
Nigeria’s Future Won’t Be Handed over to Mediocrity, Impunity, Misrule, Gbenga Hashim Insists
Chuks Okocha in Abuja
Former presidential candidate Dr. Gbenga Hashim has declared that surrender is not an option, insisting that Nigeria’s future should not be handed over to mediocrity, impunity, and misrule, despite the nation’s deepening political, economic, and security challenges.Hashim made the declaration in Abuja during a North-central zonal meeting of the Gbenga Hashim Solidarity Movement, which brought together state coordinators from across the region.
Addressing the gathering, Hashim said Nigeria’s current realities demand steadfast leadership, organised civic engagement, and citizens who are willing to remain involved rather than retreat into apathy or despair. He warned that abandoning the country would amount to handing its future over to mediocrity, impunity, and misrule.
According to him, national renewal requires discipline, clarity of purpose, and sustained grassroots organisation, stressing that meaningful change is never accidental but the product of deliberate and collective effort.He urged coordinators to deepen community-level engagement while remaining anchored to the core values of accountability, justice, and national unity.
The meeting reviewed the state of the movement across the North-central zone, assessed ongoing mobilisation efforts, and agreed on strategies to strengthen coordination and expand the movement’s reach within the region.Coordinators in attendance reaffirmed their commitment to the vision of a Nigeria governed by competence, integrity, and inclusiveness, pledging to intensify grassroots organisation and political education across their respective states.
In a personal reflection, Hashim recalled his long history of political advocacy, which began at the age of 14 when he became a sympathiser of progressive parties of the era.
“We were not of voting age then, but we pasted posters and sang with excitement,” he said.
“As a young boy, I engaged an NPN representative to the National Assembly, who was a family friend, in discussions about economic management based on my rudimentary knowledge of economics and government.”
He explained that his early activism set him on a path of advocacy for democracy and good governance. This journey later led to his detention as a political detainee at around age 20.
“Almost 40 years later, we are still standing,” Hashim said. “We will not give up until we see the Nigeria of our dreams, by the grace of God.”
Hashim also urged members to remind Nigerians, particularly the youth, of the country’s past economic strengths and future possibilities.
“Tell the people that in 1966 Nigeria’s economy was twice the size of Malaysia’s and bigger than those of Thailand and Indonesia,” he said. “Remind them how
Nigeria assembled cars and tractors and produced vaccines at the Yaba Vaccine Centre. Let young people know that jobs through industrialisation are possible, as we had before, and that they are not condemned to a life dependent on palliatives. Tell them about our $4 trillion plan for economic transformation,” he added.
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