New Nigeria
The Five-Year Rule
This column is not for the faint-hearted, the line here is bold and brass, and this surely is the place where
we call succubus by name. Dare you to read on; or would/could you go the extra mile and step forward to be counted.
Challenging Indifference and Apathy
The picture below is of a fourteen (14) year old car. Now, to look at it, you may be hard
pressed to tell. It has been well kept by a succession of owners and driven in a way that
is consistent with the manufacturer's guidelines of use, its performance is outstanding,
and its reliability is far above average. I thank GOD that, to date, it has yet to fail me.
For one to induct, from this example of a car, that all decade old cars remain in good
condition and maintain above average performance and reliability, would be credulous in
the extreme. There are horses for courses, and the rusk and the stable are just as
important as the breed and the ancestry. A five (5) year old car is not necessarily in a
better state of road-worthiness than a twenty (20) year old car.
For this reason, governments the world over have recognised that there can be no age, within
reason that a car, simply on account of its age, becomes unworthy for use on the public
highways. It stands to good sense that a car bought 50 years ago, and kept almost exclusively
within a garage, would be in almost mint condition, while a car bought two (2) years ago
and run like rain water by a hyper-active travelling salesman may begin to masquerade the
appearance of an eighty (80) year old motor.
By going against the grain to impose this five year rule on the citizens of this great
country, the members of the legislature would suggest to the population that they are either
completely out of touch with the reality that faces most Nigerians today, or worse still,
that they do not care either way what happens to the common man.
Immoral, Hypocritical, Unjust, Impracticable, and Counter-Productive
This legislation is immoral, hypocritical, unjust, impracticable, and counter-productive, and
it should be repealed. There is no study that backs up any reasoning behind this legislation,
there was no consultative process to weigh the opinions and interests of those to be affected.
There was no site study, within a controlled zone to evaluate, first hand, its potential
impact, and since it was first mooted, to when it was passed as law, till date, the opposition
articulated by many to this parade of legislative impunity has failed to disabuse the minds
of those who promulgated it.
An Immoral Law That Opposes GOD
A statistical analysis of real income figures for the country will show quite clearly that less
than half of a percent of Nigerians can afford to buy a new car, and we are not alluding here
to the BMW or Mercedes Benz. Most Nigerians cannot afford to cough up for a new Skoda, not even
under duress. This is the sad truth that be-straddles our consciousness like an oppressive and
perservering ague. If therefore legislation is passed to deprive ninety-nine (99%) percent of a
populace the freedom of access to a necessity, those behind such a law must of necessity have a
quarrel with GOD.
A Hypocritical Law That Is Imposed By A Few On The Many
Given the statistics just quoted, and the number of legislators who carried the vote, one can
draw safely to the conclusion that this is a law imposed on the majority, by an imperious
and hypocritical minority. Why 'hypocritical'? Hypocritical is truly apt here in that the
perpertrators of this antagonism would not submit willingly to any laws that would infringe
their freedom, to indulge luxuries; to undermine the established instituition and authorities;
to usurp the supremacy of the constitution; and to violate the word and the spirit of the law.
If the same law had been passed by a military regime, these same people would be the most
vociferous in condemning it from the sidelines. Moreso, the roads are over-run by old, decrepit,
and dangerously unsafe vehicles that are many times worse than the 6 (6) year old cars that
are being banned from import. Given that there is no viable local alternative to fill the
demand for mobility, these fellows will have the populace commuting by foot.
An Unjust Law In That Its Brunt Rests On The Disadvantaged
This law penalises those who are already punished for their failure to be born to wealthy
parents, and their inability or reluctance to join the limited ranks of rogues and thieves
who hold sway in the country today. It punishes those who, by hard work and persistence
carry the weight of the bridge between public service and private enterprise, in providing
facility to citizens seeking to function in a quasi post-traditional society. They are the
ones who seek to walk where the government has feared to tread, and this law would punish
them for it.
An Impracticable Law In That It Is Largely Un-enforceable
There was a man who feared neither man nor regarded the devil; but what about the practicalities
of dining with gods when you have neither wings nor broomstick? Supposing that we were to damn
the people and disdain eternal judgement; does this country have the means to enforce this law,
of harder still, the will to do so. Is this not a boon and a bonanza to the Customs officials
and the port administrators, the police, and the thousands of middle-men, criminals, and
under-world operatives, in and out of government, who will now begin to feast where the government
has chosen to fast? The police most certainly do not have the manpower and equipment to enforce
this law, and their unpaid, demoralised personnel certainly do not have the desire nor the option
to ignore a livelihood - emphasis here on livel(y) - in the pursuit of principle and order. So
where does this leave us?
A Counter Productive Law That Works against Economic Progress
Yet for all this, would the desperate and the hard-bearing press on with a couter-intuitive law?
However, the fingers on this one do not square up, neither for the desperado seeking a quick fix to
the woeful state of road-going vehicles - better to MOT them - or for that matter, the principled
and infexible soul, seeking to regulate the influx of dangerous-machinery-pretending-to-be-car. Still
better to inspect new cars on arrival, and require a post arrival MOT. In the absence of a public -
meaning government backed - transport system that works, citizens should (must) be given the right
to choose how they get to and fro within metropolis, and they may choose not to walk. This law
seeks to demobilise the nation by obreption, and so bring the economy, which is already labouring,
to a resounding stop.
This law is not right, it is not fair and it is not workable. The law makes criminals out of honest
citizens, by forcing them into the hands of corrupt governemtn officials. Inevitably, the law will
be broken several thousand times, and much as prohibition failed in the United States, so, eventually
will this too. But it would be so much better if all the blood money that is bound to be made under
the auspicies of this law were staunched now. The legislature can still move now to put an end to
this contradiction of aspiration and justice, and give Nigerians some encouragement in an already
over-bearing and oppressive environment.
Still standing up for the truth. "Otolorin" 28th February, 2003
In the battle for the very soul of this great country,
men and women must choose either to be for, or against their people. The complacency
of the majority for the last forty years has brought us to this nadir of nationhood.
We pray and believe that GOD's time has come for the redemption of Nigeria. Will you join
up and line up with the hope of GOD's people for this country, or will you stay at home,
and wait for others to save your country?
Remember; if you are not part of the Solution, then you must be part of the Problem.
Time is now to step forward and be counted.
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