Wednesday, October 24, 2012

LESSONS FROM A FUEL QUEUE

I stared out idly from the creaky taxi watching the stretch of tired cars strewn carelessly within miles of any fuel station.  I gave a reigned sign at this recurrent image in our national kaleidoscope, and reached for my headphones to escape into the therapy of the Cranberries.  The driver's angry grumbles halted me.

He was demonstrating wildly as we crawled three blocks past the junction I had told I would stop at.  "Why you no tell me say na for ICPC you go stop?  I no dey go again!  Listen Oga, after this junction, I swear I go park here and you must pay me my money!"  Ordinarily, I would flare but his reddened eyes testified to the agonizing hours he had spent waiting for the smug fuel sellers to rouse themselves for pre-dawn sales.  Eventually, when it got to his turn, he would only be able to afford halt tank, and now, the half tank is dwindling, and the day's bottom line has not been nearly met.  Plus, it is a Friday!

I calmed him and agreed to give an extra N200.00 for the excess journey.  His expression changed instantly, "haba oga no be say I wicked o, na this country dey cause am o..." and he went into an animated comparative ramble on democracy and military rule.  I tuned off.  When I alighted, I watched him struggle with more guilt ridden half apologies.  I waved them off with a smile, it was not his fault.

That was when it stuck me that the fuel crisis creates a perfect metaphor for our country and its citizens.  it demarcates us all into the typical classes we struggle in, everyday.  Here goes:

THE BLACK MARKET SELLERS
In our everyday life, there represent the Contract chasers; those half-schooled charlatans that benefit from loopholes in the system.  They are products of ill-legality and expertly navigate past every deals.  Of course, lacking the abilities to do anything with the technical contracts, they outsource them via auction type arrangements.  Once they espy another poor consultant frustrated by the dearth of due process, they swoop on him, wielding their siphons, then rush off to another victim, gloating at the huge payoff, while the consultant is tortured to merely meet the project deliverable, all hopes of possible profit having died after the 70% compulsory fee demanded by the jobbers.

THE FUEL ATTENDANTS
These represent the junior officers in public service.  They mill around the offices idly, and their work day fritters to a regular uneventful end.  Visitors walk past them every day without he least recognition of their presence.  They could be naked, or dressed in rags, nobody notices.  They are that insignificant.  But in times of crisis, when the gates are closed on all callers and the big oga does not want to see anybody that is not on appointment; they suddenly become relevant.  you then, find their hitherto humble demeanor give way to grandiose scowls.  They take forever to produce the visitors' form; shuffle into the building and emerge hours later to inform you that oga cannot see you now.  Desperate, you beg and supplicate; you remember to line their palms with currency note which they take without thanks, casting a quick eye to measure the quantum.  Beautiful girls happily avail them their phone numbers, and smartly dressed gents obsequiously croon "mummy" "big daddy."  And they are ruthless.  You are briskly marched out by the security if you try to claim right.  They know that when they system reverses itself, they would be forced back into the ignominy of anonymity.  But, in the meantime, they rule.

THE MOTORISTS WHO DO NOT QUEUE BUT BRIBE THEIR WAY IN
These are the VIPs.  No, they are not the politicians.  They are the private sector rich.  They do not have time to queue for due process; time is money.  In fact, they appear to enjoy a crisis, because it is only in such deteriorated situations that the fine line that distinguishes them from the proletariat is made evident.  Willingly, they pay more for less, and emerge, looking busy and snorting at these other fools who do not understand the value of time.  Their wealth isolates them from the ugliness of the country, and they lead merry, cheery lives in the midst of the rot.  A unique breed of ostriches, they bury their heads in gold.  They are the biggest suckers, because they have the means to drive change but do not see it.

THE MOTORISTS WHO QUEUE AND GRUMBLE
This is the ordinary Nigerian.  Pummeled on all sides by bad policy; he suffers all the consequent impact, and bears the highest stress levels.  They shove and snap at themselves, irritated by unsavory mirror images they represent for each other.  they stare wistfully at the VIPs and dream of rising to a level where they can pay their way past 'minor inconveniences.'  They despise other members of their large community and yell: "if body dey pain you; why you no go pay N500 to avoid queue!"  They foster a sense of abject powerlessness, and offer their willing backs to the buffets of the big system.

THE PIPELINE VANDALS/HOARDERS OF FUEL
Perennially faceless.  You hear of them their actions generate a harsh domino effect on the rest of society, but they are never caught.  They run the system...they are the government.



Chijioke Okafor  

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

HOW TO MAKE LAWYERS POPULAR

Although public perception of lawyers, fueled by media stereotypes, is broadly negative, but there are positive steps the profession can take to rehabilitate its public image.  Indeed, if life is just a popularity contest, lawyers seem to be losing.  One survey carried out by the Legal Services Consumer Panel revealed that only 43% of the public trust lawyers.  This is down from 47% in 2011.

Media stereotypes propagate an image of lawyers as either Dickensian figures, out of touch with reality, profit hungry or port sodden Rum-pole of the bailey type characters.  The rise of the compensation culture can also be linked to a decline in the image of lawyers.  Another survey recently found that the profession topped the list of people respondents would least like to sit next to at a dinner party, in front of Big Brother reality television contestants and Victoria Beckham.  And, with reports of some 30 million jokes a day about lawyers on the internet, there seems to be a real issue around how lawyers are perceived on the public stage.

But, according to Davies, it is not a question of better publicity.  "When was the last time you saw a news story about something good happening in a hospital?"  She said, referring to the widespread popularity of the medical profession.  "The media is a red herring that can really lead to complacency.  There are tangible actions that are within the control of the profession and the regulators that will change public perception."

Among tips offered to build public confidence in lawyers was to embrace regulation which is independent of the profession and operates transparently.  Making efforts to welcome competition and abandon protectionism was another suggestion.  Other tips were to provide excellent customer service, deal effectively and properly with complains and improve the diversity of workforce.  Davies also suggested modernizing education and training regimes, writing codes of conduct in a language which consumers can understand and involving the public more in the development of regulations.

According to Olasupo Shasore of Ajumobobia & Okeke Barristers & Solicitors in Nigeria, the consequences of poor perception of lawyers in society can be dire, if the profession has a bad reputation, enrolment in the law as a profession will diminish.  "The consequences of this are not just the trivia of our profession, they are the soul and fabric of our society", added the Nigerian lawyer.

When the patronage of a profession is low and perception is poor, the result is that people have very low trust in institutions that are associated with the profession, said Shasore, listing the courts and law enforcement mechanism as examples.  This could result in a low level of trust in the rule of law, which itself could lead to the breakdown of law and order and social upheaval.

Adapted from IBA Daily News.