo’s presidency. It isn’t Obasanjo who gave people cars or created the middle class, of course. By its nature, the practice of democracy creates certain jobs and circulates opportunities that foster the middle class.

    Now, Tinubu’s neoliberal policies are eradicating the middle class and plunging the poor into deeper, more excruciating poverty, reminiscent of the days of military dictatorship. I wonder how much longer this can continue. Yet we will be observing from afar, as nothing that is happening now comes as a shock. I forewarned that this would occur even before Tinubu assumed power.

    National Update

    Keep Reading

    A Mother to All: Transformative Footprints of Sefinat Usman Ododo

    Sen. Tahir Mongono: Taking Representation to Unprecedented Height

    2027 Poll: ADC/COP’s northern presidential gambit

    Why APC Must Woo Kwankwaso Back: A Northern Force Too Potent to Ignore

    Senator Natasha’s Misdemeanor VS. Akpabio’s Felony

    Weep Not, Asue Ighodalo!

    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Most Viewed Posts
    • Tinubu names El-Rufai, Tope Fasua, others in New appointments (1,594)
      President Bola Tinubu has named 18 Special Advisers and Senior Special Assistants in New appointments to help execute the Federal Government’s agenda across various sectors of the economy. The Director of Information at the Office of the Vice President, Olusola Abiola gave the indication in a statement released on MondayThe team, which comprises 6 Special
    • Police nabs Killer of Varsity Lecturer in Niger (1,144)
      The Niger state Police Command has apprehended a 14 year old girl, Joy Afekafe 'of Gbeganu community in Minna, the state capital as a prime suspect over the gruesome murder of a Lecturer with the Federal University of Technology (FUT) Minna, Professor Mrs. Funmilola AdefolaluThe late  Prof. Mrs. Funmilola Adefolalu, was murdered at her residence
    • FCT-IRS tells socialite Aisha Achimugu not to forget to file her annual returns (1,098)
      ***As the Service extends its warmest birthday wishes to her The FCT-Internal Revenue Service has reacted to the news of an Abuja based business Nigerian Lady Aisha Achimugu who recently set Genada aglow with 7-day 50th birthday party reminding her of her tax obligations to FCT-IRS. Achimugu is the founder and managing director of Abuja’s
    • Sule Lamido tackles Tinubu over Democracy Day speech, says its share Hallucination (1,025)
      Former Jigawa State Governor, Senator Dr. Sule Lamido has faulted the June 12, Democracy Day speech of president Bola Ahmed Tinubu describing it as mere hallucination Lamido on his X handle wrote with the title: “Hallucinating June 12, there was a June 11 before June 12”. Taking on Tinubu, Lamido said, “It is obvious the
    • ICAN bill suffers setback at Senate as stakeholders object to some sections (987)
      ***Warn against use of the ammendment to usurp mandates of other professions Stakeholders in the financial sector on Thursday raised objections to some sections of a bill for an Act to amend the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN), Act No. 15 of 1965 and for other matters connected thereto. At a public hearing

    Latest News

    Tinubu Renames UNIMAID After Buhari in Posthumous Honour

    July 17, 2025

    Dutse Emirate Council Pledges Full Support in Fight Against Gender-Based Violence

    July 17, 2025

    Police Nab Cultists, Vehicle Thief, and Burglary Suspect in Ibesikpo, Uyo

    July 17, 2025

    KONGONET holds 5th Annual General Meeting, urges Gov. Ododo on inclusivity

    July 17, 2025

    A Mother to All: Transformative Footprints of Sefinat Usman Ododo

    July 17, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    National Update
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    © 2025 National Update. Designed by Lamark Cre8ives.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Go to mobile version