Achebe’s Reflections: Leadership and Lost Promise
In There Was a Country (2012), Chinua Achebe offered a searing indictment of Nigeria’s trajectory. He traced the nation’s decline from independence optimism to corruption, ethnic strife, and civil war.
Achebe’s most enduring phrase, “The trouble with Nigeria is simply and squarely a failure of leadership”, crystallizes his belief that insecurity and dysfunction stem not from ordinary citizens but from elites who abandoned principles of justice and merit.
He warned that tribalism, opportunism, and oil-fueled corruption had hollowed out the Nigerian dream, leaving behind poverty, violence, and disillusionment.
Achebe’s reflections remain relevant today, as terrorism, banditry, and kidnappings mirror the systemic failures he described.
Wole Soyinka, Nigeria’s Nobel laureate, has consistently challenged governments over insecurity. He cautions against foreign intervention, arguing that external involvement could worsen Nigeria’s crises.
More importantly, Soyinka insists that insecurity is not fundamentally religious but driven by extremists who exploit faith for political and economic gain. He highlights incidents like the killing of Deborah.
Yakubu in Sokoto as
examples of extremist violence unchecked by weak leadership. Soyinka condemns
Nigeria’s “lackadaisical leaders” who allow fundamentalism to thrive, stressing
that decisive governance is the missing ingredient in curbing terrorism and
banditry.
Osiebe’s grief mirrors Achebe’s disillusionment and Soyinka’s warnings. All three voices converge on a central truth: Nigeria’s insecurity is not inevitable but the product of failed leadership, corruption, and unchecked extremism.
Achebe provides
historical depth, Soyinka offers intellectual clarity, and Osiebe adds
contemporary urgency. Together, they form a chorus demanding accountability,
justice, and a reawakening of Nigeria’s founding ideals.
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