18/03/2016

Nigeria in the eye of Trump’s storm


A presidential candidate that losses global respect even before he assumes office, due to the vitriolic expletives that he has hauled at women, religions, cultures, nations and race in the cause of running for office, risks becoming a liability instead of asset to the United States of America, a nation which is without equivocation the universal bastion of liberty.
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The loquacious King of hate speeches, and the US Republican Party presidential front runner, Donald Trump, known to have insulted the female gender, Islamic religion, Mexicans, Chinese, British and blacks amongst many others, seem to be doing everything obnoxious to attract media focus and has finally, to use the street lingo, “called out” Nigeria.
Yes, the xenophobic property mogul and reality show host, who derives pleasure in demonising any and every person, country, culture and race that tickles his fancy, has finally narrowed down his vicious attack from blacks and Africans by accusing Nigerians of stealing American jobs.
At a recent campaign rally, in Wichita, Kansas, Trump lashed out at Nigerians by spewing some of the most ignoble speeches made by a person of his stature against any country or race since Nazi Germany’s Adolph Hitler’s notorious hatred for the Jews that culminated in the holocaust-the most notorious genocide in the history of mankind.
According to Trump, “We need to get the Africans out (of the USA).Not the blacks, the Africans. Especially the Nigerians. They’re everywhere. I went for a rally in Alaska and met just one African in the entire state. Where was he from? Nigeria! He’s in Alaska taking our jobs. They’re in Houston taking our jobs. Why can’t they stay in their own country? Why? I’ll tell you why. Because they are corrupt. Their governments are so corrupt, they rob the people blind and bring it all here to spend. And their people run away and come down here and take our jobs! We can’t have that! If I become president, we’ll send them all home. We’ll build a wall at the Atlantic Shore. Then, maybe, we’ll re-colonise them because obviously they did not learn a damn thing from the British.”
Now, some Nigerians have argued that Nigeria deserves the bashing Trump’s insult because Nigerians, as the fear mongering populist demagogue, Trump, alleged in his outburst, could be found working in places as remote as Alaska, stealing American jobs. But my counter argument is that Americans are equally in far flung places like Eket, in Akwa Ibom and Excravos in Delta State in Nigeria where Exxon Mobil, an American oil major and others have been prospecting fit crude oil/ gas for many decades, yet Nigerians are not cursing them out for taking their jobs like Trump is doing.
It’s a such an irony that Trump who has often boasted that he made his billions building and selling luxury real estate properties to Arabs, Russians, Chinese and other affluent people from all over the world is now so anti-globalisation that he is threatening to build walls shutting out non-Americans from the so-called “God’s Own Country” just because he wants to win votes by playing to the gallery of angry rightist Republicans who are riled by the seeming drop in the US erstwhile Olympian position of influence in world affairs.
Although fellow Republicans, including the well-respected Governor Nikki Haley of South Carolina have denounced Trump’s scape-goating of peoples, religions, races and countries just to gain cheap popularity, the United Kingdom, which has also been at the receiving end of Trump’s caustic tongue, is now considering a law in parliament to ban the anti-establishment renegade politician, Trump, from visiting England.
It is worthy of note that the Wichita unwarranted ranting on Nigeria is not the first time that Trump would cast aspersions on Africans in the course of his inglorious run for the presidency of the USA- a country that was founded by immigrants and whose foundation is structured to welcome and integrate peoples from all over the world with legitimate quest for the proverbial American Dream.
It may be recalled that in a speech at Indianapolis, at the nascent stage of his campaign , the unorthodox Trump had similarly alleged that “some Africans are lazy fools, only good at eating, love making and stealing.” In his warped views: “The best they can do is gallivanting around ghettoes… Look at African countries like Kenya for instance, those people are stealing from their own government and go to invest the money in foreign countries.”
At that point in time, Trump only specifically mentioned Kenya because that country was in the news for the wrong reasons and it also happens to be the country of the father of president Barack Obama, Trump’s political archenemy.
Trump is now focusing his publicity-seeking antics on Nigeria via the diatribe about Nigeria and as a result, our nation is bearing the brunt of the corrosive Trump phenomenon since our country has overtaken Kenya as the embodiment of corruption and bad governance in Africa, due to the salacious details of the disbursement of the $2.1bn allocated for arms procurement now dubbed “#Dasukigate (diversion of defence funds into political campaign slush funds) which has recently become headline news items in the global media.
As evidenced by Trump’s vituperation, it is the Nigerian authorities that, vicariously and inadvertently, gave the reprehensible and petulant Trump the ammunition to shoot down Nigeria by raising so much negative dust about the integrity and leadership abilities of the immediate past administration which has attracted and magnified more public opprobrium and odium to Nigeria than respect.
What this implies is that the image we project in the public arena is what is used to define us as either human beings or as a nation and this validates the popular saying: “Be careful what you do to me because it might end up happening to you.”
That also explains exactly why l have in previous media interventions emphasised the need to reduce tension in the polity to engender an enabling environment for the urgently needed development of our dear country.
Specifically, l had recommended the toning down of corruption rhetoric and the parlous state of our economy while making a case for our leaders to roll up their sleeves and fight corruption fiercely but quietly and at the same time pursue progress and development with greater vigour.
According to the renown American human rights activist, Martin Luther King, whose birthday is celebrated with a public holiday in the USA on January 18, annually, “The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy.”
Onyibe, a former Commissioner in Delta State, is an alumnus of Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Boston Massachusetts, USA

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