This is a well written article Daktari. Your power of observation and
penchant for detail are an indication that you have other talents
outside ICT. I like the irony that when you start off your speech with a
joke about Okonkwo, most of the (Nigerian) audience appears not to know
who or what you are talking about. Then immediately linking this as a
metaphor for the death of intellectualism in Africa is brilliant.
Otherwise congratulations on your honorary chairmanship and best wishes
to attaining the set goals.
Waudo
> https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/emailsignet%40mailcan.com
On Wed, Oct 9, 2013, at 11:54 PM, Bitange Ndemo wrote:
> Three days in Nigeria
> Standing outside Abuja Airport in the soaring temperatures you get amazed
> on how similar to Kenya Nigeria is. This is Africa's most populous
> country. People idling around and women talking animatedly with their
> hands akimbo and they are larger than you can see in Kenya. I had missed
> the person who was to pick me up. Oga! Those who walked by me remarked.
> I assumed it was some greetings to a brother. Colours of their clothing
> is similar to ours and perhaps the only difference with Kenya is that
> more
> men wore multi-colour kanzus. Open shoes, Akala type are more prevalent
> here.
>
> I walk towards the taxis. They are gentler than I have read in Nigerian
> literature. They were honest too with the fare to the cities. I had
> begun to settle down and give Nigeria the benefit of doubt but my mind
> takes me back to Odili, the narrator in Achebe’s 1966 novel, Man of the
> People. Also not forgetting the many stories told about Nigerians.
>
> For a while I savor the beauty of Abuja scenery. Green everywhere. It
> must be within the rain forest. Land is expanse and untilled. I turn my
> attention to my driver Oku Moses. An affable young man perhaps in his
> early 30’s. I tell him I am from Kenya and in Abuja for the CTO
> conference. He smiles broadly and asked me what I thought of Nigeria as
> if he had read my mind. I said so far so good and immediately I divert
> his train of thought to football. I tell him Nigeria is the main
> hindrance to Kenya’s quest to get to World cup. We became friends
> instantly as he opened up to tell me more.
>
> You see that road, he says it leads to nowhere. Corruption is the only
> problem here he adds as his tone begin to sound angrier. I calm him down
> and tell him it happens all over Africa. The 50 kilometer super highway
> from the airport to Abuja is as good as it gets, actually better than
> Nairobi Thika highway. The Hotel I am headed to, is called Chelsea,
> named
> after the English league team Chelsea. Oku is a fan of Arsenal another
> English league team. He knows all the players. He asks which team I
> support and when I tell him none, he then says that is why you will never
> go to world cup.
>
> At the hotel Oku bids me farewell and hands me his card. Call me he
> says.
> I will show you the best of Nigeria. It is still hot and my room was
> steaming with heat. This three star hotel does not have a centralized AC
> but I could do with an old cranky stand-alone cooling system. As I
> cranked it up, it made more noise that I could not listen to news on TV.
> Then suddenly the lights went off – blackout!!. Outside it was raining
> heavily. I said Geez this is home but soon some generator boomed just
> outside my room to bring light. I wished they had shut it down.
>
> Dinner time I joined other colleagues, Sonia, Karin, Robert and John for
> Dinner. Me and Sonia were the vegetarians and so requested for pasta,
> the
> only vegetarian dish on the menu. Alas! when the food came there was
> chicken on pasta instead of tomato. The young waitress tells me she
> decided on chicken since there were no tomatoes. After a few exchanges
> she seems to remember something and says I can make it vegetarian. Wala!
> like magic she comes back with pasta alone. I said thank you but as I
> start to eat, I discover or rather the waitress had forgotten that the
> base was chicken and she had only removed the toppings of chicken. She
> meant well and wanted to do well but she missed the point.
>
> As I watched Nigerian channels that evening, I say to myself, Nigeria is
> Kenya and Kenya is Nigeria. We were colonized by the British. We
> attained independence at about the same time in the 1960s. We have new
> constitutions with devolved powers. Just like Kenya, Nigeria continues
> to
> experience longstanding ethnic and religious tensions. Although in
> Kenya’s 2008 as in Nigeria’s 2003 and 2007 presidential elections were
> marred by significant irregularities and violence, but both countries are
> experiencing relative peace interrupted by the Al-Shabab and Boka Haram
> respectively.
>
> On Nigerian TV as in Kenya politicians complain that they need more power
> to states and counties. They seem not to understand that they are the
> ones with the power to change legislation and so when they complain, the
> masses have no representation. They also need more money yet they are
> the
> ones who appropriate resources. They complain about soaring crime yet
> they are the ones who have the mandate to bring better security
> legislation.
> On the roads, motor bikes ride on the assumption that every motorist
> should watch on them. Careless and dangerous like in Kenya. If you
> admire the cleanliness of Abuja while driving, you will for sure hit one
> of them. Public places including hotels are guarded by armed policemen.
>
> In my speech at the conference I said I was glad to visit Nigeria, land
> of
> Okonkwo from Umuofia (one of a fictional group of nine villages in
> Nigeria, inhabited by the Igbo people). Only a handful of the people in
> the audience who knew that I was referring to Achebe’s 1958 novel, Things
> Fall Apart. Later Funke, a prominent Nigerian businesswoman and friend
> tells me that intellectualism died in Nigeria. There was a time in
> Nigeria prominent writers were the role model of society. These were the
> people who put our oral history on paper but we decided to chase them
> away. It is sad that Achebe had to die in foreign land alone without his
> people. I tell Funke, it is so strikingly similar to Kenya that our
> prominent writers are getting old and wasted away in foreign lands.
>
> Haruna is driving me back to the airport. He like Oku is polite but with
> much better intellect than an ordinary driver. His grasp of African
> matters is excellent. Out of the blue he tells me, you worked with
> government. I tell him yes and I quickly ask him why. No I just wanted
> to know, he says. Then he tells me that he is driving a car (VX Land
> Cruiser) that he will never afford to buy in his entire life. I note the
> ambition in him and tell him that if you know then you are capable of
> buying the car. I am not in government, he says. I tell him you do not
> need to be in government to buy the car. You see I was in government but
> I still cannot drive such a thing. He looks at me then he says, it is by
> choice on your part. I tipped him $20 and bade him farewell. He was
> stunned.
>
> I leave Nigeria with many fond memories. It was three days but enough to
> grasp the dreams of other people. Their desires. Their hopes. We are
> all the same and hopefully one day we shall change the stigma of
> corruption by improving the fortunes of our Africa. God bless Africa.
>
>
> Ndemo.
>
>
> University of Nairobi
> Business School, Lower Kabete Campus
>
>
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The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.