What is the root of Nigeria’s (and Africa’s) problem?

Addressing the root of Nigeria’s problem.

I watched a video discussing a root of Nigeria’s developmental problem to be inaccurate census data, whereby the government cannot accurately plan and provide support for those it cannot count. Think infrastructure capacity as an example. In response to this video, someone rejected the premise and instead blamed Nigeria’s developmental woes on the familiar villain “corruption”.

I have long since deeply reflected on this topic. So, stirred by the video and the reaction, I penned my reflections. May the inscribed words open new paths of contemplation for Nigerian’s and Africans to progress toward the ideal!

The lady’s points are valid. However, inaccurate census data is not the root problem, but a factor. Corruption too is not and has never been the root problem, but rather only a symptom of the problem. Let me explain. There are three layers of problem analysis: cause, symptom, and factor.

A root cause is the origin; a symptom is the direct effect of the cause; and a factor is the secondary effect of the cause and a direct effect of the symptom. 

So what is the root cause? Simple but fundamental: a lack of genuine love for the people. Most officials in government and the citizens themselves lack a genuine love for the people and country. The burning love that is consuming, infectious, and is directed toward all, and not limited to little family, kin, and tribe! The consequence of this lack of love is the symptom we experience in government as corruption.

Love wants to service and give, lack of love wants to be served and take! Public service turns into the public being at one’s service. Take a simple example:

If a mother has 3 starving children that she loves and you give her $100, what will she do? She will spend every penny to feed them! Because she loves them and wishes only for their welfare. But if she takes it and goes partying, or buys shoes while her children starves, then she lacks real love for them. So the corruption of her extravagance is only because she lacks real love! Then her not keeping up with what the children need (inaccurate data) is only an outgrowth of her extravagance (factor of her corruption). Do you see?

Nigerians have been allowing people (through election or force selection via rigging) in office who do not love the people and are committed to their welfare! The outcome from that is bound to be corruption.

We should not chase factors or symptoms, but go to the root: genuine love! Nigerians should find and support people who have this genuine love that burns within them like a surging ocean of flames 🔥. A love that only desires to serve with whole heart, for the welfare of that which is loved (the people). In love is light and development, just like the rays of the Sun brings to Nature. In love are the creative visions for collective progress, and the victorious strength for their implementation!

(For a few of many good examples of strong nation-building leaders who governed with a firm love for their people, research the details of Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana, Sir Seretse Khama of Botswana, and Lee Kuan Yew of Singapore!)

Then there is a separate conversation of the needed fashioning of institutions and systems that separate and check powers once the right person who loves is governing. Essay for another day! 

Jesus is written to have said “I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life, no man cometh to the Father but by Me.”

How does this apply here? Jesus is the Love of God, so the way to genuine progress and ascent inwardly and outwardly is through love. For Nigerians to find the way to positive development, they therefore must seek ye first “genuine love”. In love is the way, truth, and the light of progress. This is not an opinion or religious thought, but an explanation of Holy Law governing the Universe and every aspect of human existence for eternity!

So the main thing for Nigerians and Africans to progress is to inwardly turn to God in love, awaken love for their neighbor and country, and support those with a genuine love for the people for leadership. Then the Rays of development, like the luminous rays of the Sun, will shine on Nigeria and Africa, dissolving the impurity of corruption, and leading to a new beginning of robust growth for the welfare of the people.

Then the faces of Nigerians will radiate pride and joy, as a consequence of their own love that is reflected in the deeds of love in leadership. May God grant it!

Onward & Upward!💫

~Dr. Ikenna A. Ezealah, PhD, MBA

Builder of the African Future

JD….loading.

Addressing substandard products Imported for the African people

The following essay is a broader reflection in response to the article about Nestle adding extra ingredients in its product to the African market.

The failure of African leadership is the issue here. As a leader, you are to form policies that will establish and fund original scientific research and innovation institutions which includes testing centers.

Then based on the intensive research and recommendations of your scientific community, you form national polices that set chemical standards for the importation of goods (“sanitary and phytosanitary measures).

Next, you overhaul the border process of verification and entry and institute stricter measures for the testing and clearance of goods at ports. Additionally, you form punitive policies that ruthlessly punishes corporations who weasel products into your country that violate your standards. Such draconian measures would include revocation of licenses, seizure of assets, imprisonment of key officials, brutal fines etc.

Basically any corporation who flagrantly dares to violate the law, and who sends substandard products with harmful additives to Africa that they would never give Europeans, in order thereby to insult the dignity of the African people must be made to feel the iron-fist in cold pitilessness.

As an African leader, all corporations who approach your country to do business should feel the volcanic earnestness you apply to the sacred duty of being a helper and guardian of your people! The steadfastness and vigilance of your attitude toward your people, in addition to the institutions and systems you establish, will then become a shield of honor around your people that will command respect and compliance from foreign corporations to do well by them! Where are the lions of Africa?

African leaders, if the task of leadership is too much for you, if standing by your people and being a helper and protector of their welfare is too burdensome for you… then resign and vanish from office, so another who is prepared to boldly and diligently serve the common good can step forward and take your place!

African leaders, stand by your people!

~Dr. Ikenna A. Ezealah, PhD, MBA
Builder of the African Future
JD Candidate ‘25

The Disregarded Voices Of Persons With Disabilities In African Nation-Building

If you are a person with disabilities in Africa (PWD), then be prepared for a miserable life marked by marginalization, social isolation, inaccessibility of public systems, and scant support. If many able-bodied Africans already face severe disadvantages, then you can only imagine the compounded plight of persons with disabilities and vulnerable groups.

In the dialogues and initiatives surrounding African progress, this topic is notably absent. In my personal experience not ONCE in any African Conference, development forum, or strategic planning session have I heard the topic broached! As if the African future is reserved exclusively for the so-called “able-bodied”.

Today I call on the African people and governments to correct this moral and strategic oversight.

And that is why, in my vision and planning for African nation-building, the rights and needs of PWDs are a central pillar that is integrated into all facets of the national development agenda. It is our sacred duty as builders of the African future, to design the policy, institutional frameworks, and community structures that will safeguard and enhance the lives of the vulnerable among us. Any African initiative that excludes the needs of PWDs is defective and must be revised.

Think broadly: architecture, infrastructure, housing, job training, education, public systems, transportation, marketplaces, assistive devices, social services. Every domain must be touched by this inclusion.

A true African leader is one who, guided from above, surveys the full landscape of the people’s needs—including the most vulnerable—and becomes their fiercest advocate. Not for political points but because it is the right thing to do. Because PWDs are citizens too who deserve equal support, investment, opportunity, and the full dignity of living autonomous, productive lives. They too have inner abilities given by the Creator that call for development!

I call upon the advocates of PWDs across Africa to proudly step forward and speak up. You are needed in African nation-building.

If we are to truly build an African future rooted in furthering values, then let leadership and governance in Africa resemble the Good Samaritan. He did not walk past the man crying out in pain on the roadside. He stopped, tended, and restored him. Such must be the honor Cross of African nation-builders!

As the Great Master was reported to say “…whatever you did to one of the least of my brethren, you did it to Me.” If we are to fulfill this Divine Directive, then we must recognize that PWD’s in Africa are among the “least of these”.

Therefore, only that African leader and government who energetically champions and thoroughly integrates the needs of PWDs and vulnerable groups into every layer of national life, is worthy of gaining Divine approval. Only that leader is a Good Samaritan. That noble leader who, in humility, joyfully helps and uplifts ‘the least of these’, thereby proving themselves to be a real helper to the people and a servant of God of earth!

~Dr. Ikenna A. Ezealah, Ph.D., MBA
Builder of the African Future