Nigeria Is Healing. We Are the Wound It Forgot.
At dawn in this country, two people are counting.
In the cool rooms of Abuja, a man counts upward. He counts the points the market gained yesterday. He counts the billions of dollars now resting in the nation's savings, almost fifty of them, a number that glows like a clean wound stitched shut.
He counts the way prices, which once climbed like fire up a curtain, have slowed to a walk. He counts growth, almost four in every hundred. Then he says the word he has waited three years to say. Stable. The country, he says, is stable.
He is not lying. This is the part that breaks you. The numbers are true.
In a yard in Lagos, a woman is also counting. She counts the cups of rice left in the bag, and there are fewer than yesterday, because the bag that cost thirty thousand naira when her first child was born now costs ninety.
She counts the naira in her wrapper against the fuel that has climbed from two hundred to over thirteen hundred for a single litre, and the arithmetic refuses to forgive her.
She counts her wage, the new minimum wage, seventy thousand naira a month, a number bigger than any wage she has ever earned. Then someone teaches her the cruel trick of turning it into dollars, and she learns that her seventy thousand today buys less bread than thirty thousand bought in 2019.
The number went up. The life went down. She counts, and counting takes something from her each time.
This is the riddle of Nigeria in 2026. The country is rising. The people are sinking. And both are happening in the same body, at the same hour, under the same flag.
Understand the medicine, and you understand the pain. Three years ago the government broke something that needed breaking. It tore away the fuel subsidy that had swallowed the treasury wholly. It freed the naira to find its true and brutal weight.
This was a doctor setting a shattered bone. The setting was right. The bone needed it. But a doctor who has set a bone has not healed it. He has only begun the long scream.
And while the bone of the nation knits itself back, slowly, in a language only investors and economists can read, the flesh around it howls in a language every mother knows by heart.
They fixed the scoreboard. They have not yet fixed the game. They healed the chart and forgot the household.
But hunger, terrible as it is, is not the deepest wound. The deepest wound is fear.
Walk to any gate in this country, that iron line between a family and the night, and you will find it locked earlier than it used to be.
This year the gunmen took schoolchildren from their classrooms in the north, lifting them out of arithmetic and into ransom. They took a retired general, a man who once commanded armies, snatched off a road like a stray goat. They ambushed a governor's right hand and left four bodies behind.
They seized a surgeon, a man whose two hands knew how to close a wound, and his fellow doctors had to threaten to abandon a whole hospital just to beg the country to find him.
And above all of this hangs a number too vast to feel. Thirty-five million Nigerians, the watchers of world hunger now warn, will not have enough to eat in the dry months ahead. Thirty-five million. The largest harvest of hunger this nation has ever counted, in a land where the soil is willing and the farmer is too afraid to walk to his farm.
So picture it plainly. The books are getting better. The kidnappers are getting better. The economy is recovering, and the people are disappearing, and the same morning newspaper that prints the cheerful chart prints the names of the missing one column over.
Then, last year, a stranger came to the gate.
He was the president of America, and he looked at our burning villages and our stolen children and our churches turned to ash, and he did not speak the way a polite friend speaks. He named us a country of particular concern.
Well, aside studying law much later in his acting career, he may have studied while they did (actors perceived lifestyle), that's those their "alabanko" razmataz "oringo" life. So, the compulsory ingredients that sharpens the minds of would be lawyers will be missed even though he's bequeathed with the certificate.
@Pharmacio001 This your dream is a tall one. Abeg, if you can't see the doctor for assessment and be given orthodox medicine, abeg try "agbo" the native herbs 🌿. The malaria will be attacked and treated. Please try.
The body language, gestulations, arrogance, and self adulation was uncalled for. Imagine saying that he's the supposed best presidential candidate? Envisaging that he's towering above all that are currently in the race right now? How?
All that was expected of him was to have used suiting words to calm down frayed nerves, but instead he aggravated the situation. Aspirants rightly complained that the way some candidates emerged was not appropriate, and what the supposed leader of the party did during the interview which presented a good opportunity to build hope was to boast and spread unnecessarily and even belittled the party's candidate.
Well, we thank him for the political platform, but, Oga Dickson did not do well in that interview. No, he didn't. He can do better by arranging for another interview.
@IgboHistoFacts That's why he was allowed only at the corridor while the caucus meeting was holding in the sitting room. Who will trust "oji onu" who talks too much? Even ADC won't allow him into any serious meeting.
@EhisBukason Complete 'ekpekiri' human being. I don't know if it's the back of the Bible that he reads. Still can't fathom the reason even some educated people go sit to listen to his phantom religious stories.
@jrnaib2 You or anyone else cannot go and achieve substantial distance by backing the road and trekking backwards. No, you'll waste your time and the time of everyone who's in your team.
Is that so? NDC has shown that their members are after all Nigerians and they're the same people like those in other political parties. I don't blame anyone who's hollering at people during their party's heart-to-hearts talk. Times are different. Everyone can't be Gani Fawehinmi, Beko Ransome Kuti, Fela Anikulapo Kuti, or Tai Solarin, who fought for human rights and did advocacy for free, and to free Nigerians from the grips of the military government. No! Today's human rights advocates unlike those who advocated for Nigerians in the 1970s and 1980s, also wants to secure political positions in order to probably serve the people or taste the puddings. Yes o! Na work chop o. You work and you chop too. Na so Fela and co holler so tey God called dem back home and dem waka like that. I no blame anyone.
@Kingprince006 I heard he has two private universities. Well, it's understood that he has protect them. Otherwise, the roaring ogbologbo can ram into them and request some explanations.
References:
Al Jazeera (2026) From US threats to holding hands: did Nigeria disarm Trump on security? 19 February. Available at: https://t.co/H8accLDIVU (Accessed: 2 June 2026).
AllAfrica (2025) Nigeria: authorities urged to take lawful measures to stop mass abductions in Nigeria, 28 November. Available at: https://t.co/KLyTFtdP86 (Accessed: 2 June 2026).
Atlantic Council (2025) With Trump's threats of military intervention in Nigeria, Tinubu faces a delicate balancing act, 5 November. Available at: https://t.co/Bl2lPmyp7b (Accessed: 2 June 2026).
Business A.M. (2026) Market rally, consumer pain: two faces of Tinubu's economic reforms, 1 June. Available at: https://t.co/amsUq1ma4t (Accessed: 2 June 2026).
CBS News (2025) Trump threatens to cut off aid to Nigeria, orders Pentagon to 'prepare for possible action' over persecution of Christians, 1 November. Available at: https://t.co/lUaXOO34I0 (Accessed: 2 June 2026).
CNBC Africa (2026) Nigeria's Tinubu says reforms stabilising economy despite hardship, 29 May. Available at: https://t.co/D2K3oAYk8S (Accessed: 2 June 2026).
Council on Foreign Relations (2025) The dynamics behind Trump's decision to bomb ISIS in Nigeria, 29 December. Available at: https://t.co/LthFGfvR1D (Accessed: 2 June 2026).
Daily Post Nigeria (2026) Three years in office: economists rate Tinubu govt, 2 June. Available at: https://t.co/cA5GVbegc7 (Accessed: 2 June 2026).
Glamtush (2026) Top 10 Nigerian newspaper headlines today, 2nd June 2026, 2 June. Available at: https://t.co/eDANvhBTvm (Accessed: 2 June 2026).
Human Rights Watch (2025) Nigeria: renewed spate of school kidnappings, 25 November. Available at: https://t.co/vrMeXC0bK8 (Accessed: 2 June 2026).
Nigerian Journal of Sustainability Research (2026) Inside Nigeria's deepening cost-of-living crisis in 2026. Available at: https://t.co/aquYJpEpaY (Accessed: 2 June 2026).
NPR (2025) Trump threatens military action in Nigeria over Christian persecution claims, 1 November. Available at: https://t.co/405iCyF666 (Accessed: 2 June 2026).
Punch (2026) News, 2 June. Available at: https://t.co/R8UyFVTWlN (Accessed: 2 June 2026).
Nigeria Is Healing. We Are the Wound It Forgot.
At dawn in this country, two people are counting.
In the cool rooms of Abuja, a man counts upward. He counts the points the market gained yesterday. He counts the billions of dollars now resting in the nation's savings, almost fifty of them, a number that glows like a clean wound stitched shut.
He counts the way prices, which once climbed like fire up a curtain, have slowed to a walk. He counts growth, almost four in every hundred. Then he says the word he has waited three years to say. Stable. The country, he says, is stable.
He is not lying. This is the part that breaks you. The numbers are true.
In a yard in Lagos, a woman is also counting. She counts the cups of rice left in the bag, and there are fewer than yesterday, because the bag that cost thirty thousand naira when her first child was born now costs ninety.
She counts the naira in her wrapper against the fuel that has climbed from two hundred to over thirteen hundred for a single litre, and the arithmetic refuses to forgive her.
She counts her wage, the new minimum wage, seventy thousand naira a month, a number bigger than any wage she has ever earned. Then someone teaches her the cruel trick of turning it into dollars, and she learns that her seventy thousand today buys less bread than thirty thousand bought in 2019.
The number went up. The life went down. She counts, and counting takes something from her each time.
This is the riddle of Nigeria in 2026. The country is rising. The people are sinking. And both are happening in the same body, at the same hour, under the same flag.
Understand the medicine, and you understand the pain. Three years ago the government broke something that needed breaking. It tore away the fuel subsidy that had swallowed the treasury wholly. It freed the naira to find its true and brutal weight.
This was a doctor setting a shattered bone. The setting was right. The bone needed it. But a doctor who has set a bone has not healed it. He has only begun the long scream.
And while the bone of the nation knits itself back, slowly, in a language only investors and economists can read, the flesh around it howls in a language every mother knows by heart.
They fixed the scoreboard. They have not yet fixed the game. They healed the chart and forgot the household.
But hunger, terrible as it is, is not the deepest wound. The deepest wound is fear.
Walk to any gate in this country, that iron line between a family and the night, and you will find it locked earlier than it used to be.
This year the gunmen took schoolchildren from their classrooms in the north, lifting them out of arithmetic and into ransom. They took a retired general, a man who once commanded armies, snatched off a road like a stray goat. They ambushed a governor's right hand and left four bodies behind.
They seized a surgeon, a man whose two hands knew how to close a wound, and his fellow doctors had to threaten to abandon a whole hospital just to beg the country to find him.
And above all of this hangs a number too vast to feel. Thirty-five million Nigerians, the watchers of world hunger now warn, will not have enough to eat in the dry months ahead. Thirty-five million. The largest harvest of hunger this nation has ever counted, in a land where the soil is willing and the farmer is too afraid to walk to his farm.
So picture it plainly. The books are getting better. The kidnappers are getting better. The economy is recovering, and the people are disappearing, and the same morning newspaper that prints the cheerful chart prints the names of the missing one column over.
Then, last year, a stranger came to the gate.
He was the president of America, and he looked at our burning villages and our stolen children and our churches turned to ash, and he did not speak the way a polite friend speaks. He named us a country of particular concern.
Then he went further. He threatened to come in himself, guns blazing, in his own rough words, to deal with the men we had failed to deal with. Our own president rose to meet the insult and said, truly, that Nigeria is no land that hunts a man for his faith, that we have always been one people praying in many tongues.
For a moment two proud men stood chest to chest. And then something quiet and heavy happened. America did not break down the gate. It reached through it. There were strikes against the terrorists. There came a table in Abuja where Nigerian and American hands planned together how to keep Nigerian children alive. The threat softened into a handshake.
Sit with what that means, because it is not a thing to clap for. It took the anger of a foreigner to make our own house run faster toward our own children. The stranger at the gate shouted, and only then did the family inside rush to the door.
And the question that leaves behind is the one I cannot stop hearing at night. If it took an outsider's roar to move us, then how long, and how loudly, have our own people been crying into a house that would not turn its head?
This is my country in the third year of its great repair. A patient the doctors are proud of, who cannot sleep for fear. A house with a fine new gate and an empty pot. A nation praised in dollars and buried in naira.
The recovery is real. I will not insult you by pretending it is not. The bone may truly be healing. But a recovery that the hungry cannot eat, that the kidnapped cannot feel, that the frightened cannot rest inside, is a recovery that has forgotten what it was for.
Numbers do not fill a stomach. Reserves do not walk a child home from school. A rising market cannot return a surgeon to his daughter.
So let the men in the cool rooms keep counting upward. We hear them. We even believe them. And then we will go back to our yards and count downward, cup by cup, naira by naira, gate locked against the dark, and we will wait.
We will wait for the day the line on their chart and the meal on our table finally agree to rise together.
Until that day, the country is healing.
We are the wound it forgot.