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Exodus: Transport, Aviation, and Works Ministries — Nigeria’s Bane of Existence

A Journey Through the Wilderness

When the Israelites left Egypt, their path was marked by hardship. They trudged through deserts, crossed the Red Sea under Moses’ staff, and survived on manna from heaven. Yet, in their suffering, there was always a promise: “I carried you on eagle’s wings and brought you to myself” (Exodus 19:4). Movement was not just survival; it was destiny. The journey itself was the covenant of freedom.

Nigeria today finds itself in a similar wilderness. Our ministries of Transport, Aviation, and Works entrusted with carrying the people on “eagle’s wings” have instead become the bane of existence, shackling citizens in a modern captivity of broken roads, unaffordable flights, and absent railways.

Death Traps on the Highways

The Ministry of Works bears responsibility for the arteries of the nation. Yet our roads are littered with potholes, accidents, and insecurity. Highways that should connect families and commerce have become death traps. Like Pharaoh’s chariots swallowed by the Red Sea, countless lives are swallowed daily by negligence and decay. The promise of safe passage has been betrayed.

The Silence of the Rails and Buses

The Ministry of Transport, meant to provide alternatives, has failed to build a system that moves people with dignity. Efficient rail networks remain a mirage. Bus systems are chaotic, unsafe, and unreliable. Goods rot in warehouses because there is no infrastructure to carry them swiftly to markets. The Israelites wandered forty years in the desert, but Nigeria has wandered sixty years in transport wilderness, without manna, without direction.

Aviation: The Eagle’s Wings Broken

In biblical imagery, God promised to lift His people on eagle’s wings. In Nigeria, aviation should be those wings. Instead, they are clipped. Banditry and kidnappings have forced citizens into the skies, but the proprietors of air travel have turned desperation into exploitation. A single domestic flight is now on the borderline of ₦500,000, making it cheaper to fly six hours from London to Lagos than forty-five minutes from Lagos to Enugu, Asaba, or Awka. The eagle’s wings have become a vulture’s claws, preying on the people’s need for safety.

What Have We Done to Ourselves?

This is not merely an economic failure; it is a moral indictment. A nation that cannot move its people cannot move forward. The ministries of Works, Transport, and Aviation have become Pharaohs of our time, holding Nigerians captive in immobility. The Exodus story reminds us that liberation is not only about leaving bondage but about building a path to the promised land. Nigeria’s promised land remains unreachable because the journey itself is broken.

Toward a New Exodus

If Israel’s Exodus was about faith, Nigeria’s must be about responsibility. We must demand:

  • Roads that are safe, maintained, and secure.
  • Railways that connect cities and markets with efficiency.
  • Aviation that serves, not exploits, the people.

The ministries must remember their sacred duty: to carry Nigerians on eagle’s wings, not to cast them into the wilderness of despair. Until then, the Exodus continues, not toward freedom, but deeper into captivity.

Comments

Anonymous said…
Your essay strikes a painful nerve because it refuses to treat mobility as a luxury; it names it correctly as destiny infrastructure. When a people cannot move safely, affordably, and with dignity, freedom itself becomes theoretical. Roads, rails, and airways are not neutral assets—they are moral choices made visible.
What is most disturbing is not simply decay, but normalization of dysfunction. We have grown used to praying before road journeys, budgeting funerals into transport risks, and accepting airfares that insult both logic and labour. This is not resilience; it is coerced adaptation. No nation should require faith as a substitute for policy.
Your biblical framing exposes something deeper: Nigeria’s transport crisis is not accidental—it reflects a leadership mindset that plans without people in view. When ministries exist without outcomes, when announcements replace maintenance, and when desperation is monetized, governance quietly mutates into exploitation.
The comparison with Exodus is apt, but with a sobering twist: Pharaoh was external; our captivity is self-administered. We legislate suffering through neglect, then spiritualize the consequences. Infrastructure failure has become our longest-running public ritual.
Yet, the most urgent takeaway is this: movement is power. The inability to move goods kills productivity. The inability to move people kills opportunity. The inability to move safely kills hope. No reform agenda can succeed while Nigerians remain stranded—physically and economically.
This conversation must not end at lamentation. It must mature into civic pressure, policy interrogation, and accountability beyond press releases. Until movement is restored, every promise of progress remains stalled at the roadside.
Ogbuke’s Cubicle’s Desk

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