Osinabjo Read Acting President's full speech at Armed Forces graduation ceremony

On June 23, 2017, Yemi Osinbajo attended the graduation ceremony of Armed Forces Command & Staff College, Senior Course 39, in Jaji, Kaduna state.
There,
he delivered an inspiring speech titled, "We Can Build A New Nigeria,"
to the new officers. The speech covered unity, hate, economy and a lot
more.
Laolu Akande, the Senior Special
Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Office of the Acting
President, has released the full speech.
Read it below:
"I
am especially pleased and indeed privileged to share this special day
with you the staff, graduands and proud family members of the graduands
of Senior Course 39."
"We
must give glory and thanks to the Almighty God by whose mercy and grace
we are able to witness this celebration of achievement.
"You
have made a success of this course after 48 grueling weeks.
Congratulations. Of course we must specially commend all the spouses of
our graduands here, but for whose sacrifices and personal deprivations
there would have been no celebrations for many here today.
"It
is also gratifying to note that amongst the 187 graduating students are
10 students from sister African countries, and 5 senior members of
Staff from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Defence Intelligence Agency,
Nigerian Defence Academy, Nigeria Police Force and the Federal Road
Safety Commission."
"I must
commend the governments of Cameroun, Ghana, Liberia, Mali, Niger,
Rwanda, The Gambia and Togo who nominated their officers to attend this
course. By so doing they have strengthened the brotherhood we share as
Africans but more so they have shown great foresight on the issue of our
common security concerns on the continent.
"The
occasion of the graduation of the elite corps of our Military, armed
services, intelligence and Foreign Service members is one that offers an
opportunity for reflection on national issues.
"We
are the identifiable public service elite of our nation, paid for with
taxpayers money, and so we must be its foremost think-thank. So, permit
me to address you for a short while on the subject - We can build a new
Nigeria.
"The last two decades in Nigeria have witnessed the quickened retreat of the Nigerian elite to their ethnic and religious camps.
"I
would like to emphasize the fact that this was essentially an elite
phenomenon - unity and disunity are promoted by the elite to which the
vast majority of the Nigerian people were only later conscripted.
"In
these past few years, more and more, we began to hear expressions such
as Nigeria’s ethnic nationalities; we began to see more identification
by race and geopolitical zones, Ndigbo people, Arewa people, the Yoruba
people, South-South, North-East, South-West, North-West and South-East;
and other parochial description that were hitherto unknown.
"The
rise of ethnic chauvinism rode on the wings of several agitations. The
narrative of most agitations centres around alleged marginalization and
fears of dominance of one faith over the other.
"In
the 2015 elections, the ruling party repeatedly tried to cast the
opposition as a party of Islamists determined to islamize Nigeria. The
expression Janjaweed party took root.
"Most
ethnic agitations are centered around getting a larger share of the
national cake or more favoured placement in the food chain because they
were essentially elite claims: the vast majority of the populations of
the ethnic groups that win some concession or the other never really
benefit.
"So, the mere fact that
a South-South person became President did not necessarily translate to
prosperity for the tribe, neither was it the case when a President from
the North-West emerged, nor one from the South-West.
"Aside
from a few individual beneficiaries of some appointments or the other,
there is usually nothing to show for the ethnic group of those who
emerge in Nigeria's numerous ethnic contests for power. Yet, the
contests of the tribes are heightened by the elite, usually for personal
political or commercial ends.
"When
you hear a person say that my tribe has been marginalized usually what
he is saying is appoint me. The ethnic card is an effective bargaining
tool.
"A major drawback of
ethnic chauvinism is the way that it is used to mask wrongdoing and
promote impunity. Notice that when people are charged with looting
public funds they quickly find a counter narrative. It is because I am
Yoruba, Fulani or Igbo; or the Christians or Muslims are after me.
"Appointments
in the public service are no longer even judged on merit. The question
is how many are from my own ethnic group. A terrible affliction, when
you consider that what we are looking for are men and women of integrity
and talent to run our economy and create a future for our children. Why
is that when we want to win at football we don't ask which ethnic group
the players are from? But perhaps at its most extreme and dangerous are
hate-filled agitations for secession or autonomy.
"In
the past few weeks we have as a nation witnessed the escalation of such
agitations usually couched in deliberately intemperate and provocative
language. The reckless deployment of hate speech and the loud
expressions of prejudice and hate, name calling of those of other
ethnicities and faiths is a new and destructive evil in our public
discourse. But even more divisive words, expressions, and actions
calculated to create fear and uncertainty have also been freely used.
"Young
people in the South-Eastern states under the aegis IPOB, issued a stay
at home order as part of actions to prove support for their agitations
for secession. In the Northern states young people under the aegis of
the Arewa youth, issued an ultimatum to Igbos living in the Northern
states to vacate before the 1st of October.
"The
problem with hate-filled and divisive speech is that they tap into some
of the basest human instincts, bringing up irrational suspicions, fear,
anger, and hatred and ultimately mindless violence. People who have
lived together as neighbours and friends suddenly begin to see each
other as mortal enemies.
"The
tensions that led to the killing of over 800,000 Tutsis and Hutus
considered Tutsi sympathizers in the Rwandan genocide, were roused by
hate media. The most notorious was the Radio-Television Libre des Mille
Collines (RTLMC), which became immensely popular as a young, hip
alternative to the official voice of the government. It played popular
music, and encouraged the public to phone-in and participate in radio
broadcasts. Amongst its listeners, RTLMC attracted the unemployed youth
and Interhamwe (Canadian NGO). The station also became notorious for its
covert and overt naming of Tutsi individuals who it claimed deserved to
be killed.
"General Romeo
Dallaire, the commander of the UN peacekeeping operation in Rwanda at
the time of the genocide, said: "Simply jamming [the] broadcasts and
replacing them with messages of peace and reconciliation would have had a
significant impact on the course of events."
"Fortunately
the purveyors of this tragic hate media did not escape unpunished. The
ICC in Arusha eventually sentenced the owners of the hate radio stations
and newspapers to long prison terms.
"Some
of our youth groups urging secession already are deploying hate media,
using radio and social media. The language on those media are inciting,
provocative and insulting to the individuals who are named, and to the
beliefs of others.
"While we
must remain irrevocably committed to freedom of expression and the
tenets of a free press, we must draw the line between freedom that
conduces to healthy democracy and that which threatens and endangers the
entire democratic enterprise. It is an important balance that we must
strike. Failure in any way will be tragic.
"The
truth is that our nation and national unity is worth preserving and
protecting. We are the pre-eminent power in Africa today in terms of
population, size of our markets, natural resources and economy.
"We
are a factor in the geopolitics of the world and no one can ignore a
nation-state that is home to one in every four black persons. Smaller is
weaker not stronger today.
"Your
Excellency, distinguished ladies and gentlemen, history and experience
has shown that countries can alter their destinies. Italy, India and
Nigeria – to use just three examples, share one thing in common: at one
point early in their existence people questioned their viability as
nation-spaces; spoke of them in terms of being no more than mere
geographical expressions.
"Indeed
not many Nigerians seem to know that the often quoted line about
Nigeria being a “mere geographical expression” originally applied to
Italy. It was the German statesman Klemens Von Metternich who
dismissively summed up Italy as a mere geographical expression exactly a
century before Nigeria came into being as a country. Churchill
describing India said it was no more a nation than the equator, (which
is just an imaginary geographical line.)
"But
what fate saddles a country with, and what that country makes of
itself, we have since learned, can be two very different things. India
for example has over the last couple of decades built itself into a
technology and software powerhouse, and has also made impressive strides
in nuclear and space technology. It has successfully created
alternative narratives to a narrative of ethnic and religious division.
"Italy
on its own part has made its mark on the world in fashion and in
automobiles; so that when people think of it today they are more likely
to think of its venerable cuisine and fashion houses than its
still-very-real fault lines.
"What
the stories of these countries tell us is that we do not need to be a
perfect union before we can be a great country and there is no better
example of that than the United States of America – a country that
thrives, not in spite of its diversity, but because of it.
"It
is my respectful submission that the responsibility for a similar kind
of greatness here in Nigeria lies in our hands as the country’s elite.
We must rise above unproductive ethnic and religious sentiment.
"We
must develop the emotional intelligence required to cope and adapt in a
swiftly and constantly changing world. We must adopt a global mindset
that seeks to learn from the experiences of other countries, far and
near, so that we do not waste valuable time repeating mistakes that we
should have learned to avoid."
"One
of those lessons is that today’s wars never really end. This should be a
sobering lesson to us all in Nigeria, as we contend with the forces who
seek to stoke violence and bloodshed in our country.
"Somalia, Syria,
Yemen, and closer home, the Central African Republic, Libya and the
Democratic Republic of Congo; these wars have raged for years. Some of
them have in fact gone on so long that they have been tagged as
‘forgotten wars’. Contemporary wars, we have learnt, are extremely easy
to start, but difficult to end.
"Another
lesson is that in the 21st century the theatre of war is increasingly
shifting to cyberspace. Terrorist organizations, purveyors of hate
speech, all of these and many more who seek to destabilize the world are
busy staking out territory on the Internet, and scoring significant
victories and conquests for themselves. As members of the Armed Forces,
with a mandate to protect Nigeria from all forms of internal and
external aggression, you will increasingly be judged as much on the
basis of your success online as on your successes on the conventional
battlefield.
"The Internet has
altered or disrupted every industry we know of: Politics and Elections,
Business and Commerce, Governance; and is changing the very nature of
warfare. Websites teaching on how to make and use IEDs and other
explosives are numerous.
"Today a
great deal of the threats facing Nigeria are being nurtured and
cultivated in the vast spaces of the Internet. The rumblings of
secession, the dangerous quit ultimatums to ethnic groups, the radio
stations and blogs that spew divisive speech and exploit our fault
lines; all of these are now to be found online.
"This
means that the military and its officers and men must itself devote
resources and talent to these new battlefields, where mindless verdicts
on the continued unity and existence of Nigeria are daily being
delivered.
"As you make your way
out of the hallowed halls of this institution, into the ‘field’, as you
would describe it, you have huge roles to play in the way Nigeria turns
out in the years and decades ahead.
"Even
though the days of military rule are now well behind us as a nation,
the role of the military is still as critical as ever – and not just in
the traditional areas of deterring threats and protecting lives and
property.
"The Military of the
21st century must realize that it has a role to play in supplying
reinforcement to the good side in the clash of ideas that today define
the world: ideas of moderation, tolerance and sensibleness versus ideas
of extremism, xenophobia, and terror. The Boko Haram terrorism is a
perfect example of the types of scourges that the world faces.
"The
battle is not just to defeat the terrorists, the greater battle is to
defeat the ideology and mindset that feeds the madness and to cut off
its oxygen, money and publicity.
"The
great challenge and the wonderful opportunity for this generation of
the Nigerian elite is to build a new Nigeria. Out of the rubble of
cynicism, division and suspicions we can build a new nation.
"A
new nation built on trust, consensus, love for one another and love for
our country is possible. A nation where the rulers do not steal the
commonwealth, where every Nigerian is safe to live and work, where the
State takes responsibility for the security of each and every Nigerian,
where the state knows every Nigerian by name and can find and locate
each one of us, a Nigeria where the Ibo or Ijaw man can live peacefully
in Sokoto, and the Fulani man can live peacefully in the Niger Delta.
"But
building is an act of the human will. It is a practical, routine,
sometimes dirty, sometimes frustrating enterprise. This is why no great
nation was ever built overnight or without the sacrifice of group
compromise, the pain of not getting all you want, the feeling that your
ethnic or religious persuasion could be treated better, that is the
sacrifice of nation- building, give and take; a little here, a little
there. No one group can have it all.
"Our
leadership must be courageous. Courage means willingness to be abused
and insulted by our own people. The humiliation of being heckled for
making concessions is the price of the privilege of leadership. The
greatest leaders are those prepared to take unpopular decisions or make
compromises unpopular with their constituencies but crucial for long
term goals."
"Yes,
they may be unpopular in the short run but their greatness eternally is
guaranteed. Nelson Mandela after years in prison and decades of the
inhumanity and oppression of apartheid, to the shock and amazement of
his black constituency preached reconciliation. An unpopular move in the
short term but no contemporary political figure is as revered as he is
even in death.
"The opportunity to go down in history as builders of the new Nigeria, now beckons. I trust that you will heed its call.
"I pray that your road henceforth will be laden with favour and grace in Jesus name."
Osinabjo Read Acting President's full speech at Armed Forces graduation ceremony
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