• Sunday, December 29, 2024
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President Buhari and Nigeria’s ‘Burning Train’

Attack on Churches: Enemies out to stoke religious war – Buhari

Muhammadu Buhari, President of Nigeria

In the sociology of death and dying, only those around when death knocks can imagine the pain, the struggle and desire of the deceased to stay alive. “I’m in the train. I have been shot. Please pray for me” was the last public message by the late Dr. Chinelo Nwando, a distinguished medical doctor retained after her youth service in Kaduna State.

She had hoped to join her family abroad to fulfill her dreams before governance loophole in her fatherland failed her and others in that terrorised passenger train where eight people were murdered, some injured while many are now in the den of extortive terrorists who have found clement working environment in a state governed by a former unsparing opposition speaker, Governor Nasir El-Rufai.

Kaduna, a famous crocodile state with compliment of all ideological instruments of state oppression (army, navy, Police, DSS) seems to be unwilling or is being held down by compromised souls in the system. Fears of being killed and hopelessness grow in a nation being ruled by people moved only by their ambitions and not by altruism. In this piece, Nigeria is conceptualised as a ‘burning train’, set on fire by poisonous insiders who do not want the country to enjoy the needed peace, progress and development.

The Burning Train is an Indian train disaster movie released into the market on March 20, 1980, (few years before a coup enthroned Major General Muhammadu Buhari as Military President). It is metaphoric of Nigeria’s present situation and mirrors what transpired in the Kaduna-Abuja terror-attacked train and the fatalities associated with it. The movie was about three childhood friends Ashok, Vinod and Randhir who had beautiful life goals like most Nigerians. Ashok was the son of a business tycoon while Vinod and Randhir were railway engineers.

As friends, Ashok was a lover of fast cars while the dream of Vinod was to build the fastest passenger train. The duo of Ashok and Vinod met their lovers, Shettal and Seema respectively. As fate would have it, the millionaire father of Ashok went bankrupt and committed suicide. As creditors took over everything including the car of Ashok, his engaged lady, Sheetal sent him a disengagement letter. She had to leave him because he had become poor.

Everything crumbled before Ashok. However, on the other side, Vinod married Seema and had Raju as son but he was concentrated on his ambition of constructing India’s Super Express Passenger Train. He succeeded at work but the wife and kids were lonely. All was set for the inauguration of India’s Super Express train and Vinod’s dream wasabout to be fulfilled but for his friend, Randhir who was envious of his success. Randhir alleged that Vinod snatched the girl of his dreams, Seema and married her. He had his plans. He made the inaugural passenger train tripan unforgettable historical event.

Read also: Buhari seeks fresh borrowing as budget deficit increases to N7.35trn

Like those who boarded the ill-fated Kaduna-Abuja passenger train had private plans about their lives, Indians purchased tickets to be part of the history. There were those who wanted to spend their wedding anniversaries on board. There were newly-weds, and newly engaged.

Children who were going to see their grandparents, Hindus, Muslims and free thinkers were also on board. Hindus and Muslims were arguing about their supremacy like Christians and Muslims do in Nigeria instead of focusing on advancing humanity. But Randhir, the enemy within had his evil plans well schemed.

He said to Ashok: “Vinod snatched away my love, I didn’t say anything. He snatched away the super express train (glory). I have removed the vacuum break from the (train) engine. This super express will never stop. And I have also kept a small-time bomb (which will soon explode)”. From that time, Ashok made effort to ensure that the bomb did not explode but he was late.

On the Burning Train, people were singing instructive song. The singers said “we are companions for a few moments. Dance as long as you are alive”. The next moment, the bomb exploded like in Kaduna train experience and everyone’s hoped the train would stop but, so long. The burning train without vacuum break became unstoppable, passed many stations and didn’t stop. Joy was replaced with sadness.

As hope of stopping the train dims, many on board realised life was only meaningful to the living and that there was no need to compete over anything. The Hindu and Muslim on board who had been fighting over supremacy concluded in their hopeless situation that “death is neither Hindu nor Muslim. Today we are facing death and I’ve realized that death has no religion”.

A woman who was on board to celebrate her wedding resigned to fate. Her concern was about how people will recognise their remains. A pregnant lady on board went into labour and concluded it would have been better this child was not born. In the face of hopelessness like Nigerians are experiencing, some school children on board went to their teacher and asked: “are we going to die?”

The teacher stepped out of her hopelessness and encouraged the children to sing to God. The children asked for mercy from God to safe them. But as they prayed, the railway authorities made effort to send helicopter but the devil, Randhir went on board and ensured it crashed. It took the trio of Vinod himself, Ashok and one man who was on board to steal diamonds to stop the train eventually but it was not easy as Randhir, who stood on their way had to be killed before they succeeded. Vinod said it was “my responsibility and all options must be tried.”

He didn’t mind if it costs him his life. He said the lives of 500 Indians on board are my responsibility. Whose responsibility is it to protect over 390 passengers on Kaduna-Abuja train and what is the worth of a Nigerian life to our leaders?

Welcome back to Nigeria’s Burning train, a country under the leadership of a retired General who promised to lead from the front but seems to be found in the back seat. Under the leadership of President Muhammadu Buhari, terrorists who had been pushed back to the fringes by past administration have become emboldened and rake millions of naira, rape and waste destinies in cities. Nigeria has no leader ready to take responsibility like Vinod and haltsharp descend into normlessness and chaos. Who is our own Randhir at the local government, state, national, National assembly and executive arms of government? Who is/are the enemies of Nigeria in the army, police, DSS, Immigration, customs and NDLEA? Who is that traitor that exposes our gallant men to death by halting their operations? Who is that head who ought to give orders to put out the fire on our burning train but continues to profit from the blood of Nigerians?

Hmmmm, after seven years of this administration, economy is down and insecurity is at its peak with heightened fears of being kidnapped, raped or killed on the road; kidnapped, raped or killed in your communities; kidnapped, killed and injured on the train and higher chances of being shot or killed at the airport. Nigeria’s burning train is now from frying pan to fire; a country that thought it was running away from cluelessness but landed in clueless estate.

We must have people like Vinod who take his people’s safety as his responsibility. The wicked traitor in the executive, legislature, army, police, and other agencies who are like Randhir must be exposed and silenced if we must have headway. War economy entrepreneurs must be fished out and dealt with to quench the fire on our burning train. But there are immediate things that can mitigate further cataclysm.

This administration must address the problems of economy, make power/energy available for industries/entrepreneurs, and hold security chiefs accountable. Without doing this, this government would be engraved in history as one that came with three electoral promises (to fix the economy, fight corruption and tackle insecurity) but failed to deliver one!.

.Dr Tade, a sociologist sent this piece via [email protected]

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