As many Nigerians continue to call
for the restructuring of the country, a founding father of the Pentecostal
Fellowship of Nigeria (PFN), Reverend UMA Ukpai, who is also the President, UMA
Ukpai International Evangelical Ministries, says what Nigeria needs is
leadership with vision, leaders who know what the questions are and those who
can see Canaan and take Nigerians to that Canaan.
Ukpai also bares his mind on the poor state of the economy and points the way forward. He also speaks on the Boko Haram insurgency and renewed militancy in the Niger Delta. There are growing calls for the restructuring of Nigeria. Do you share that sentiment? It is another form of trial and error. Why did we opt for the present structure? It was for the government to be closer to the people but, as I speak, we’ve not had any government led by somebody that knows what the questions are. Before independence, our problem were bad roads, lack of water, poor power supply, poor educational system and poverty of the worst type.
We have an educational system
that does not answer our question or solve our problem. We have men who are
trained to use their heads and not their hands. As I speak, none of those
problems has been solved. The problem is not the structure, rather the problem
is the people who are operating this structure. We are selfish, we are
self-centred.
We have no feeling for the poor, we have no regard for the poor. A
leader can go to bed and sleep whether the poor around him eats or not. We have
no programme for the masses, something that can lift us up, upgrade and promote
us. I am not even sure we know how many people exist in Nigeria and, if we know
how many people live in Nigeria, what are we doing with their welfare as a
nation? We have leaders who are into government to enrich themselves, not to
serve and the sacredness of human lives does not mean anything to them.
A nation of this kind has no future. We have no love one for another.
Our leaders attempt to occupy national seats but amplify tribalism because they
want to use their tribal seats to rule us.
There is so much unemployment and nobody cares. I was shocked when one
of our leaders said some time ago that until we take food from the dust bin,
let nobody say we are suffering. That was the message of a heartless man and a
man who could not think, a man who did not care and a man who could not be a
leader but a follower because no leader would say what he said. We have
political lepers who claim to be leaders. We don’t look like a nation anywhere.
We are not organized, our problems are so innumerable.
How we survive is a miracle. What the agitators for restructuring think
is that if Nigeria should embrace true federalism, Nigeria would be better off.
We don’t need restructuring to embrace true federalism. We only need leaders
with vision, leaders who know what the questions are, leaders who are
visionary, leaders who can see our Canaan and can take us to our Canaan. As it
is, we have no Canaan as a nation. Asking for restructuring is to continue to
look for an excuse for them to continue to waste our time and lead to no direction.
There is also the problem of the Naira falling steadily to the dollar? When
leaders don’t know what the question is, the economy has to collapse.
It is like asking you, which is the longest river in the world and you
say, Aba River. Our economy is bound to collapse because we don’t have leaders
who are visionary. A blind man does not see the things going on around him. Our
leaders are blind leaders. We are neither going forward nor going backward, we
are standing still, our economy has become a free fall economy. We need leaders
who will come to serve us; people who know what we need to rise up and be like
others. There is no reason we should be as tremendously rich and, yet,
hopelessly poor.
We are a gigantic paradox. In the midst of plenty, we are hopelessly
poor because a blind man cannot run. Our leaders are political lepers, they
don’t feel any pain, they don’t hear the cry of the people around them, they
don’t even know where we are; therefore, they don’t where we are going to.
Could it be what Nigeria is passing through as a nation is as a result of the
sins of our leaders against God and humanity? No, every Nigerian has equal
number of holes in his head, has ten fingers, ten toes.
We have seven days in a week, 12
months in a year and 365 days in a years as other nations have. There is
nothing other nations have that we don’t have. Number one, we have no respect
for God; we don’t care for the poor amongst us. A man who does not care for the
poor around him cannot be a great man; we don’t have the desire to care for the
poor around us. We like them to remain poor and die poor and because we don’t
have a purpose of going into governance, we go and come out without achieving
anything except to fill our little pockets that cannot feed the masses. Number
two, our educational system does not answer our questions or solve our
problems.
We have remained a consumer
nation when others are busy inventing things that can make life easier and more
comfortable and more pleasurable. It is a terrible thing to be led by a blind
man. Everyone of us can run only as far as he can see. Leaders ought to be our
eyes, ought to be our ears, ought to be our legs. It is painful that we are
ruled in a way that frightens me. When God wants to punish a nation, He gives
them small boys who don’t know what the questions are to rule over them. A
small boy is a selfish person, he thinks only about himself.
How can only one man steal One
billion Naira when many are going to bed without food? I am of the opinion that
God is not happy with us because we don’t have respect for Him, we don’t obey
Him, we don’t seek His mind in what we do. The average Nigerian is a
periwinkle, the only king without a kingdom. The average Nigerian is a
self-centred person, the average Nigerian recognises no higher authority over
him and around him. When God gives a Nigerian a brand new shirt, he concludes
God wants him to become god to his people, whereas when God gives a man a
shirt, He wants the man to serve Him by serving His people, to be of help to the
poorest of the poor. You know, lepers feel no pain.
The nerves that are supposed to
convey feelings to other parts of the body are dead. When our nerves are dead,
we don’t care about what others are going through. What is the way forward?
There is nothing like innocent Nigerian. I have said that an average Nigerian
is like a periwinkle; the only king without a kingdom. The person you want to
call an innocent Nigerian is so arrogant and does not care whether somebody
rules over this world, whether there is a manager over this world. Is there a
way out? The way out is for us to go back to the Bible, believe the Bible, obey
the word of God. We are called to love one another, care for one another,
respect one another and serve one another and support one another. That is what
the Bible commands us to do. Almost everywhere in the country now, there are
problems.
Up North, Boko Haram and down
South, the militants. Where are we going? When you look down on me, you compel
me to fight you. When you refuse to know who I am, I will be compelled to tell
you who I am. Somebody around Boko Haram is asking questions that nobody wants
to listen to the same thing with the Niger Delta Avengers. They are asking
questions and nobody wants to answer those questions. They are asking, how can
we be generating so much money a day in oil proceeds, yet, we are hopelessly
poor? And when somebody is tired of persuading you, he is bound to apply
pressure. Somebody is asking a question and nobody is answering the question.
So, the people are saying, ‘our leaders don’t think we exist, we need to tell
them that we exist’. I was in South-Korea when they were hopelessly poor as we
are but, as we speak, they export cars. The first time I went to Dubai, I
cried. You could see what they have done with their money for the welfare of
their people. When I speak of our thoughtlessness and wickedness, I mean it.
For example, our road engineers are about the most corrupt in this country.
They build roads today and
tomorrow the roads collapse. They will build roads near a house without gutter.
They will build roads not to specifications and they will expect somebody to
say that they have completed the roads as required by law. I want to say that
our road engineers, civil engineers are among the enemies of this country. Are
you in support of the on-going war against corruption by President Muhammadu
Buhari? Everybody is in support of the war against corruption but the man whose
house is on fire is not interested in the chase of mosquitoes and rats, you
have to protect the human beings in that house first.
Nigeria is on fire and our
leaders are running after mosquitoes and rats. They have abandoned the issue.
Our house is on fire, there is poverty everywhere. Yes, there is war against
corruption which is good in a way because the discoveries have helped us to
know that the first coming of the soldiers was right. Now, we are shocked that
even soldiers are as corrupt as civilians but our house is on fire. So, while
we are chasing the fire, we should remember the human beings in that house and
protect them because it is for their sake and their sake only that they want to
put out the fire.
But a man who has no feeling for
others cannot solve that problem. The man who does not know what the questions
are, cannot answer the questions. We have been running in circles without
making progress. As we speak now, there is no road out of the East. To go to
Onitsha, you have to go through Owerri. We don’t have road out of the whole
East and from Uyo to Calabar, we don’t have roads, from Uyo to Umuohia, we
don’t have roads from Umuohia to Owerri, we don’t have roads and this has
lasted for more than five years. I was expecting our leaders to commit suicide
and I am shocked that none of them is behaving as if something has gone wrong.
That is why I call them political lepers. A leper does not feel anything.
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