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Ubani |
By Comrade Aloysius Attah
I0 years after the death of Comrade Chima Ubani, the former
Executive Director of The Civil Liberties Organization (CLO) Nigeria, the ideals he stood for and the
struggles he died for still stares us in the face.
Chima Ubani died in a controversial ghastly road accident on
September 25, 2005 along the Postikum, Yobe highway while coordinating the
Labour and Civil Society (LASCO) coalition rally/ protests against the
incessant increase in the prices of petroleum products by the then Obasanjo
administration.
Chima was supposed to fly to Abuja for the continuation of
the rally but they said that the seat is filled up and he had to give up the
space for Adams Oshiomole, the then National Chairman of Nigerian Labour
Congress.
A die hard fighter of the oppressed and one whose life was
an epitome of selflessness, transparency, abhorrence of obscene lifestyle and
aversion for greed and primitive accumulation, Chima started his activism from
the University of Nigeria, Nsukka. He was rusticated and later recalled to campus
and he graduated with a first class honours but the university senate denied
him the first class honours because of his rigid stance against the oppression
of the students.
It was during the commendation service for the late Chima at
the Auditorium of the University of Nigeria, Enugu Campus witnessed by this
writer and other human rights activists that the authorities of the university
made an open confession about Chima’s academic result status.
A non tribalist and non conformist human rights crusader,
Chima lived all his adult life in Lagos, married from Edo state and never owned
any personal property in his native home in Oboete Obingwa, Abia State till his
death.
As at the time of his death, many promises were made on his
burial by those in government authority but the bulk of the promises were left
unfulfilled save for the then government of Lagos state who offered
accommodation to his wife and children.
Ten years after Chima’s death, the struggle he lived and
died for seems to have been in vain. Pump prices of Premium Motor Spirit goes
for N87 per liter while our refineries are moribund leading to importation and
the fraudulent subsidy regime things. Kerosene which the ordinary citizen uses
to cook while the villagers rely on it to light their lanterns in the night
goes for an official price of N50 but Nigerians from time immemorial now buy
the product between N110 to N140 per liter.
Our roads remain death traps with craters and gullies
tearing down vehicles and causing untold road carnages where uncountable
numbers of Nigerians are roasted daily.
Mr. President who swore to uphold the constitution of the
Federal Republic of Nigeria on assumption of office is unapologetical in his
Northernisation agenda against the tenets and provisions of the Federal
Character Principle.
Corruption remains all time high with some people who have
been in the corridors of power either as appointees, elected or contractors/
conduit pipes amassing so much wealth that the collective treasury is empty
while their personal accounts and investments are overflowing.
Chima wanted an egalitarian society where there won’t be the
ever widening gap between the haves and the have-nots. A society where those
who hold political power hold it in trust for the people and are consumed by the
pursuance of public good against personal aggrandizement.
Why is it that that
in the 21st century and with the abundance of both human and natural resources,
the country still wallows in underdevelopment , poverty in the midst of plenty
and collapse of basic infrastructures?
A country that places no value on its human resources and
treats its citizens without dignity has no place in history as a great
country. The Supreme Pontiff of the
Roman Catholic Church, Pope Francis was emphatic on this when he said that “
the greatness of a society is found in the way it treats those in need , those
who have nothing apart from their poverty”
Emile Zola identified truth and justice as pillars of
greatness of any nation when he said that the greatness of any nation depends
on them.
We recite the National Anthem daily and we show our
hypocritical nature all the time when we sing that “The labour of our heroes
past shall never be in vain”.
All the labours of our heroes past have been ridiculously in
vain because apart from not immortalizing their efforts, the decision makers
have never made genuine efforts to live and act by the ideals those heroes
stood for.
As we therefore mark the 10th year anniversary of the
passage of this extraordinaire human rights and good governance crusader, it is
a clarion call for those in various government authorities to place the public
above self.
The activists should rev up their engine room and remember
their callings as the conscience of the nation. This is the time for
realignment, coalition and action to rescue the nation and keep those in
authority on their toes.
The time to stay in the sideline and criticize only is also
fading away, so let there be synergy that will allow the ‘fighters’ to be in
the saddle too.
At 55 years of independence, Nigeria cannot continue to
wallow in all indices of underdevelopment and bad governance; it is time to
kill all that has stunted our growth all the years past.
The time to immortalize the late Chima Ubani and others who
died in the struggle is now, both in symbols and in positive actions.
(Attah is Chairman, Civil Liberties Organization (CLO), Anambra State
Branch. He can be reached via: 08035090548, attahcomrade@yahoo.com)
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