[X]
Digg   Reddit   Newsvine   del.icio.us   Google   Yahoo   Facebook   Stumble Upon   Technorati   Windows Live Follow BayStateBanner on Twitter

Nigeria's big spenders make a flamboyant splash

LAGOS, Nigeria — The waiter at Caliente bar sticks a sparkler into yet another bottle of champagne and hits a siren mounted behind the bar to draw everyone’s attention to the sleek Nigerian businessmen who ordered it.

Near their table, oil traders, sports stars and politicians’ children grind to a hip-hop beat.

Most of Nigeria’s 150 million citizens may live in desperate poverty, but the West African oil giant also has an elite that revels in “shakara” — the flaunting of success.

“Nigerians who have money like to splash it,” explains Naomi Okaja, whose company imports goods into Lagos, the commercial capital. “There are a lot of bad things about this country, like the leadership, but there’s a real entrepreneurial spirit.”

At the Megaplaza mall, a flat-screen TV taller than a man sells for $53,000, a crystal chandelier for $10,000. A 2009 survey by U.S. consulting firm Mercer finds Lagos pricier for expatriates than Berlin or Madrid.

Meanwhile, four-fifths of Nigerians live on less than $2 a day.

In this city of over 17 million, power shortages caused by neglect and mismanagement mean even rich areas only get a couple of hours of electricity a day. A fleet of diesel generators keeps the Megaplaza lights burning.

The wealthy import everything from refined gasoline for their Mercedes-Benzes to their children’s favorite foods.

At night, the line of lights from vessels waiting to berth stretches across the horizon like a diamond necklace on the throat of a Lagos socialite. They enter heavily laden but head out riding high above the water. Only the tankers leave low-bellied; crude oil accounts for 95 percent of Nigerian exports. But production has been slashed following attacks by militants protesting widespread pollution and poverty.

Violent robberies, fraud and kidnappings pit the haves against the have-nots. Restaurants post armed guards; the homes of the wealthy have walls with razor-wire, floodlights, cameras and security guards. Newspaper ads for luxury armored Hummers blare: “You are a person in authority and influence. Protect yourself.”

An island and the connecting peninsula jutting into Lagos Lagoon offer the best real estate. At night, the neighborhoods become the ultimate gated communities, reachable only by bridges and checkpoints guarded by sullen police with rifles.

But the guns can’t protect against fraud. “This home is not for sale” is spray-painted across the walls of many mansions, in case fraudsters get the keys and sell the home for a briefcase full of $100 notes.

And since even Hummers must contend with Lagos’ legendary traffic jams, there are yacht moorings and helipads for the super-rich.

All great cities have gaps between rich and poor, but Nigeria has only the smallest of middle classes sandwiched between the desperate and the fabulously wealthy.

Okaja, the importer, a svelte, black-clad 30-year-old, sees the positive side of conspicuous consumption, calling it an African tradition and a celebration of businesses overcoming poor infrastructure, corruption and political unrest.

But success stories, especially for the politically unconnected, are still the exception.

“You must have a big man behind to you succeed,” insists 25-year-old Ifane Okuro as he haggles with customers over his brightly colored swaths of cloth. “Can you give me a job?”

Okuro’s margins have been squeezed by the closure of most of Nigeria’s textile factories and a ban on importing fabrics, meaning he must smuggle in cheap Chinese cloth through neighboring Benin. Police collect unofficial “taxes,” and he was robbed on his way home from work three months ago.

Authorities say 600 newcomers arrive in Lagos every day to find work. Most end up living in crime-ridden slums, or sleeping under bridges, or in shacks they build on stilts in the fetid lagoon.

The inequality continues to the grave. Ebony, Nigeria’s top funeral provider, offers a replica of Michael Jackson’s coffin, plus a 30-piece brass band. The poor are disposed of wherever there’s space; newspapers reported last month that 24 bodies were found abandoned under a Lagos bridge.

Everyone has a different vision of Nigeria’s future. The dancers at Caliente and the shoppers at Megaplaza think the wealth will trickle down, a growing middle class will push for better governance and a better government will provide better services.

For Okuro and other stall holders around him, such visions provoke bitter laughter.

“When will it come? Tell me when,” Okuro demands to shouts of approval. “We are tired of waiting.”

(Associated Press)



Sep 17 10:30am by D. Weeks [208.58.2.83]

We must also look at the history of Nigeria, and the continent of Africa as well. Until Africans, and those who were involuntarily displaced around the world, (the diaspora) come to recognize that this was planned. I suggest you read How Europe Underdeveloped Africa. The same thing happened in Latin America. Read, The Open Veins of Latin America. Once a country has been successfully exploited and colonized, you can determine the success when the colonizer exits. Those educated Africans who allow corruption to be part of their lives home or abroad contribute to the problem. It is time to wake up and recognize that Africa was successfully raped and it is starting all over again. If you see a nation willing to invest in Africa out of the "gooness of their hearts" ask yourself why. Don't get excited. What natural resources, what is it that we have left that is about to be taken.

It is upon Africans and those in the diaspora, and those sincere in heart to keep watch, and hopefully we can have young adults with knowledge and concern for other nations to become mediators that can allow these nations to move forward. Every loan is not a blessing, and every grant usually comes with strings attached. Let's wake up! What you see in Africa was a planned event, not a curse.

We must train children to be global thinkers, and the only way this will happen is if we properly educate them at school and home. Educate them with the truth.

Ignorance is a void. It is up to you to fill it.

 

related articles

Northeastern talk to feature writers-in-exile

A former winner of the PEN Freedom-to-Write Award, acclaimed author Christopher Abani left his native Nigeria after being imprisoned and tortured as a young man for his writings. In his 2004 novel “GraceLand,” he describes his protagonist’s difficulty reconciling the many faces of the Nigerian city of Lagos, where skyscrapers and slums coexist: “How could a place be so ugly and violent yet beautiful at the same time?” More »


Ethnic diversity strong for Mass. Nigerians

The state’s Nigerian American community started with college students who arrived in the 1970s and 1980s and stayed because of the economic turmoil and political corruption in their homeland. Many are reluctant émigrés who, like others of the first generation, remain focused on affairs back home. Most, though, have become naturalized citizens. More »


More valedictorians pick Northeastern for college

Chioma Nwaoha, the valedictorian of English High School’s 2008 graduating class, got a head start on higher learning by enrolling in summer preparatory courses at Northeastern University. After finishing undergraduate study, Nwaoha said she hopes to go on to medical school and then establish a research center to study infectious diseases in her home country of Nigeria. She said that the health care system in the West African nation is burdened due to the high rates of HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria, and hopes she can one day make a difference. More »