Fellow Nigerians, the
year 2010 is the year
that our country
celebrates 50 years of
our independence from
colonialism. A
colonialism that
thwarted our
aspirations,
underdeveloped us, and
laid the foundations of
our current
socio-political
problems. I congratulate
all Nigerians residing
in Canada, that we can
celebrate this year, in
spite of the gloom with
which the year started.
Our President is
reported sick, America
has declared us a
“country of interest”,
and here in Canada, we
are apprehensive of the
consequences of being
unjustly profiled and
being segregated
against. At home we
continue to receive bad
news of persistent
corruption, and needless
blood letting among
Christian and Moslem
believers. Let me state
to you that in spite of
stories of gloom and
doom, our country is
making steady progress
in all areas of our
national life. For every
bad Nigeria, there are
over one hundred and
forty nine million, nine
hundred and ninety nine
thousand, nine hundred
and ninety-nine good
Nigerians including you.
I challenge anybody to
show me a nation on
earth, where there are
only saints and I would
show a nation without
human beings. Nigerians
are sick of being sick
of their country and the
old corrupt ways of
doing things are being
seriously challenged by
the example of new
efficient and honest
ways of conducting
affairs. A new emergent
responsible leadership
has been forged from the
furnace of our
collective anger and
despair. So let us
celebrate a new birth
and perish gloom and
doom this year.
My main message this
year to you is, do not
despair. Nigeria shall
rise in greatness.
Restore your confidence
that if everybody falls,
at least, you will be
standing. And if you
stand, you may just be
what our country needs
to revive her
institutions, her
integrity and indeed her
fame. I challenge you,
each one of you, to come
together and be the
change we want to see in
our country. The
pluralist values we
enjoy in Canada, the
peace we cherish and the
order we take for
granted here can be
Nigerians too. What
needs must be done is to
share our good fortune
in vision, beliefs and
practice with
continental Nigerians.
Get out of your hiding
places and defend the
true great tradition of
Nigeria as the leading
donor country and peace
maker on the continent
of Africa and indeed
globally. Share your
remarkable strengths and
resilience, your joys
and hopes with other
Canadians and make your
host community even
better. Our struggles
and sacrifices, the
lives of our past heroes
and yours cannot be
without the purpose of
building a place on
earth, which 150 million
Nigerians of the earth
and all oppressed black
people can proudly call
home.
I challenge you to rise
up to those that
prophesy doom, those
that say we are failing,
or have failed and tell
them they lie. We will
not fail; we will fight
to enthrone our true
independence, true
democracy and our values
as proud, hardworking,
peace loving, family
valuing, generous,
passionate, spiritual
and happy people.
Raise up your heads all
citizens of Nigeria at
50, let us take on
fully, the challenges,
rights and benefits of
our citizenship, as well
as the duties and
responsibilities, that
guarantee for each of
us, full partnership in
the fortunes and future
of our country through
unity, sense of
community, maturity and
loyalty.
Arise fellow citizens,
shine in Alberta,
Ontario, Quebec, British
Columbia, Manitoba, New
Foundland and Labrador,
Saskatchewan and all the
provinces and
territories of Canada.
As we face the global
challenge today of being
unjustly segregated
against at borders of
the world, we should not
bow to prejudice, but
dignify ourselves by
transparent integrity,
co-operation, and truth.
On behalf of my wife
Nancy and the staff of
the High Commission, I
wish you a happy new
year 2010.
Prof. Iyorwuese Hagher,
PhD, OON
High Commissioner