“No nation survives when it treats its young like enemies and its poor like burdens.”
The signs are unmistakable. Across Nigeria today, frustration festers, despair deepens, and hope flickers dangerously low. Hunger, joblessness, insecurity, and broken trust have combined into a volatile mix. If urgent steps are not taken, this country — Africa’s largest democracy — risks plunging into unprecedented chaos.
According to the National Bureau of Statistics, more than 133 million Nigerians are now classified as living in multidimensional poverty. This staggering figure represents over 63% of the population. Inflation has climbed above 31%, while food inflation — the sharpest indicator of distress among the poor — has crossed 40%. A nation where the minimum wage buys less than a week’s groceries is a nation standing on the edge of fury.
Youth unemployment paints an even grimmer picture. Today, 53% of Nigerian youth are jobless — a devastating waste of energy, potential, and dreams. These are not mere statistics; they represent the daily humiliation of millions trapped in hopelessness, and the growing anger of a generation that sees no future.
We must learn from history. Revolutions do not come solely from poverty; they are born from the toxic marriage of material hardship and broken expectations. When people believe they have nothing left to lose — when governance becomes synonymous with indifference and exploitation — resistance becomes not just likely, but inevitable.
Nigeria has seen the early warnings before. The #EndSARS protests of 2020 were not simply about police brutality; they were an eruption of long-suppressed anger at systemic injustice. The bravery of Nigeria’s youth, and the brutality with which their calls were answered, revealed the dangerous disconnect between the rulers and the ruled.
Three years later, the grievances that sparked those protests have only worsened.
Insecurity, once confined to remote regions, now haunts every part of the country. Banditry, kidnapping, insurgency, and violent crime have left millions displaced and fearful. According to the 2024 Global Terrorism Index, Nigeria remains among the top 10 most terrorized countries in the world. Every act of violence, every unresolved kidnapping, every massacre without accountability tears another thread from the already fragile fabric of national unity.
Meanwhile, the political class remains detached — seemingly more interested in power games and personal enrichment than in the fate of the ordinary Nigerian. Each time a corrupt official escapes justice, each time a promise is broken without consequence, cynicism grows. Trust — the invisible glue that holds nations together — is disappearing fast.
If urgent action is not taken, Nigeria risks slipping into a classic revolutionary cycle. The likely sequence is grimly predictable: a fresh economic shock — perhaps another fuel price hike or food shortage — sparks widespread protests. The state responds with force, further inflaming tensions. Protests evolve into widespread riots. Ethnic and regional tensions flare. In the absence of credible leadership, calls for secession and armed resistance could become impossible to control.
The cost of such a descent would be catastrophic. The World Bank estimates that a full-scale national shutdown costs Nigeria approximately half a billion dollars a day. Beyond the financial loss would lie far greater human suffering: hunger, displacement, violence, and the long, painful task of rebuilding a broken country.
Yet, this future is not inevitable. It can be prevented — if decisive, courageous action is taken now.
The North Journals calls on the federal and state governments to act with the urgency this moment demands.
First, create immediate economic relief programs targeting Nigeria’s most vulnerable populations. Subsidized food programs, mass employment initiatives, and expanded social safety nets must become priorities, not afterthoughts.
Second, tackle insecurity head-on. Security forces must be reformed, professionalized, and held to the highest standards of accountability. Communities must be empowered to play a role in their own defense, under strict legal frameworks.
Third, launch serious police and judicial reforms. Justice must not only be done but be seen to be done. Rogue elements in uniform must be rooted out, and citizens must believe once again that the law protects them rather than preys upon them.
Fourth, pursue genuine political restructuring. True federalism, where regions manage their resources and destinies within a strong national framework, is not just a slogan — it is a survival strategy for a diverse nation like Nigeria.
Finally, make accountability real. Corruption must be punished swiftly and publicly, no matter how high the offender’s position. Every unpunished scandal further erodes faith in the system.
The Nigerian people are remarkably patient and resilient. But no nation can endlessly test the patience of its citizens without consequence.
This is not a time for political games, empty rhetoric, or cosmetic reforms. It is a time for leaders — real leaders — to emerge. Nigeria’s survival depends on boldness, humility, and a willingness to listen.
The world is watching. Our children are watching. They deserve a future better than the fear, hunger, and hopelessness that today threaten to engulf the land.
Nigeria stands at the edge. The choice is clear: renewal or ruin.
History will not forgive those who, having seen the danger, chose to do nothing.