Reuben Abati is just a clown, I think he is a better writer than an adviser, Lool. Just read this funny and interesting piece by him.
"See what your
friends are writing”
“Who?” “Your fellow columnists. See how they are attacking the Minister of Interior, General Abdulrahman Dambazau, just because an orderly helped to shine his shoes in public.”
“I really don’t see what the hoopla is all about”
“Me too”
“I think many of our people just like to talk about shoes. For five years, Nigerians kept talking about how former President Goodluck Jonathan had no shoes as a child.”
“Who?” “Your fellow columnists. See how they are attacking the Minister of Interior, General Abdulrahman Dambazau, just because an orderly helped to shine his shoes in public.”
“I really don’t see what the hoopla is all about”
“Me too”
“I think many of our people just like to talk about shoes. For five years, Nigerians kept talking about how former President Goodluck Jonathan had no shoes as a child.”
“But he was the one that started it. Last
week or so, the former President was again talking about shoes. In
America.”
“I think people love shoes. That is why they
won’t also allow Dambazau to rest over his shoes.”
“Read what your friend has written here. He
says the orderly was subjecting himself to indignity by bending down to shine
his oga’s shoes at a public ceremony.”
“He doesn’t understand. Many of the
commentators are probably thinking of their own type of shoes. When you see
some shoes, you’d certainly not want a speck of dust anywhere close by. There
are shoes and there are shoes. All these people making noise, have they seen
some shoes?”
“Someone once showed me his pair of shoes
which he said he bought for 2, 000 pounds. I swear I’d gladly clean such shoes
even if it is at a solemn funeral.”
“Do you have any idea the type of shoes the
Minister was wearing?”
“No. But what does it matter? My point really
is that people should stop blaming the Minister. Look when you are in public
office, things like that happen. It is the duty of your aides to make sure you
look good all the time. “
“I agree. A Minister of the Federal Republic
must always be impeccably dressed. If you ask me to choose between Minister
Dambazau and that one that wears beret and dresses as if he is going for a Man
O’ War session, I’ll choose Dambazau any day.”
“My own point is that nobody should blame the
Interior Minister. It is not as if he summoned the orderly and asked him to
start shining his shoes in public. These things happen. We should blame
the aide. Aides in government corridors are too sycophantic, sometimes, they
don’t fit the occasion to the act.”
“I have seen quite a few of such aides. I
once went with someone to visit a state Governor. The Governor was the
only one sitting on a sofa. All his aides including commissioners sat on the
floor. I didn’t know what to do, whether to stand or join the aides on the
floor. “
“Those aides often respond to their oga’s body
language though. And what did you do?”
“Me? I sat down on the sofa oh. I think it is
the aides who are guilty. It is a peculiar kind of ailment: it is called eye
service.”
“I know. We don’t really have a civil
service.”
“We have an eye service. Anything that will
make the boss happy, even if the same aides will later turn around and bad
mouth the same boss.”
“You know in some government houses,
aides behave like robots. When their boss stands up, they also stand. When the
boss sits down, they too sit down. They eat what eats, and when they see
the big man’s wife, they start grinning from ear to ear.”
“I have seen otherwise educated aides
carrying bags for their Oga’s wife.”
“And you know they don’t need to be forced to
do all that. People just do it. It is a way of showing loyalty”
“But I think your friend’s point in this
article is that the big men should discourage such behaviour.”
“Have you not seen where people kneel down to
talk to their boss? Even when they are asked to stand up or sit down, you’d see
adults saying, let me remain on the ground sir. I am fine sir, Your
Excellency. I am afraid one of these days, you’d see an aide prostrating
publicly to make their boss feel good. Don’t blame the boss, blame the aide.”
“I still believe that some big men actually
enjoy it. An old friend lost his job as a commissioner because he had developed
the habit of arguing with the Governor at Council meetings. He refused to
behave like other commissioners, the oga-is-always-right crowd.”
“Any boss that is always right cannot get it
right.”
“You know, the guy told me that at a
particular Council meeting, one of his colleagues stood up and told the
Governor, sir in fact, I have been meaning to tell you, I don’t know how you do
it, you are the wisest man I have ever seen, the best strategist in the world,
the best thing to have ever happened to our state. Then, he asked other council
members to give the Governor three gbosas. Our friend said he
was shocked.”
“So, did he expect the Governor to sack the
praise-singer?”
“That particular commissioner always
got anything he wanted. Someone like that would willingly clean the
Governor’s shoes, he’d in fact gladly do it. ”
“I imagine that it is the same in the
corporate world. Some company executives behave like houseboys.”
“It is a Nigerian thing, then. I am sure if
General Dambazau had asked that guy not to shine his shoes in public, he would
have been very upset. He would think he has fallen out of favour. He was happy
serving the boss, the same way policemen are happy to carry bags for other
people’s wives.’
“It’s human nature. It’s this whole thing
about the survival of the fittest.”
“Like surviving Lassa fever?”
“My brother! That’s frightening. I understand
up to about 63 people have died already in 17 states, and that more may die.”
“The Minister of Health, Professor Isaac
Adewole says the Nigerian Government will write the obituary of Lassa fever by
April.”
“I hope so. If it is possible to do it before
April, that will help, because the way Lassa fever is writing the obituary of
so many people, it may turn out to be worse than Ebola virus.”
“I think the Minister and his team, and the
various state governments are doing a good job of alerting the public to the
dangers of Lassa fever. Even government agencies like the NYSC have deployed
public enlightenment teams to market places.”
“One man ran away from a hospital while being
treated for Lassa fever. May be government should begin to quarantine people.
These days, when I see anybody looking sick, even if it is ordinary fever, I
start by imagining the worst and I keep my distance.”
“I hear some people eat house rats.”
“What?”
“Then, public enlightenment should become
even more vigorous. Eat rat? How can anybody eat Okon Calabar?”
“Who is that?”
“Okon Calabar. That’s what we called rats
when I was in school. You know some of these big rats that don’t run away from
human beings. When they see you, they actually act like they want to jump on
you. I believe those are the real multi mammate rats.”
“I have asked somebody to help me buy two
cats.”
“You have rats in your house? What kind of
house is that? Where do you live?”
“I live in Babana Island.”
“Babana Island. Not Banana Island? Oh,
Babana. That island that is around Abule Egba, close to one refuse dump”
“You no well.”
“When your house is dirty, and nothing is
well kept, you’d breed rats, of course.”
“I don’t live in dirty surroundings. I am
just taking precautions. And take my advice, also try and buy cats. Let’s kill
all the rats in Nigeria.”
“I like that. Let’s kill the rats and save
lives. But you don’t need cats, get a fumigator to drive all dangerous things
away from your house: rats, cockroaches, mosquitoes.”
“The cost of fumigation has gone up. I hear
fumigators are making serious gains now.”
“Very soon, the cost of cats will also rise.
“
“Cats?”
“Yes. Don’t you know that everything is
business in this country?”
“There are too many human rats out there
ready to take advantage.”
“What do you mean human rats?”
“You don’t know some human beings are like
rats, causing fever?
“You are speaking in tongues. Okay,
name one human rat that you know.”
“I am looking at one right now.”
“Me?”
“Yes”
“No. I am not. You should be talking to those
militants in the Niger Delta who are again sabotaging the country by blowing up
oil installations, and giving the Federal Government conditions.”
“The Port Harcourt, Warri, and Kaduna
refineries have been shut down due to pipeline vandalism. At this rate, we ‘d
soon buy fuel at N200 per litre.”
“God knows we can’t afford another round of
Niger Delta militancy. We have Boko Haram. We have the Biafra
“secessionists.” And now Niger Delta militants are back to the creeks and
trying to reverse the gains of the amnesty programme. In the end, we will all
suffer for it.”
“Don’ t worry, those boys will be dealt
with.”
“At what cost? It is better to nip the crisis
in the bud.”
“How? By begging the militants? The Federal
Government has made it clear that it will not succumb to blackmail.”
“Who is talking about blackmail?”
“Wahala today. Wahala tomorrow. This
Nigeria sef.”
“Yes oh. They are even saying we will
now pay stamp duty on all monies paid into our bank accounts once the amount is
over N1, 000. When you add that to other bank charges, how much is left?”
“My friend, it is just N50.”
“It is not just N50. Why must I dash
government money? Is government now begging for alms? Is it that bad? If I want
to give anybody alms, it should be my decision.”
“There is a law called Stamp Duties Act. They
want to enforce the law.”
“So, a bank is now a branch of the Post
Office? If anybody posts money into my account, government will force me to buy
stamp? And yet we want a cashless society? Very soon, people will stop doing
electronic transfers.”
“Don’t be stingy. Be a good citizen.”
“N50 on every transaction. For people who run
active accounts, that could amount to very heavy tax by the end of a month. You
know what? I think they should just re-name the banks and call them post
offices, since they are now selling stamps.”
“As in?”
“As in Zenith Post Office”
“Diamond Post Office”
“Union Post Office”.
“Na wa oh.”
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