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The Perils Of Identity Politics And Economic Turbulence

by Babayola M. Toungo
3 weeks ago
in Opinion
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Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation and a tapestry of myriad peoples, languages, and histories, now stands at a crucible, where the convulsions of politics, identity, and economic uncertainty threaten the core of its national soul. The crossroads at which Nigeria finds itself is not merely a matter of governance or economics, but rather a profound existential crisis – a struggle to define who belongs, whose voices matter, and what kind of future is possible for more than two hundred million souls.

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In recent years, the country’s political evolution has become ensnared in the quicksand of identity politics – a brutal calculation that favours short-term political capital over the long arc of nation-building. The promotion of ethnic, religious, and regional identities, wielded as both shield and cudgel by the ruling elite, has spread a shadow over every state and enclave, save for the cosmopolitan mirage of Lagos, where commerce alone seems to hold fractious spirits in uneasy truce. Once, Nigeria aspired to be a crucible of unity – a land where diverse aspirations, faiths, and cultures commingled within the bold outlines of one republic. Today, the body politic is lacerated by invisible borders etched along the grain of history: Igbo against Hausa, Yoruba set apart from minorities of the Delta and middle belt, Christians and Muslims circled in wary suspicion. The machinery of government, once expected to transcend these divisions, has instead mastered the art of exploiting them. Instead of forging a common developmental vision – one that might lift all boats – the leadership has embraced the politics of exclusion. Dissent is not merely unwelcome; it is punished, sometimes with icy indifference, sometimes with open hostility. “To hell with you,” seems not just a phrase but a philosophy, a signal that the circle of belonging grows ever smaller.

This refusal to listen, to include, to open the doors of the national conversation, has come at a steep cost. Political parties, which in theory should incubate democratic competition and policy debate, have become arenas of fratricidal struggle – shattered by internal schisms, their democratic promise undermined by external manipulation. The opposition, no longer a loyal adversary, is cast as a threat to be neutralized, its leaders caricatured, insulted, and made targets of vilification by presidential aides and party loyalists emboldened by a government that sees no value in civil dissent. Public discourse has withered into a barren monologue, with power insulated from critique and accountability. Across the country, legitimate grievances – of farmers displaced by conflict, of young people denied opportunity, of minorities denied voice – echo in vain against the stone walls of official indifference.

The spiritual cost of exclusion cannot be overstated. It seeps into the fabric of daily life, eroding trust in public institutions, corroding social capital, and casting a pall of fatalism over a people once famed for optimism and resilience. The promise of democratic renewal – of responsive, inclusive governance – has, for many, turned to the ashes of disappointment.

Woven into this political malaise is an equally profound economic crisis. The recent rebasing of the Gross Domestic Product, designed to update and invigorate official measures of growth, has instead revealed the fragility beneath the numbers. The economy is in free fall: inflation gnaws at salaries and savings, unemployment stalks the dreams of millions, and the naira, battered by policy missteps and global headwinds, drifts ever lower on foreign exchanges. The government, projecting an image of fiscal health – citing the “bold” removal of subsidies on fuel, electricity, and farm inputs – continues to borrow with frenetic urgency. Each new loan, whether to fund infrastructure or plug budgetary holes, is a stone added to the burden that future generations will bear.

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What is touted as a surge in government income is, in reality, an accounting mirage. For every naira gained, another is swallowed by the ravenous demands of debt servicing, the inefficiencies of bloated bureaucracy, and the siphons of patronage. Public investment withers, social safety nets unravel, and the chasm between official optimism and street-level despair widens.

At the epicentre of these storms are ordinary Nigerians – the women who rise before dawn to trade in bustling markets, the men who ferry passengers across sprawling cities, the children who carry satchels of hope to schools with leaky roofs and empty libraries. These are the faces of a nation’s promise: industrious, creative, relentlessly hopeful. Yet increasingly, that hope is shadowed by uncertainty. Jobs are scarce, prices soar, and the daily grind yields little but fatigue and resignation. The promise that democracy would bring not just freedom, but opportunity, rings hollow for too many.

Perhaps the gravest danger of all is the narrowing of governmental ambition to a single, self-serving obsession: the conquest of the 2027 elections. Political strategy, policy choices, even the language of the state, are bent to this singular goal. The broader project of nation-building is neglected, its urgency lost amid the scramble for electoral advantage. The pursuit of power has eclipsed the pursuit of the common good, and in that eclipse lies the risk of a lost generation.

Yet, amidst this darkness, Nigeria’s greatest strength abides – an extraordinary capacity for resilience, for reinvention, for hope. Again and again, the country has weathered storms that would have broken nations less endowed with courage and tenacity. This moment of profound crisis, for all its pain, is also a summons to reimagine the republic – not as a zero-sum contest of identities and interests, but as a vibrant, inclusive community.

To chart a new path, Nigeria’s leaders must recover the lost art of listening – to the young and the old, to the regions and the minorities, to critics and supporters alike. They must place inclusion at the heart of policy, not as rhetoric but as reality; foster dialogue, not just among elites but across all strata of society; and return to the hard, patient work of building institutions that serve everyone, not just the well-connected.

To transcend the perils of identity politics, the nation must embrace its diversity not as a liability, but as its unique gift – the wellspring of creativity, innovation, and unity. To steady its economy, it must demand accountability, invest in education and health, and nurture an environment in which enterprise can flourish. And to restore hope, leaders must remember that legitimacy flows not from electoral triumphs alone, but from the daily trust and confidence of the governed.

The journey ahead is arduous, the obstacles daunting. But Nigeria’s story is unfinished, its future unwritten. Within the heart of every citizen lies a glimmer of possibility – an ember that, if fanned by just governance and a renewed sense of common purpose, can ignite the fires of transformation. The time to act is now, for the cost of delay is measured not only in lost opportunities, but in the slow erosion of the nation’s very spirit.

 

Let Nigeria’s next chapter be written not in the language of division, fear, and exclusion, but in the bold, inclusive script of progress, dignity, and hope. Only then will the nation transcend its current travails and fulfil its boundless promise.

 

 


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