Just outside President Goodluck Jonathan's office sat 17 ambulances, just in case he or one of his aides fell ill. They were seldom if ever used.
No actual health-care facility
nationwide had as many, and in fact a few still have none at all. But as
soon as a Nigerian newspaper took a photo of the ambulances and
published a story about them, they suddenly disappeared — probably to an
underground garage.
Jonathan is president of Nigeria
which should be among the world’s most prosperous nations. After all,
it produces an estimated 2.4 million barrels of oil each and every day.
With oil now selling at $93.61(as of today 24th March, 2013) a barrel, that’s $224 million in income
daily. And yet many hospitals can’t afford to buy an ambulance. The
reason, in my view: Nigeria is the most corrupt nation on earth.
Sure, Transparency International lists almost three dozen states as more corrupt – Chad,
Haiti, Laos, Yemen, Cambodia and the like. But are any of those nations
as wealthy as Nigeria — taking in $81 billion annually, just from the
sale of oil? No, not even one of them. So Nigeria steals and squanders
more money than any other nation, making it the world’s most corrupt, by
that measure.
Nigerian journalist Musikilu Mojeed finds all this so discouraging.
“With its geopolitical power, economic
resources and middle class,” he laments, “no country (with the possible
exception of South and Egypt )
has the power to change the course of black/African civilization like
Nigeria.” After all, Nigeria is Africa’s most populous state — and
large, twice the size of California.
So Nigerians are living an opportunity
squandered — particularly now. Egypt is in turmoil. In just the last few
days, in fact, many Egyptians have been calling for a military coup —
anything to rid the state of its widely despised Muslim Brotherhood
government. And a new report by the World Economic Forum ranked Egypt
the least safe and secure tourist destination among 140 tourist nations
evaluated.
Egypt has lost its place as the
Arab/African worlds’ leader, and Saudi Arabia never had it. So for
Nigeria, the time is ripe. But its leaders seem interested only in
stealing the state’s money to make themselves rich beyond imaging. Think
about it: $81 billion a year just from the oil, while most every local
government official still tells his people the nation just doesn’t have
enough money to fix the roads, schools or hospitals. (Roads are in such
terrible shape that government officials generally travel any distance
by helicopter.)
And Nigeria’s people — well, they are as
mistreated as any on earth. In only nine nations — among them Liberia,
Sierra Leone and Somalia — do more mothers die during childbirth. And in
only 10 states, including Chad, Afghanistan and Zimbabwe, is the
average life expectancy lower. Right now the average Nigerian’s average
life span ends at 52. That may be why the median age of Nigerians is
just 18.
A few months ago, the Economist
Intelligence Unit published an evaluation of the best places for babies
to born in 2013, given their probable welfare as
children and the chance for a safe, comfortable, prosperous life.
Switzerland, Australia and Norway were the top three. The United States
came in at 16th, largely because “babies will inherit the large debts of
the boomer generation.”
Dead last: Nigeria. “It is the worst place for a baby to enter the world in 2013,” the report said.
Even with all that wealth, only just over half the population has access to clean drinking water, and one-third to a toilet, UNICEF says. Two-thirds live below the poverty line. Only one child in four who contracts pneumonia is given antibiotics, and only about half the population is literate.
The CIA also
cites endemic “soil degradation; rapid deforestation; urban air and
water pollution.” All this in a county whose gross domestic product
stands at $236 billion a year, in the same league as Denmark, Chile,
Israel and the United Arab Emirates — prosperous, successful states to
be envied.
Goodluck Jonathan is certainly aware of
all of this. After all, taking the oath of office, he swore to “devote
myself to the service and well-being of the people of Nigeria. So help
me God.”
Well, just last week he demonstrated who
he really is and what he stands for when he pardoned a former state
governor who’d been convicted of embezzling state funds and laundering
the money. That pardon triggered a broad, angry uproar.
Good luck, Mr. Jonathan. It’s time you were impeached.
( Joel Brinkley is the Hearst professional in residence at Stanford University and a Pulitzer Prize-winning former correspondent for The New York Times.)This article was first published in the Los Angeles Times.
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