Nigeria’s Yahoo Yahoo image is killing her economy. Things are
spiralling out of control and sociological wreckage is being wrought. It
has often been said that Nigerians are not loyal to their country and
that they badmouth their nation. With this premise, the Department of
National Orientation has run programmes to inculcate patriotism in
citizens and direct the youths. The results are not empirical.
Nigeria has a very bad image abroad. When a nation has a bad reputation,
there will be collateral damage and the first casualty is patriotism.
Because a bad national image casts a dark halo on the citizens, they
will not want to identify with their country. The image subtracts from
their intrinsic worth. They are thus forced to rely on their personal
equity in different situations and they soon begin to question the value
of their country to them.
Our national identity cannot augment our valuation as Nigerians because
of the negative reputation of our fatherland. This is because our
primary output as a nation is apparently advance fee fraud, not oil; our
systems and institutions are deemed malfunctioning and corrupt. Our
passport is thus a liability at customs checkpoints and the innocent are
banded with criminals.
This generalisation takes a toll on patriotic sentiments. Citizens don’t
idolise a nation that subtracts from their worth, or shuts the door of
opportunity against them, or makes them a pariah at international
borders. And when a Nigerian succeeds, he feels he did it by himself and
despite his country. Thus, he owes his nation no allegiance.
Are we by this article justifying lack of patriotism? Of course not!
Nigeria suffers from four image afflictions (in my line of work we call
them ‘brand eroders’). They are corruption, online credit card fraud
(cybercrime), fundamentalist terrorism and kidnapping. These constitute
the ordinance against the country.
The four can be broadly categorised into two classes — the violent class
and the economic class. Kidnapping and fundamentalist terrorism belong
to the violent class. They tend to play grandly on the national stage;
but cybercrime is the most democratised of all. It is a huge retail
enterprise, precisely because the barrier to entry is low. A cyber
criminal can run his operations entirely from a business centre. Anyone
with a modem and a computer, or smartphone can launch into business. And
it has gone industrial. There are now cybercrime factories — rows and
rows of young men and women in huge spaces, dedicated to online criminal
pursuit on computer notebooks.
The damage to the nation has been incalculable. The problem with
cybercrime is that while other crimes are domiciled within Nigerian
borders, cybercrime is a global phenomenon. We are systematically being
shut out of the global economic system because of the activities of
these aberrant cyberpreneurs. Today, Nigeria is not listed on the drop
down menu of Paypal, the global online payment platform. Neither can we
shop on Macy’s, Target, J.C. Penney and Marks & Spencer, to name a
few. We can’t even buy antivirus software for our computers. Kaspersky
shut us out. We are suffering from economic blockade, not unlike Iran;
it’s just that ours is the market-driven variety. If truth be told, a 419er is an economic terrorist. He is waging an economic war against his country.
Our young men and women cannot access cheap finance through credit cards
for their business start-ups. Even our debit cards are not accepted by
international merchants! Once the transaction originates from Nigeria, a
virtual steel door clamps down. Those who take the risk of online
transactions from Nigeria put us through such strenuous processes it
defeats the very purpose of online purchase. And our internet
transactions are being routed through South Africa, with the attendant
consequences on national sovereignty.
The elites have found a way round the credit card blockade. They simply
travel abroad and use a foreign merchant card. They take care of
themselves, but how myopic!
For one, the youths will become more desperate and take ever more
unwholesome routes in pursuit of opportunities; our negative image is
thus reinforced by an army of disenfranchised youths. Two, they will
hate those that are privileged and their sense of rage will morph into
other criminal activities against the privileged. Three, they will lose
faith in the maternal instincts of the nation, after all, the nation is
not helping them. Four, as those who succeed by devious means flaunt
their ill-gotten wealth and invariably take up the political positions
they bought with their loot, a signal is sent into the generational pool
that ‘making it’ through criminal device is the way to go. Five, the
youths will become a dangerous arsenal in the hands of the wrong
commander-in-chief. When you extinguish hope, there is nothing left.
Six, crime becomes normative, expected and required. It becomes an
affirmation of basic humanity.
What should be done? How can we redeem our image and remedy the situation?
We need a four-pronged strategy: eliminate, repair, discourage, prevent.
We must eliminate cybercrime factories. Government must erect an
equivalent anti-cybercrime factory full of hackers, trackers and servers
to fight online criminal pursuit. It is a national security risk. And
by the way, setting up this factory will provide employment to many of
our computer science graduates. If we are serious, we should see a major
drop in cybercrime within nine months.
We must also activate a discouragement strategy. First we must pass the
cybercrime bill before our legislators. We must prosecute criminals
under the law and make an example of cyber criminals. With the passage
of the law, we signal to the international community that we are serious
about curtailing cybercrime.
Our repair strategy dictates that we mend our relationship with the
international merchant community. We need to undertake economic
diplomacy. The amount Nigerians spend abroad annually gives us economic
clout. It can be leveraged.
But prevention is always cheaper than cure. We need to re-orientate our youths and create opportunities for them.
In addition, our school curricula must reflect our realities. We need to
teach our kids to create jobs rather than waiting for jobs.
Religious organisations have a role to play too. Government must partner with them.
And parents have a role to play too. As do our teachers. We must be worthy examples to our children.
Society is dynamic. We will never reach a point in which cybercrime is
non-existent. The image of nations is not defined by the absence of
negatives. It is determined by the positive exertions of its government
and citizens.
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