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Diezani Alison-Madueke |
Greg Odogwu
A Nigerian court recently ordered
the seizure of $40 million worth of jewelry and a customised gold iPhone
belonging to a former minister of petroleum resources, Diezani Alison-Madueke. According to a statement from the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission,
the items, including hundreds of bangles, rings, earrings, necklaces and
watches, were found at a property owned by Diezani.
When I first saw the news, I did
not even think about it – we are used to profligate (former) politicians. But a
few days ago, I saw something that made me realise that our society needs to
actually restructure the psychology of the rich. There are little things that
matter. And life is transient. At the end of the day, all the money amassed as
we chased the big things of life will not be there to save us from the same
society that we sought to “belong” to. At that time, it would be those little
things that matter, that could come around to give us the peace of mind required
to transfer the baton to the next generation.
When we fail to sort out these
little things, then the big things we achieved can never be small enough to
respond where small things are required. This was made manifest when
Alison-Madueke spoke to Ijaw youths in faraway London in a public event. She
said the moral fabric of the country had decayed because youths craved quick
ill-gotten wealth. Many observers watched and hissed. They already knew about
her over N16bn worth of silver, gold and phone stashed away somewhere in
Nigeria. Her voice now sounded hollow, even to her own people.
This article was inspired by what
I witnessed recently in Abuja. It was a cool evening and I decided to take a
walk along the pedestrian lane of the well-constructed Ahmadu Bello Way. I had
my face mask on, because observation of the COVID-19 protocol was in full
swing. After strolling for a couple of yards, I noticed two young men
approaching. They were in a spirited discussion, and looked like labourers
returning from one of the various construction sites scattered all over the
Federal Capital Territory.
I also noticed that as they approached, one of them was consciously scanning the sidewalk as if he was looking for something. When they were almost shoulder to shoulder with me, the scanning man stopped abruptly and also made his colleague to stop. It was as if he had seen what he was looking for. I followed his eyes to the well-manicured grass straddling the concrete pedestrian lane. On top of the grass was a discarded face mask. It looked incongruous in its grassy surrounding, not only because of its bright sky-blue colour, but because it looked clean and fairly new.
From the look of it, the face
mask was recently discarded by an unknown pedestrian, appearing “fairly used”.
I was puzzled because the two workmen were wearing their own face masks; though
theirs looked dirty and worn out. One could only wait and see the actual
intention of the young man who had sighted the discarded face mask, and was now
hesitating before it. Ostensibly, he wanted me to walk past. But because I
really wanted to know his intention, I did not want to stride off. So, I slowed
my steps, passed the duo, and stopped, to see what happened.
The young man casually bent over,
picked up the waste face mask, examined it as if to ascertain its “cleanness”,
and then carefully folded it into two, and pocketed it. I was amazed. I was
shocked to my marrow, so I stood as if transfixed to the spot, staring at the
two workmen. Now, I did not care whether they noticed that I was staring. I
just could not understand what prompted the young man to pick up a face mask
used by someone else!
There was no logic to explain
what was happening. For one, face masks are as cheap as N100, hawked in every
corner of the town, even right up the road where we stood. So, why would
someone pick a used face mask discarded by an unknown person. Secondly, face
masks are supposed to protect us against air-borne viral droplets. It is worn
by both COVID-19 patients and non-patients. So, why would someone pick a
discarded face mask when the person who discarded it may be a COVID-19 patient?
There were many troubling
questions that popped up in my head, and refused to go away. Meanwhile, the
journalist in me took over. I mentally worked on the best way to confirm my
fears about the action of the two workmen. I now saw them as partners in guilt
because the one allowed the other to bend down on the road and pick up a
discarded face mask without as much as cautioning his friend.
Before I finally decided what to
say, the man that now had the used face mask, observing that I was quizzical
concerning his action, looked me straight in the eyes and laughed. It was a
guilty-sounding, high-pitched, unnatural squawk. I immediately felt ashamed on
his behalf. It was now obvious that he understood what he did.
“Bros, na so we dey do am o!” he
desperately shrieked in pidgin English, as if he was trying to explain to the
whole world. Other pedestrians did not know what he did. They just walked past.
I was the only person he was talking to. Without being told, I could feel what
he meant by “na so we dey do am” (this is how we always do it). There are some
areas of the town where affluent people were likely to discard “new looking”
face masks. Some people pick them up and reuse. In the same manner, people
scavenge for used plastic bottles and cans in similar areas.
I decided to lecture the guys.
“But don’t you know that you can contract COVID-19 by using used face masks.
There are cheap face masks you can buy in every corner of the street. And the
ones made from textile materials can be washed and reused many times over. You
can use those ones, instead of picking up used ones from the side of the road.
Please you have to also consider your loved ones and even your colleagues at
work. You are actually putting everybody around you at risk by unnecessarily
exposing yourself to COVID-19.”
But the young man did not seem to
get my point. Rather, he began to justify his action. In fact, he sounded
angry. He said that he was trekking on Ahmadu Bello Way because he could not
afford N50 to board a public transport along the express. He said his wage at
his construction site was not enough to take him through the month. He said the
government did not care whether he died or he lived. He said that he expected
his superiors at his work place to provide him with face mask free of charge –
but they did not.
The young man talked, and talked. It was as if I had helped him to let off some bottled-up anger. He then sighed, and said, “Don’t worry, I dey wash am with hot water before I use am!” Suddenly, I remembered Diezani’s jewelry and gold iPhone lying somewhere, unused and useless. I could not help calculating how many face masks they would have been used to purchase for some people who could not afford it. Or, how many palliatives they could have provided, for many Nigerians reeling under the societal impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. (Punch)
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