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Nigerians
abroad our worst enemy - Prof. Dora Akunyili
excerpt from Sunday Sun
Why
would anyone re-brand Nigeria?
Thank you for the question. When people see that some
products, for example, consumables or other ones are
no longer popular, they re-formulate, re-package, re-brand
and here we are talking about just a product. And if
people re-package, re-brand such product so as to be
more acceptable, one wonders why we cannot our country,
Nigeria. Is our country not more important than any product?
We know that Nigeria is not an enviable brand. If it
is not and we need to do something about it, we need
to systematically do something that can change the brand
for the better. And there is no other thing that can
change it for the better, no other name than to re-brand
it.
In the case of Nigeria, when we say re-branding, it is
not the ground slogan. We are talking about total re-orientation;
from the ordinary Nigerians to groups, to communities,
for us to imbibe a new spirit of patriotism, a new
spirit of doing things right, a new spirit of abhorring
corruption and following the rule of law and paying
attention to details in whatever we do in this country.
If we are working, we do our work well. If you are
a leader, you lead well; if you are an ordinary citizen,
be a good follower. In so doing, we are going to start
changing the current situation where it appears there
is some sort of confusion in the system where people
behave anyhow. It will be good if we are able to get
it right and re-enact our beautiful cultural values.
Combination or re-orientation and bringing back our
cultural values together would actually put us in a
better light as citizens to project ourselves better
to the outer world.
When we talk about this re-branding, it has to get hand
in hand with government delivering to the person; that’s
delivering democracy dividends. Democracy dividends
are now becoming a very unacceptable cliché.
Well, government is doing its own bit for the people
(and) at the same time fighting corruption. All these
can actually come together to give us a new Nigeria that
we all deserve - when the world sees that Nigeria is
changing, the citizens are changing for the better, there
is a re-orientation of people to behave better, there
is cultural revival and government is doing its work,
and citizens are becoming good followers. And with them
professing positively, because right now we profess negatively.
You need to hear a Nigerian talk down Nigeria, you will
start wondering if he has another country. So, with these
things, I believe we can come together to present us
better to ourselves.
We have a basic problem of trust in this country; we
don’t believe ourselves anymore in the country.
A typical Nigerian does not believe in him or herself;
does not believe in his fellow Nigerians, talk down
on the country, on everybody and looks for every negative
thing to talk about. We are not saying we don’t
have negative stories that shouldn’t be told,
no. What we are saying is that we should stress on
the positive and play down on the negative, because
a cup can be half full and a cup can be half empty;
the same cup. One is saying something positive while
the other is saying something negative. I prefer to
say that Nigeria’s cup is half empty and we can
work out to fill it. I’m too optimistic about
this country. I believe in this country and I don’t
want to lose hope or hear anybody say hope is lost.
If hope is lost, why are we alive? I still want to
feel my children have a country that they can call
their own; a country, citizenship they can take to
the bank. Right now you and I cannot take Nigerian
citizenship to the bank; it’s not a good thing.
Nobody is happy about it, and do we just fold our hands
and continue crying and grudging or getting angry that
there’s no light, no road?
What I feel as the chief image maker of this country
is let us start to do what we can do on our own. As
we are doing it, even our leaders will be watching
to see that something is happening. After all, did
we have extra roads when we had War Against Indiscipline
(WAI)? We surprised ourselves the way Nigerians behaved.
We were orderly, focused, (and) we had a deep sense
of community. All in a period of few months, everybody
got focused to behave better, to do things the right
way. So, this re-branding is a necessity and if we
don’t do it now, in future, the name Nigeria
will be a liability to all of us because it is becoming
a liability. People are skeptical.
What kind of misconceptions about re-branding Nigeria?
People,
like you said, a lot of them have given up; they don’t even know where you have to start. We
are now appealing to everyone not to give up, because
giving up is not the answer. Giving up to what? Give
up just to complain? We must be doing something as long
as we are alive. What we are saying is very simple, its
not rocket science. Let us believe in ourselves; that’s
the first thing. Let us stop running down ourselves and
our country. Let us change our behaviour and attitude.
Let the leaders lead well and the followers follow well.
And let us project ourselves positively, because if you
talk negatively, you project negative energy, vice versa.
There are good beautiful places in this country; we have
good and educated people in different callings. Why
can’t we talk about them? Do you know Nigeria
is a country where if somebody discovers something,
Nigerians will be quick to say it’s not true?
So, I feel that this re-branding is even more important
than any physical infrastructure because it is critical
and fundamental to our national development. If we
have all the roads in Nigeria and we have 24-hour electricity
supply, it’s fantastic, but it won’t make
foreigners come into the country. They will still have
it on their websites all over the world that Nigeria
should not be visited because it’s not safe.
That statement alone has nullified any good we might
have had on ground. We are going to get some comfort
with electricity and good road network but when we
have the whole world portraying us as criminals and
as a country where nothing works, we are unsafe; a
country where you are killed before leaving the airport.
So, what social amenities we put on ground will not
actually impress anyone outside. We may benefit from
it but it won’t get us out of the woods. What
will get us out of the woods is as we are working on
these infrastructural facilities, we also start making
conscious efforts to change our behavior. I keep emphasizing
it, because if we don’t change our behaviour
and we are re-branding, it will be like re-packaging
a product without changing the content. So, the content
is us, the re-packaging is the totality of the re-branding.
You wonder why? All other countries keep re-branding
themselves and the re-branding we are talking about
is a continuous process, not something we start today
and finish next week and is over. It can last for another
30 years; the longer it lasts, the better it gets.
Angola for instance is just out of war, 21 years war
and is still suffering from abject poverty with their
re-branding. No matter how bad things are inside Angola,
basically they have told the world they believe in
themselves. Look at even Israel, they have been in
war of struggling to have their nation state, yet they
are re-branding. The ambassador of Israel came to my
office to show me the document of their re-branding
process.
Do you know that South Africa has more criminal record
than Nigeria? In South Africa, it’s difficult
to walk on the street with your bag without clutching
it. But South Africa has re-branded and is still re-branding.
Did they say without the crime, they will not re-brand?
There are so many challenges in South Africa; some
of them are even shameful to talk about. This is a
place where a Vice President would tell the world he
slept with a prostitute. If they have gone so low,
I imagine that Nigeria is even better than them because
I don’t see a Nigerian President or Vice-President
making such a statement. They are as low as that but
they are re-branding.
From the airports in India, you start seeing clubs; but
it is incredible Indian. This is the picture that is
presented to the world. It is their perfection that
is reality, perfection is everything; India is saying
they are incredible and when you watch your television
set you think what you see in India is India. Indians
are still killing their baby girls, still terminating
pregnancies because they are girls; people starve in
their villages, people pick food in the streets in
India. The type of poverty I saw in India, I have never
seen in all my life; yet it is incredible India. Go
to the U.S. where a little boy will pick up a gun and
shoot children in the classrooms, shoot teachers. In
God they trust; they still feel very proud of themselves.
I wouldn’t have known there are places like the
kind of dungeons I saw there.
That brings me to our media. We should be reporting responsively
as much as possible. These people wouldn’t have
shown us those places if not for (Hurricane) Katrina.
There was no way they could hide it because it couldn’t
show part of the hurricane and not show those parts.
And that was where people lived, in God’s own
country. Look at South America; we have the drug barons
even taking their government to ransom. But they are
still the tourist destination because of the way they
present themselves. So, we in Nigeria, no matter the
challenges, should simultaneously re-present ourselves
better.
Do you know that all over the world, when you visit a
book shop, airport, you see pictures from China, South
Africa, Kenya and other countries, but you can never
see picture of anything on Nigeria, not one. Don’t
we have the Yankari (Games Reserve), tourist centres
all over this country? Don’t we have waterfalls
and so on? There are lots of these re-branded countries
being shown on CNN where you just see hills, mountains
and grass; we have so many of them here. I want us
to start telling our stories by ourselves. It can work
but it is only a matter of time. We have had enough,
been run down enough and also run ourselves down enough.
People don’t even give us benefit of doubt. Go
to some airports and see what is happening to Nigerians,
then you know that this re-branding is critical. We
are asked to stand aside, treated like common criminals.
People hide their green passports. How long shall we
do that?
There’s
so much to do but what is the starting point?
We
have been branded so many times in the past; the last
was Heart of Africa. We have
not recorded the desired
success, so we decided to do things in a different way.
The starting point of doing it differently was to get
it to the people. We make it home-grown, get Nigerians
involved, have ownership of the branding. I now reason,
how do we make Nigerians have ownership of the branding?
Let the branding be their own, so, they can brand it.
This is because I have seen Nigerians in my work with
NAFDAC. It happened with war against fake drugs. Every
Nigerian became a NAFDAC staff in one way or the other.
Nigerians took that fight over and there was no hiding
place for the fake drug perpetrators. That was what informed
the competition we had in February, in which we had the
Nigerian peoples’ forum.
I don’t believe in public/private partnership.
It’s an internationally accepted arrangement but
I believe in the public/private people’s policies
because we are talking about the people who are the majority.
So, if we have public/private people’s partnership
and Nigerian people bring this logo and slogan through
a competition, it becomes their own and automatically
becomes their own and gives them the ownership. And if
they believe in it, it will sink into our conscience.
It will fire us up; not the logo and slogan that will
re-brand us. There’s something that we all can
hold on to. The American can die holding up his national
flag instead of giving it up. Let us equally hold something.
Yes, we want something different that we can boast of.
How do we hand over this passion to a hungry man? How
does it go with hunger and how does hunger work with
patriotism?
You
see, whether we are hungry or not, we still have to
do what we should do. I told
you the kind of hunger
and poverty I saw in India. Despite this, they still
tell the world they are incredible Indians. They haven’t
said or talked about those Indians picking rubbish in
the streets. I’m not saying I would feel comfortable
for people living in hunger, no. I’m saying poverty
is something that never can be eradicated but we can
work on it to ensure that people have the basic necessities.
I will feel happier if everybody around me is comfortable
and feeding well. But we are living in an imperfect world,
it may never really happen the way we really wanted it.
But as Nigerians will say, let’s move on. The Ministry
of Agriculture is doing its own bit of making sure we
produce enough food.
The point I’m making is that if we want to get
everything right before we start re-branding, it means
we will never re-brand. Why is it that other countries
did not wait until they get everything right before they
started re-branding? Why is Angola re-branding with all
the ruins of war and poverty? It is because they know
that the way the world perceives them is critical to
their even surviving from the ruins of war. If people
start feeling comfortable with Nigerians, there will
be an influx of businessmen and women that would like
to come and do business here. If they come, that’s
how our growth will start booming and the seven-point
agenda will start getting attention.
It means there must be change both in our leaders and
the following. How are we going to get our leaders; the
governors, the ministers to do exactly what would make
the people think that there is a change?
You
see, everybody has a conscience. Even criminals have
conscience. That’s why they have to smoke
marijuana and take alcohol before they go to rob. They
know if they don’t take those things, their conscience
will not allow them operate the way they would have wanted.
So, the ministers, the leaders we are talking about are
also watching what is going on on this re-branding. If
we as Nigerians agree and key into this project, the
corrupt and bad people that are denting us will have
unsettled conscience.
This thing is going to be a movement. I want it to move
from campaign to movement. If we continue talking about
it and we mean it, before you know it, it will be on
the lips of everybody that we must change. We need to
present ourselves better, just like (the) fake drugs
(campaign). At a time, in the last few years, awareness
became so high about anti-fake drugs. This re-branding
is even a war fighting corruption because we are now
going to be talking about everything. What we want to
do is to start having meetings with the mini-stakeholders
in the states.
When we travel to a state like Bauchi, the House of Assembly
members in Bauchi and the National Assembly members
will go with us. All those representatives of the people
will stand by me and tell their people what they are
doing for them in government. While I’m telling
them about what government is doing for that state,
the people from that state would also tell their people
individually, because the Ministers are representing
that state, the Senators are also representing them.
They should tell the people what they are doing for
them. So it’s a way of being accountable to your
people. In that mini-stakeholders meeting, we would
also be able to get from those people what they feel
about government. So, there would be feedback on both
sides.
Don’t
we expect some kind of resistance, putting Ministers,
Reps and Senators
on the spot?
Well,
if anybody resists, it is easy. Even without me saying
a word, the people from
that state would know
that their son or daughter does not want to come and
give account of himself. We don’t expect a gang-up
in the leadership sector. When I’m doing some thing,
I can be single-minded when I know that I’m doing
the right thing. In this case, I’m sure that what
we are doing is correct. We want to be able to reach
out to the people. We want to be talking with the people;
we don’t want the communication that has opened
to ever die. It has opened; even this criticism, support
and all that are healthy. So, if you we to a state and
the Minister or Senator from that state has nothing to
tell them than just message, let the grassroots people
tell us what to tell the government. It’s going
to involve many things. It is holistic; it’s not
just one thing. You cannot say it is an attitudinal change
or say it is providing infrastructural facilities or
say it’s just the way we present ourselves. It
is inter-connected but we can easily synchronize everything
and work towards evolving a new Nigeria, a new image
for ourselves.
You have said this thing is going to take 30 years or
more?
No,
we are not giving ourselves time limit but it’s
an on-going thing. Re-branding is a continuous process.
What is the Nigeria of your dream? How do you see the
education sector or health system, considering where
we are coming from? What are we set out to change and
what do we expect as results?
Nigeria
of my dream is a situation where people will start
believing in themselves and
in their country. People
will shed that doubt. People will learn to nurture Nigeria
as a baby; will believe in Nigeria so much that they
would never think of running down this country; a country
and a future where everybody will be telling people our
own story and start reporting the positives in this country
and the negatives being reported responsibly. A country
where our leaders will know their job, that the position
of leadership is so sacred that when we don’t do
what we are supposed to do for our followers, it’s
actually a sin. Also where followers make themselves
amenable to be led (and) become good citizens. A Nigeria
where our children will hold their passports in the airport
and nobody will humiliate them, I hope it will happen
in our life-time. We keep working; I’m optimistic
and I refuse to be deterred. I’m very hopeful and
I pray that people will bear the strength with me, because
if we lose the chance of re-branding Nigeria today, we
may never muster the courage anymore and it means we
are handing to our children a country, like I said before,
they cannot take to the bank.
You mentioned something like WAI. Are we going to have
uniformed people who will enforce some changes and new
attitudes?
No,
we don’t believe in that, because during the
War Against Indiscipline, we didn’t have anybody
in the street pushing us to stand on the queue. It’s
a matter of we Nigerians keying into what you ask them
to do and believing in it. Remember that even though
it was a military era, the military people did not stand
around to make us stand on queues. People on their own
started standing on queues. But when you throw away anything
in the street, people shout WAI and you pick it. That’s
why I said we surprised ourselves. We saw a new Nigeria,
orderly people, more responsive, having sense of community,
(and) focused. I don’t remember anybody waking
us in Enugu then.
I believe this movement will get to a point where even
little children in Nigeria will be saying we are good
people, this is a great nation. And as good people,
we should try to behave better, and realizing how great
this nation is, do everything to retain the greatness.
That is the spirit. It’s like a spiritual revival.
Maybe I’m getting too ambitious about it but
I’m confident. We have no reason not to believe
in ourselves because we are intelligent people.
So the question is, what is really wrong with us? We
have put ourselves down for so long that we are getting
stuck in it; outsiders are putting us down. It’s
like you start calling a child a stupid child. After
so many years, the child will be feeling really stupid.
I think we have gotten to that point. But we are not
stupid, criminals or fraudsters and our country is
a beautiful country. The challenges, I believe by the
grace of God will be addressed by various private establishments
and even the public sector. I said we are going to
do this thing differently because we are not hoping
on government funding. We are looking at sourcing money
from the private sector and from good-spirited Nigerians.
We also will publish what we spent two times a year
to the last kobo.
Nigerians are great people, great volunteering spirit.
We (have) had our re-branding campaign flag-off. Bongos
Ikwue and Idris Abdulkareem came and performed free.
They are supposed to be paid millions but each of them
called and volunteered to come. I wanted to call Onyeka
Onwenu to come, but she had already volunteered to
come perform for free. It’s just that the committee
had accepted that these people would come. They felt
bringing in a third musician may not fit into the programme
because of time. That tells you the kind of people
we have in this country. We are not saying it for saying
sake but because Nigerians are good people.
What are you doing about Nigerians in the Diaspora and
what they have brought to the image of the country?
It’s not just the name they brought on the country.
Nigerians in the Diaspora are the worst when it comes
to bad mouthing Nigeria. When you hear Nigerians overseas
talk about Nigeria, you will weep for this country. I
have asked a few of them if they have another country
they can call their own. They don’t know that each
time they talk down the country, they are diminishing
themselves and running down the ordinary Nigerian. They
also forget that every Nigerian in Diaspora is an ambassador.
We have over 17 million Nigerians in the Diaspora. In
fact, in this re-branding committee, we have one representative
of the Diaspora and are prepared to have a second person.
We need them to be represented. Imagine 17 million people
out of our population in Nigeria! It is a significant
percentage. Some Nigerians in Diaspora have brought us
bad names but some of them have done very well. Doctor
Nelson lives in Abuja and as soon as he announced his
discovery, Nigerians went on air. Newspapers said he
was lying. Because we don’t believe that anything
good can come out from here.
As Nigerians are saying he is lying, an American company
had signed an MoU with him. At a time when we should
be joyful that our brother had discovered something,
we were saying it’s not possible because diabetes
has no cure. Many years ago, do we have drugs like
antibiotic? Its gradually we are getting cure for certain
things in this country. Drug that is for the cure of
sickle cell was developed and formulated by NIPRID
in conjunction with a company from Nigeria. I never
saw it in any newspaper. If an American had developed
the cure for sickle cell, which is marketed today,
it would have been on CNN from morning till night.
If Doctor Nelson were to be an American or Ghanaian,
it would also have been on CNN. Why would CNN pick
it when Nigerians came out to say he was lying? This
is a man that had his PhD. and competed with foreigners
in foreign land. So, why would you say he cannot discover
something? It’s all about the image problem and
the way we are perceived here.
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