Most Rev. Matthew Kukah |
The Catholic Bishop of Sokoto Diocese, Most Rev. Matthew Kukah has
lamented that Nigeria has become a country that can no longer feed
itself, provide good education and other amenities.
Kukah anchored his claim on Nigeria’s over-dependency on oil, which he noted had not been properly managed.
He spoke at a lecture organised in commemoration of the 60th birthday
of the Chief Executive Officer, Seplat Petroleum Development Company
Plc, Mr. Austin Avuru on the theme, ‘60 years after: Preparing for a
Nigeria without oil.’
The cleric noted that in the last 60 years, the country was yet to achieve major development with oil revenue.
He said, “I think the critical question is: what did we do with our
oil? Today, we are a country that cannot feed ourselves. Today, we are a
country that cannot provide education for our children. Today, we have
become a country that is unable to generate and distribute electricity.
Today, we have become a country that cannot provide railway lines.
“We are still gathering the consequences of that war, and I think
almost everyday in Nigeria, the country remains permanently at war. I
heard recently that you can actually include surviving in Nigeria in
your CV because it is such a great achievement. I think the question, if
we are asking what will Nigeria be without oil, is what was Nigeria
with oil.
“The question is: how did we as a nation end up with such a
gargantuan level of appetite driven by greed; greed driven by a society
that is growing economically but a society where the people themselves
are increasingly being diminished?
“It drives our politics. It drives everything we have to do in Nigeria.
“Many people have referred to oil as a curse, but my argument is that
this is an illusion; I don’t believe that oil is a curse. Having oil
intrinsically was never really meant to be a curse. I think what is most
important is what we have done with our oil. Perhaps it has shut the
creativity part of our brains.
“Nigeria without oil might help us to think a lot bit more clearly
about what our future might look like. I think the question we should
also ask is: how did we become a country with such a capacity for
internal self-implosion? How did it happen?”
-Daily Post
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