#NotTooYoungToRun: A Personal Experience. By Jude Feranmi
Every time I am caught in introspecting about Nigeria and
meditating about the solutions to the many problems that we face as a nation,
from corruption to lack of infrastructure to a huge housing deficit to the
rotten educational system to insecurity in all the corners of the geo-political
zones to internet fraud and codeine addiction amongst the youth, I am forced to
think about the future of Nigeria.
What will this future look like? Most of the times when I
get the opportunity to speak to an audience, I have formed an habit of asking
the audience to add 20 years to their current age and try to project what life
in Nigeria will be in that time. From all indicators, figures and charts, the
picture of this future is such that no one will be interested in being a part
of that future.
This future starts from as early as next year when Nigeria
will overtake India as the country with the highest number of people living in
extreme poverty to 25 years’ time when Nigeria will be competing with China,
India and US for top 3 most populated country to 15 years’ time when there
would have already been at least 7 metres rise in the sea level covering most
of Bayelsa State and the luxury highlands of the coast of Lagos that are just 5
metres above sea level.
The old-age prayer that the lives of the young ones will be
better than what the old ones experienced no longer obtains. There is now a
seemingly, even proud assertion by members of the old generation that what they
experienced was far better than what we have today with the slogan-ization of the “good old days”. When this gloomy
future finally arrives, who will be the victims and the casualties?
It is at this point that the #NotTooYoungToRun movement
comes in. An advocacy that started before the days of President Goodluck
Jonathan has now metamorphosed into a global movement with the United Nations
Youth Envoy latching on the narrative to drive home that demand – that young
people be allowed to run for office. Here in Nigeria the demands are to reduce
the age for contesting to as low as 25 for the House of Representatives and 35
for President.
The #NotTooYoungToRun Bill having thankfully passed both
houses have now being sent to the state houses of assembly for the next hurdle
as we hope for its eventual passage in at least 24 states. As a strong
proponent of this bill having canvassed for its passage, I think there is a
more serious need to now at least start to ask the hard questions that critics
have posited as their reasons for its objections.
How many of Nigeria’s young, passionate competent people who
are advocates of this bill are known and popular in their wards of
residence/origin? How many of us are impactful enough on a local scale? How
many of us are recognized as the leaders of this generation the same way we are
recognized on social media? How much followership do we have in our wards? To
what level can we influence the politics of our community vis a vis security,
economic activity, local organizing for solving little problems and overall
emotional impact?
There is no gainsaying in asserting that we need to ease our
way into the leadership of our nation right now so that we can make the
policies that positively impact on the
future that we will be a part of, as opposed to our current leaders whose
vision is about how proposals and projects and legislation benefits them and
their pockets today, not even tomorrow. But to change this leadership into future-centric
leaders amongst us who are passionate about better living for us all, we cannot
but start at the lowest level where it matters.
As a young Nigerian, I have seen my parents go through the
painful experience of building a factory and shutting it down after 5 years, a
lot sweat and high blood pressure. I have seen the effect of poor education as
my friends who we played football on the same streets go from dropping out of
school to becoming broke to turning into survival criminals. I have seen my country
fail the best students in a class in accidents on a road trip only to fly their
corpses back home to their parents and lecturers destroy female students’
careers because they refuse to sleep with them.
Most of those who have led the #NotTooYoungToRun movement
are leaders of the 83 civil society organizations who came together to start
this about 9 years ago. As we continue to engage the state representatives on
the passage of the #NotTooYoungToRun bill, we must sit back and ask ourselves
what roles we are going to play in the gloomy future that besets us. Are you
going to be laying the foundation for another generational mistake like we
witnessed in 1966 and 1999 by staying in the background while those who are
versed in the ‘usual way to do politics’ take over this advantage? Are you
going to be simply content with opening up the space for the children of those
who have gone before us to destroy our future and care nothing for the next day
talk less of the next year?
I am strongly convinced that unless we ALL go back to our
wards and make the case for a better Nigeria in our lifetime and the case for a
change in leadership to make that happen, our efforts will not only have been
in vain, we would have actively contributed to the continued oppression of this
incompetent and selfish political class.
I have decided to take that ‘backward’ step. I hope all the
young and passionate Nigerians with a high level of competence, the capacity to
deliver results and the character to lead the aspirations of a new Nigeria will
do the same.
Jude Feranmi
National Youth Leader
KOWA PARTY
jude.feranmi@kowaparty.com.ng
Labels: #NOTTOOYOUNGTORUN, KOWA, Politics
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