By Farooq A. Kperogi Twitter: @farooqkperogi Responsible and morally sensitive governments all over the world toil day and night to in...
By Farooq A. Kperogi
Twitter: @farooqkperogi
Responsible and morally sensitive governments all over the
world toil day and night to invent novel ways to make life a little better for
their citizens and to assuage the inevitable existential injuries that life
episodically inflicts on people. But not the Buhari regime.
The regime's single-minded obsession and raison d'être, it
would seem, is to make life a little more miserable than it already is for
everyday folks every day. One of its core governing philosophies is sadism,
which is the perverse pleasure derived from the suffering of others.
(Someone who knows Buhari at a close range told me sometime
ago that Buhari is himself a sadistic narcissist who derives pain from the
success of people close to him but who’re not his relatives. He said Buhari resents people who wear expensive clothes and drive nice cars (like he does) and that
people who want to be in his good graces have to learn to pretend to be poor
even if they’re rich because he derives joy from thinking people aren’t doing
well. So there’s a convergence between
his personal disposition and his regime’s governing philosophy).
His regime’s entire policy thrust almost from inception has
been centered around tactics and strategies for tormenting Nigerians. In 2016,
the regime precipitously hiked petrol prices and instigated a devastating
recessionary spiral that catapulted Nigeria to the position of the world’s
poverty capital. It again increased petrol prices this year at a time of global
slump in the prices of petrol.
Petrol is Nigeria’s lifeblood and the engine of its economy
in ways it is not anywhere else in the world. When the price of petrol goes up
in Nigeria, everything else goes up—except, of course, the already measly
salaries of common people. It incites a rise in the cost of transportation,
which leads to increases in food prices, in rent, and in the cost of other necessities
of life.
There is no other part of the world I know of where fluctuations
in the price of petrol automatically activates across-the-board inflationary
conflagration. So the regime knows that jacking up petrol prices under all
kinds of idiotic guises is a surefire way to achieve its governing philosophy
of mass pauperization of Nigerians.
The Buhari regime is
also one of only a few governments I know of in the world that charges its
citizens “stamp duties” for every bank deposit they make—in addition to the
exploitative charges that banks impose on their customers. (A relative of mine
who lives in Ireland said the Irish government also charges a negligible “stamp
duty” on bank deposits and ATM transactions, but the standard of living in
Ireland is lightyears above Nigeria’s, not to mention that Ireland has one
of the world’s best social welfare systems).
In other words, Nigeria is one of only a few countries where
people lose money by keeping it in the bank.
Not done with stealing from the poor in the name of “stamp
duty” on bank deposits, the regime, in July this year, “directed landlords and
property agents to charge six per cent stamp duty on all tenancy and lease
agreements to shore up its revenue sources,” according to the Guardian of July 29.
The regime’s goal in introducing a 6% stamp duty on tenancy
and lease agreements appeared to be to expand the misery of already traumatized
Nigerians by causing a rise in rent. In the aftermath of enormous nationwide
indignation, it backed down, but it achieved its aim nonetheless by hiking
petrol prices a few weeks later, which has led to rent increases.
In 2016, former Minister of Communication Adebayo Shittu
sponsored a bill in the National Assembly for a 10-percent tax increase on
phone calls, text messages, and Internet data plans. After popular outcries, the
bill was “suspended until the conclusion of study to determine retail prices
for broadband and data services in Nigeria.”
That same year, in November, Central Bank of Nigeria governor Godwin Emefiele proposed that all phone calls that lasted longer than
3 minutes should be taxed, saying, “government could earn about N100 billion per annum from this alone.”
Electricity tariffs have gone up more times in the past
fives than at any time before, and each increase brings forth more darkness and
despair. I don’t know anywhere else in the world where the government forces
people to pay more for less and to subsidize ineptitude. But that’s what a governmental
philosophy of sadism entails.
It also entails a thoughtless closure of the borders, a ban
on food importation even when there’s a severe food shortage because people
have abandoned farming all over Nigeria as a consequence of the escalating homicidal
fury of Fulani herders on sedentary communities, which the government
studiously avoids talking about much less finding a solution to.
After taxing everything that moves, stretching the elastic
limits of price regimes, and imposing “stamp duties” on everything that catches
their sterile fancies, regime honchos were running out of ideas on how to make
Nigeria an even more treacherous snake pit than they've already made it.
Then one of them must have had an epiphany and thought: Oh,
we can make Nigerian bank account holders re-register their bank accounts even
though they already went through hell to get Bank Verification Numbers a few
years ago. They decided to call that “re-certification.”
It's obviously pointless duplication, but that's not the point.
The point is to inflict pain and misery on Nigerians, which is the Buhari
regime’s reason for being. It is what gives it its highs and delectations. I
hear the policy has been withdrawn now after a massive social media uproar.
But there's more on the way. Regime strategists and
tacticians are perpetually brainstorming on the next sadistic agony to visit on
Nigerians. When they are out of ideas, they might choose to tax the air Nigerians
breathe, the land Nigerians walk on, and even the saliva they gulp.
This is all part of what I have called Buhari’s reverse
Robin Hoodism, which I defined in a December 3, 2016 column titled “Reverse Robin Hoodism as Buhari’s Governing Philosophy” as “robbing the poor to
enrich the rich.”
The increased taxes, stamp duties, and tariffs Nigerians
have been paying in the last five years aren’t used to build or renew
non-existent or crumbling infrastructure; they are used to subsidize the life
of epicurean lavishness of Nigeria’s political elites. They are used to fund
yearly brand-new cars, medical tourism, sitting and “hazard allowances,” and so
on for politicians and their hangers-on.
Of course, the increased financial burden on poor Nigerians also helps to keep them in check and renders them more docile and controllable.
The poorer people are the less strength they tend to have to resist oppression
and the more likely they are to be esurient for crumps from their oppressors.
So the regime’s governing philosophy of sadism is rooted in the desire to keep
the vast majority of the people dirt poor, miserable, ignorant, and therefore more
manipulatable.
At the rate things are going in Nigeria, as I pointed out in
a recent social media update, the next logical step for APC would be to change its
party symbol from a broom to a cutlass and to change its name from “All
Progressives Congress” to “All People's Cutlass” (APC) since it has become a
proud, equal-opportunity weapon for cutting down people's joy, hopes, and peace.
In true democracies, people run the government; in Nigeria, the government runs the people. In Buhari's regime, the government goes further than run the people; it runs them to the ground, incapacitates them, and ruins them. That’s the sum of its ruling philosophy.
Well captured sir
ReplyDeleteThe good news is that even in the North where the religion of majority of the people is Buharism, thoughts are changing radically. Many people are now apostatizing; they are converting from Buharism to Islam and Christianity. Alhamdulillah. There is this viral video of an old Hausa man lamenting and raining curse on Buhari. I just hope the man will not be arrested by the DSS. The man claimed that Firaun (Pharaoh) is far more useful and better than Buhari. The old man's lamentation is the summary of your write up today. I will send you the video clip. Thanks for always updating us on the new strategies devised by this government to inflict hardship on us.
ReplyDeleteFootball is only thing that unite Nigerian,but now hunger and insecurity tend to unite Nigerian
DeleteWell, I have to commend prof for speaking for the weak. I just hope that those who have responsibilities to govern the country are getting the message. I'm always delighted that history of their stewardship will be properly documented for then to give account to the creator of the universe who gave them the opportunity to serve. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteDead by APC changing logo from broom to cutlass 😄😄
ReplyDeleteIt's hard for me to believe that Buhari would deliberately inflict harm on ordinary Nigerians.I think that's a bit of an exaggeration. Space wouldn't permit me here to prove you wrong with statistics; it's only sufficient to note that the current hardship being suffered by many Nigerians have causes that are beyond Buhari: it emanates largely from an unfortunate convergence of factors that Buhari couldn't have controlled or foreseen. Bad as subsidy removal is for the masses,I think the Government had no choice, from the economic point of view, but to remove the them. They are a gigantic scam. Still,it's implementation was ill-timed.
ReplyDelete