OBAMA SNUBS NIGERIA?
Last weekend a recently retired senior Nigerian diplomat sat virtually alone at
a bar in his club contemplating rather than drinking the glass of soda water on
the coffee table before him.
After watching him for some time I approached to cheer him up.
He was not interested in any subject but the impending one-day visit of Africa's
own president of the United States to the continent.
"This cannot happen," he said.
"What cannot happen?" I asked. "This is not the first time the most powerful man
in the world would be visiting the continent of the dark man."
"Sola," he answered with a dry smile. "In my time in the foreign service, all of
us in our missions in Europe and America would have been mobilised to ensure
that President Obama would make at least an airport stop-over in Nigeria next
door.
"We would persuade the White House that a touchdown in Nigeria would serve our
mutual interests."
'Giant of Africa'
As the discussion or, more appropriately, the lecture went on, I found that the
former career diplomat's discomfiture was caused, not by the apparent snub of
"the Giant of Africa", as Nigerians love to describe their country, but by what
he concluded was the death of Nigeria's foreign service.
As far as my respected friend was concerned the government had declared the
foreign service redundant.
"That cannot be the case," I said. "Remember that Foreign Minister Ojo Madueke
declared long ago that Nigeria's foreign policy was 'Citizens' Diplomacy'"
That is, the government would do whatever was necessary to protect Nigerians
everywhere in the world, including applying tit-for-tat actions when a Nigerian
was maltreated abroad.
"That was a hollow statement meant for newspaper readers," the diplomat replied.
In fact, he said, Nigeria began practising citizens' diplomacy under military
rule: Lawyers were recruited into the foreign service, trained in diplomacy and
posted to key missions abroad to advise Nigerians.
When necessary those lawyers attended court hearings to keep a watching brief
for Nigerians.
In time, according to him, every government knew that if they maltreated
innocent Nigerians in their country, their own citizens in Nigeria would not be
left untouched.
Also, he said Nigeria became active in the international institutions set up to
formulate a global immigrant policy, given the large numbers of Nigerians in
Europe and America.
Nigeria's clout as "Big Brother" was well established in Africa, especially in
the western sub-region, so, no serious international discussion on Africa would
be held without the participation of Nigeria.
"What has brought about the change," I asked.
He did not mince words:
• Perceived systemic corruption has led to distrust in important circles
• The economic downturn has meant that the government can no longer back its
diplomacy with funds
• Lastly President Umaru Yar'Adua, unlike former President Olusegun Obasanjo,
has not been seen to demonstrate any serious interest in matters beyond
Nigeria's shores.
It is not only President Obama who is perceived by Nigerians to have snubbed
their country, even small African nations now behave with little consideration
for what the reaction of Nigeria might be. culled from the BBC.
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