For social media activists, Senator Ben Murray-Bruce’s tweet on the
alleged loot of the late head of state, Gen. Sani Abacha, was too
insensitive for a joke, which, perhaps, the lawmaker had in mind.
Murray-Bruce has taken to Twitter to express his disappointment with
the current financial position of the Federal Government, thanking God
that Abacha had stolen from the country.
He also sarcastically described the late military leader as a
visionary, saying his loot had become the country’s “saving grace.”
He wrote, “Thank God for Abacha. In some way, he was a visionary. In
this time of scarcity, his money being returned to us is now our saving
grace.”
But this remark was one tweet his followers did not take lightly.
Hence, the lawmaker has come under attack for making a jest of an
offence that reportedly reduced the worth of the country and embarrassed
its citizens.
For one, the presidential candidate of the KOWA Party at the 2015
poll, Remi Sonaiya, took the former NTA director-general to task, saying
his remark was not in good taste.
“Hopefully, this was written tongue-in-cheek. But given the horrors
we knew under Abacha, it may not be in good taste,” Sonaiya, the only
female candidate that ran for the presidential poll, posted on her
Twitter page.
Also, one Somi Ekhasomhi scolded the Bayelsa State-born lawmaker for
attempting to make a joke out of a “crime” that has attracted
condemnation from the public. She said the lawmaker’s Twitter handle was
too important to be used to make statements that were opened to
misinterpretations.
She noted, “He is being sarcastic. He too feels the need to mock
those who say this with a straight face. But I agree that a senator’s
handle is not the place to make a joke that is so open to
misinterpretations.”
Tweeting on @buky, another social media user urged the lawmaker to delete the post, noting that it “is disgusting.”
“Please delete the tweet. This is a highly irresponsible and a slap on our face,” @buky posted.
According to Emeka Obasi, a social media influencer, Murray-Bruce
would have avoided the unnecessary backlash if he paid attention to the
public mood. He said the current challenges experienced by Nigerians did
not encourage such jokes.
The majority of the online activists, who criticised the lawmaker,
said his remark was an endorsement for corruption, a position that
contradicts his “common sense” sermon.
Meanwhile, a professor of Political Economy, Pat Utomi, has also
taken to digital media to express his concerns about the performance of
the country’s economy, observing that nothing short of a “rapid
response” from stakeholders and institutions will save the citizens.
Utomi is among the few Nigerian experts who have embraced the social
media, especially Twitter and Facebook, to share their thoughts on
national issues, including the economy.
Tweeting on the state of the economy from Dubai, the United Arab
Emirates, the political economist regretted the challenges investors in
Nigeria faced, noting that there was the need to speed up efforts to
improve on the country’s business environment.
According to him, the country needs a consensus among the elite on how it can sustain economic progress.
“I am at now in Dubai, just had indigestion served with someone
reading story of investors leaving Nigeria. We need rapid response. (I)
hate to think the recursive economy is back. We really need elite
consensus on how to sustain progress in Nigeria,” he tweeted.
Utomi’s post from Dubai is like a call for a revolution, or so his
teeming social media fans have perceived the phrase “rapid response.”
A response from one Oloopo Adeniji confirms this. Adeniji said,
“Professor, you could start a movement and you can be sure that we,
young ones, would follow. But you need to start one.”
Tweeting also, Emmanuel Ugwuanyi said Nigerians were waiting
patiently for the Utomis to start doing something meaningful to announce
to the government that they were not docile, as they often perceived.
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