Once again it’s
Christmas all over the world. A time for joy and laughter, that’s why even
though it’s a special time traditionally for Christians all over the world to
celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ, it has also become a time set aside for
many at the end of every year for merriment as it has now been accepted by
nearly all as a special holiday period for even very large numbers of
non-Christians across the globe.
Many save up to
make trips to spend time with loved ones from one point to the other especially
those who have not had time all through the year due to the everyday life’s
hustle to make ends meet, hence Christmas for such people is a “catching up”
time.
Christmas, a time
you feel so much love in the air as no doubts gift shops all over the world are
right now packed full with last minute buyers and of course with the many sales
ongoing in virtually all the stores across the globe, you are bound to find gob
smacked attendants on their feet all day attending to customers’ needs
including unending questions from big-buying’ as well as the window shoppers or
‘time-wasting’ ones who will end up picking a lot less than what they must have
troubled the attendants over. But then, that’s one of the challenges in working
in such stores.
For us in Nigeria
too, it’s Christmas again and a time typical for petroleum marketers to make
their ‘end of year killing profits’ at the detriment of the masses. Therefore,
we are once again like a couple of years before now at Christmas, faced with
the recurrent fuel scarcity thus leading to long queues at the stations where
people have to wait for long hours as though expecting the second ‘coming of
Christ’ just to get a few litres of fuel and the most mind boggling part is
that many sleep at the stations just to ensure they get to buy as soon as these
stations commence sale yet some of these ones leave disappointed without buying even after the horrid hours
spent waiting.
This time around,
we are not only faced with fuel scarcity which has led to the crazy hike in transport
fare by over a 100% thus hindering some families from travelling for the
yuletide season, we are also faced with long queues at ATM machines in all the
banks in the country including the ones in the rural areas where on a good day
would barely have more than two persons waiting to use those machines. People
can’t collect their money from the banks to even buy food talk less of buying
the fuel which the ‘black’ marketers are selling at very outrageous and exorbitant
prices.
We have not only
become a cashless society but have moved on to a ‘cash-trapped’ society as we
now have to wake up very early and rush off to queue up at banks just so we can
collect our own money which was saved in these banks.
In all of these
happenings, it’s still the masses who are affected as those who steal us ‘red’
on a daily basis in their various leadership positions, still have their way
around getting all their needs met at this season from ‘the backs’ including
the scarce fuel as well as cash from some of
these banks’ officials who are sometimes even willing to make delivery
to the respective homes of these ‘top shots’. While the rest remain cashless,
‘cashtrapped’, ‘fueltrapped’ and even ‘foodtrapped’. What an irony of life!
Gosh! Nigeria is
beginning to choke one up more and more by the day. We seem not to be getting
out of the woods anytime soon.
Nevertheless, let
me still use this opportunity to wish everyone in Nigeria including all those
lucky ones in diaspora a merry Christmas even as the rest of us here endure the
season of a ‘cashtrapped’ holiday taking
place all over the country at this moment.
God help us all!
STELLA ENE-INYANG
STELLA ENE-INYANG