It
is plausible that for every success recorded by another country, an article
emerges entitled ‘Lessons for Nigeria from…’ that success or country. Yes,
articles abound pointing out lessons for Africa’s most populous country and
largest economy; be they from Barack Obama’s emergence as the United States
President, Steve Jobs’ success at Apple or Osama Bin Laden’s death. The list is
endless.
But
as the country continues to flirt with self-destruction, it appears that for
every lesson the nation ought to have learnt, it comes up with a myriad of
excuses about why it is incapable of learning anything new. Many of them are
linked to the long-dead Lord Lugard.
Perhaps,
the country has also been unable to learn anything from Steve Maraboli’s
profound quote, “There is no greater symphony of self-destruction than the
beautifully poisonous melody found in our excuses.”
And
so, it goes that four years after Nigerians held unto hope, defied the
trappings of poverty and hardship only to be told that the elections for which
they had assembled had been shifted by a week, they have had to contend with a
similar situation, albeit with more serious implications.
When
the Independent National Electoral Commission under the leadership of Prof. Attahiru
Jega postponed the 2011 general elections, it cited logistic challenges as its
reason.
Four
years later, it has justified its decision of asking Nigerians to wait for six
more weeks to exercise their right to choose their leaders with a controversial
excuse.
Jega
informed Nigerians that the military, which were expected to provide security
during the polls, would not be able to do so as they had scheduled an onslaught
on Boko Haram.
He
insisted that the commission had been ready to hold the elections and that he
had made that clear to the Council of State days earlier.
“The
summary of my presentation was that for matters under the control of INEC, the
commission was ready for the elections despite the challenge of the PVCs and we
have been doing all we could for that,” he had said.
The
excuse lacked credibility to many, including the United States and the United
Kingdom – as have many other excuses Nigeria has come up with for its
heart-wrenching failures. Some of those against the move argue that if after
five years, the military has been unable to tackle the insurgency, then there
is little it can do in six weeks.
On
the flipside, supporters of the poll delay believe that if the military goes on
to achieve a major success in its campaign and more Nigerians get to collect
their Permanent Voter Cards, the elections would be more reflective of the
wishes of the citizenry.
A
week after the move, however, the country is worse off.

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