Mr. Mike Omeri, the head of the National Orientation Agency (NOA) spoke to Joshua Ocheja and Tomilola Amudipe about his signature programme and other issues
It
is widely believed that the NOA operates more as the propaganda arm of
government, rather than a re-orientation agency. What’s your take on
that?
Well,
if the NOA is described as the propaganda arm of government, what else
do they want us to do? Be the enemy of Nigeria? But what I know and I
insist is that and you can do a psychoanalysis of all that I have said
since I came here and whether anything that I have said is contrary to
what society wants and not. If you talk about railway, there are
railways. If you talk about airports, go there and see first. If you
talk about agriculture, go there and see what is happening. I challenge
journalists who have interviewed such people who claimed that we have
been compromised to do an analysis, to take steps to investigate and
come out with a position.
I
am an investigative journalist by training and if I see people doing
investigation especially for information, I get excited. Yes we are
compromised for good governance, we are compromised for Nigeria and we
have no shame about it. We are compromised for patriotism and we love
our country and we have no shame about that.
“The Do the Right Thing” is your signature intervention. Why is such a campaign necessary?
We
conducted a baseline study and discovered that every Nigerian wants and
desires the right thing. Every Nigerian dreams the right thing but
Nigerians are not working for the right things. So we thought we should
come up with a charge for Nigerians. It is not a slogan but a charge to
remind Nigerians that these right things that we talk about and need are
a collective task and it begins with the individuals. Therefore it’s a
call to action because there are so many aspects of values that we have
neglected that are right and that we want. We have decided that we take
them one after the other. For instance, a Nigerian may think that not
planting tree is the right thing to do or throwing dirt on the road is
the right thing to do. And because we are so accustomed to doing what is
wrong, we think that what is wrong is right. So this campaign is to
wake us up to the reality to what is right.
Can you share with us the roadmap and the success of this campaign?
Part of what we intend to do is to rebrand. As a fact we have rebranded the then WAI Brigade into Community Support Brigade.
The idea is to have this and other such platforms in the communities
spread out there and supporting people to do the right thing, reminding
people about what is right and doing it always. But aside from that, we
are also the campaign to the government and to public servants. Every
civil servant knows that there are rules of doing what is right and
therefore if we remind them through our patriotism and ethics
roundtable, through our various conferences and workshops which we have
signed a collaboration with the office of the Head of Service of the
Federation, it will give us a mileage towards achieving what we are
doing.
We
are also working in the schools through our campus focus programmes
because these issues that need corrections are in all aspects of our
lives. So every organised group and some unorganised ones are our
platforms and therefore we approach them with the message of doing what
is right relevant to their sector. We have been to the markets, we have
been to road transport workers, government offices, we have had
executive business roundtable involving some agencies of government and
we intend to continue with that. So in that way we hope that the message
will sink in. But importantly, the Patriotism and Ethics First platform
of the NOA is a roundtable model that is created by the agency in the
states and within agencies of government. Using that method, we have
5000 or more roundtables going on in this country and we expect that it
will grow. We hope to get Nigerians talking and listening because at the
moment we do a lot of talking but not listening. So through this
roundtable method, we hope Nigerians will listen and share experiences
and we see it reflected in the display of values that we crave for.
What impact do you think this campaign will make?
Imagine
for you, a day that you wake up as an individual and decide to report
to work and do the right things. Imagine how it will turn out to be and
if all of us choose to do what is right in our homes, workplaces and
other social spaces and in interactions with people. Imagine the
difference it will make in our lives. So a community that is doing what
is right will reap the benefits of productivity and organisation. But
cast your minds back for those of us who have experienced the past of
Nigeria when government was never there, when little of government was
known, when government was heard of as a distant phenomenon, how were
the people surviving? They were organised around values. Nobody wanted
to steal anything because it’s not a good thing to do so. What we are
simply saying is return to values. So it is dependent and incumbent on
us now to be the Sardaunas, the Azikiwes, the Awolowos and the Macauleys
of Nigeria.
Some believe the challenges are deep-rooted. How do you factor that into the campaign?
I
just visited the Universal Basic Education office and I am about to
visit the TETFUND and other similar agencies and the education resource
centres. What we are doing is calling for the return of the teaching of
history. At least Nigerian history and the introduction of patriotism
and civic education in schools because within these are the values.
There exist 40 basic proven principles of character. And if you observe
any one such as integrity, honesty, love for your neighbour, etc., you
will make positive impact in the society. So in essence, we are taking
the campaign to the primary schools using our local government model
because we are spread in all the local government areas and the states.
Our staffs at that level are engaging with primary schools and such
institutions.
We
are also in the secondary schools, universities and other tertiary
institutions. We just came back from Kebbi State University of Science
and Technology where we had the campus focus programme geared towards
bringing back values to that layer of the foundation of individual
development.
The
NOA under your watch has been very active. Would you like to share with
us some of your other interventions since assumption of office?
We
have been active as a result of enthusiasm and belief that the
transformation agenda will work this time. Yes we have quite a number of
interventions that we have introduced like the campaign on
environmental sanitation which is a collaborative effort with other
government agencies. We also have the joint collaborative initiative on
disaster mitigation and awareness. We embarked on advocacy and community
awareness and so people will know the dangers of abusing the
environment and building within disaster-prone areas etc. We also have
the theatre for development which we use to dramatize issues, using the
same people in the communities to interpret messages of government and
it has been quite effective especially when we implemented the freedom
of information public sensitization campaign in some communities. We
have also the community interactive and engagement platform. We have
been working hard to get a radio station that will essentially be
reflective of the character of the agency itself, speaking to the
communities in their local languages and giving these communities a
voice. We need community radio stations to fill in the gap that the
social space has created. So we are working on that and so many other
initiatives that we have introduced which I cannot easily enumerate but I
can say that with very little logistics support we are able to provide
some made in Nigeria vehicles to our state offices and head office for
operational purposes.
You mentioned the made-in-Nigeria vehicles. Do you want to shed more light on it?
We
have been leading the campaign for the patronage of made in Nigeria
products. We were the first to acquire made-in-Nigeria vehicles for
official and operational use that are made in Nigeria because after
ours, a lot of other agencies are beginning to patronise. The Federal
Government has made it a policy to patronise a made-in-Nigeria vehicle
and with the coming of the National Automotive Act, you can see that
what we started as a little campaign, what the Federal Ministry of Trade
and Investment is pursuing as a campaign, what the transformation
agenda has introduced is beginning to get the attention of Nigerians and
everybody is involved in the process. Don’t forget that we just had a
Made- in- Aba Fair in Abuja. It was fantastic and you needed to see what
was on display.
What is the Neighbourhood Development Ambassadors Scheme about?
We
have actually changed the name since then to Citizens Responsibility
Volunteer Scheme. This is supposed to be a volunteer-based scheme to be
located in the communities: people helping communities organise
themselves, supplying energy, talent and education. It is a holding
platform in the vision of the agency for those who are yet to be engaged
or acquired any formal employment to be productively and positively
engaged within communities and neighbourhoods so that they can add value
and through that eventually discover that they can empower themselves
from their talents within the community. So instead of sitting down and
doing nothing, the scheme can be a worthy alternative and we intend that
in the long run we would get the MDG Office and ITF and other agencies
involved so that certain projects that can be implemented in communities
can attract the labour of the Citizens Responsibility Volunteers. In
that way you trap income within the community, you get multiple benefits
because people will now respect, protect and use what they perceived to
be their own creation in the communities. Our hope is that it will
eventually lead to creating a people who will end up cooperating to
build their communities.
How has the response been?
Well,
we have not implemented any major programme yet because we are still at
the training and advocacy stage. So people need to know exactly what it
is and to be able to key into it. At the community level I have
discussed with the young people and they are willing to be a part of it
because they have signed up.
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