Although Nigeria is facing different
challenges to her development process, some challenges pose greater
threats to her unity and security than others, including herdsmen
killings, Boko Haram insurgency, corruption, mounting poverty,
inequality, unemployment, rising cost of living, and ethnic/religious
conflicts. To you, which of these factors pose the greatest challenge to
Nigeria’s development process and how can it be tackled successfully?
ABIMBOLA AKOSILE
* The surge in herdsmen mayhem
across states in Nigeria, Boko Haram insurgency and the continuous kid’s
gloves handling by our leadership, is highly alarming. We need to be
alive first before we can think of how to tackle poverty, corruption
etc. How did Nigeria become a cheap prey?
– Ms. Nkeiruka Abanna, Lagos State
* Though the Nigerian State is
bedeviled with complex developmental challenges, the most fundamental
threat to the sustainable progress of Nigeria is the bane of quality
leadership and corruption. Quality, innovative and inclusive leadership
devoid of corrupt tendencies will resolve all other challenges of
insecurity, poverty, unemployment, ethnicity and religious conflicts,
unemployment among other issues. Leadership is the fulcrum pillar upon
which Nigeria’s development will be anchored. God bless Nigeria.
– Mr. Ekpa, Stanley Ekpa, author, Abuja
* Insurgency is our real threat
today. The past governments trivialised Boko Haram and today Nigeria is
in gory security crises, living in permanent fears daily especially in
the North-east. Rampant killer herdsmen must also be sincerely checked
before it is too late. Benefactors of this tragedy are not spirits.
Think of all the precious lives, money, time, energy etc expended so far
to no avail. Now that elections are due, a stitch in time will
definitely save nine.
– Miss Apeji Patience Eneyeme, Badagry, Lagos State
* The biggest threat to our
development at this stage is the lack of social virtue called trust. In a
democracy like ours, we the voters must be able to trust the elected
leaders that they are working in our best interest but this is not
presently the case. If the masses cannot trust leaders to make the best
decision, the leaders are handicapped because their legitimacy is
already challenged. We need trust in our society so that we can stop
shouting down ourselves in needless battles of rivalry and engage in
healthy debates to help us formulate the best policies for national
development.
– Mr. Oluwapelumi Oyeniyi, Osogbo, Osun State
* Well, we are architects of our
problems because we failed to elect credible people in governance to
move Nigeria forward. Until we stop tribal or religious sentiment in
leadership, we cannot have any impact in development of Nigeria. Let us
correct our mistake come 2019.
– Mr. Gordon Chika Nnorom, Public Commentator, Umukabia, Abia State
* The four current biggest threats
to Nigeria’s development include: Fulani herdsmen killings; Boko Haram
insurgency; increasing corruption where leaders are most culpable; and
lack of truth from PMB and his close associates. We have come to believe
that he has a different agenda and all those backing him have skeletons
in their cupboards, and are afraid of exposure.
– Hon. Babale Maiungwa, U/Romi, Kaduna
* Herdsmen killings and the Boko
Haram insurgency are menaces that affect businesses, agricultural
development, movement and livelihoods of innocent citizens. We need
educational development of the herdsmen in terms of new breeds of cattle
and ranching, provision of cattle routes, education on the needs to
live peacefully. To tackle the Boko Haram insurgency effectively there
should be reorientation and training of the Military, Police forces and
the State Security. The masses should be more alert, with a household
census to identify those causing the various problems and bring them to
book.
– Mr. Michael Adedotun Oke, Founder Michael Adedotun Oke Foundation, Federal Capital Territory, Abuja
* I think corruption is the greatest
threat to our development. Looters should be indicted with death
sentence and for anybody else who is indicted with them. Let Nigeria
focus on zero tolerance to corruption.
– Mr. Oye Ade, Lagos State
* A past we have never learned from
always seems to keep our development arrested in Nigeria. We always say,
forget the past and come up with solutions. Then we go and make the
exact same mistakes we made in the past. Every great country today
analysed their past mistakes, learned from the errors and applied it to
their present and consequently secured a good future. The solutions to
our unique problems lie in our unique past. Until we go back, even as
far as colonial rule, we may continue to repeat the same old errors.
– Mr. Buga Dunj, Jos, Plateau State
* Insecurity is the biggest threat
to Nigeria’s development today. Kidnapping, killer herdsmen, political
robberies, treasury lootings in virtually every sector of the
government, House, economy, polity, etc point to disunity, insincerity
e.t.c yet they waste tax payers’ funds, time and energy. Those
manipulating our security system must be identified and hunted down
urgently for good.
– Mr. Apeji Onesi, Lagos State
* Of all centrifugal forces
threatening to tear Nigeria apart, two of them are particularly
hydra-headed: poverty and insecurity. All other malaise plaguing the
nation such as unemployment, inequality, terrorism, and killer herdsmen
e.t.c are products of poverty and insecurity. To tackle these ills
successfully, government must ameliorate the living condition of its
citizens and be ready to deal decisively with any act of criminality,
irrespective of whose ox is gored.
– Mr. Paul A. Jideofor, Dept. of Languages, FCT COE, Zuba, Abuja
* Which development, when there is
no security; heartless Fulani herdsmen, continued Boko Haram killings,
illegal arms are still in circulation; corruption, dehumanising poverty,
and where both states and the federal government still owe pensioners
and staff members? Government should as a matter of urgency step in to
disarm all those who own such arms. Without doing such, no meaningful
development will be achieved.
– Mr. Dogo Stephen, Kaduna
* The herders/farmers debacle should
be thoroughly thrashed out with all sides willing and ready to
compromise. Let us have model ranches first. The wealthy class should
get together and set up a couple of these ranches and practicalise to
the herders what they stand to gain financially e.t.c from buying into
the new idea. Government should get serious about mopping up illicit
firearms nationwide.
– Mr. E. Iheanyi Chukwudi, B.A.R. Abuja
* The legislators at the National
Assembly constitute the biggest threat to our development, in my own
view. They seem to live in a world of their own, far away from the
people they represent. They only care about their own personal comfort
and their antics also inadvertently led to this country’s recent
negative ranking on corruption by TI. The Legislature needs complete
overhaul!
– Mr. Olumuyiwa Olorunsomo, Lagos State
THE RESPONSE
Top threat: Insecurity
Second: Corruption
Third: Poverty
Radical tip: Overhaul Legislators!

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