Festac Town and its "419
reputation"
By Adeola
Aderounmu
I LIVED in Festac Town from
1977 to 2002. I attended Central Primary School, 5th Avenue
and later Festac Grammar School, 41 Road. From 1978 to 1989, I
had my primary and secondary education in this once beautiful
village called Festac Town. Festac Town is now a rotten place.
Like every other thing in Nigeria, it was not maintained!.
There is a lot of history behind Festac and there is a lot
that can be highlighted regarding the rise and fall of Festac
Town. One thing that struck me recently is the local and
international reputation of Festac Town as a 419 town.
In 2006, I was driving my 1986 Honda Civic along the
streets of Festac with some friends and they were quick to
point out that I didn't get stopped by the police because of
the number plate of my car. How is that, I queried? They told
me that if my car plate number was FST and if the car looked
very new, the police would have stopped me on the suspicion
that I was a 419 perpetrator. FST as I came to know was the
preference for the "yahoo boys" to show that they live in
Festac Town.
Actually, I had seen images of Festac Town and yahoo boys
on the internet in connection to a TV programme that ran on
ABC television in the United States. So, in a way, getting on
ground in Festac myself and having live confirmation from my
friends was not absolutely shocking.
I realized before I travelled to Europe in 2002 that while
I'd spent many years studying at the University of Lagos and
labouring afterwards as a humble teacher to lead a normal
life, many young people around me were taking the fast lane.
Many young boys and girls did unthinkable things to acquire
wealth. 419 was the non-violent part of these unthinkable
things.
I will not dwell so much on 419 because it is a dubious
process that involves two or more parties. The greediest
member of this party is the man or woman (not in Nigeria) who
wants to reap where he/she had not sown. 419 is a fraud made
famous not by Nigerians but by their greedy preys abroad.
In a recent radio programme that I stumbled on in Sweden,
they are running a series on Lagos. The next programme will be
on 30th June 2007 and they will talk more about Lagos. They
have described Lagos as the most dangerous city in the world
and Festac Town as the headquarters for 419 activities. Lagos
is an issue on its own and the okada and the crazy transport
system in Lagos really needs to be treated. I don't know if
Lagos is the most dangerous city in the world. I told my wife
that maybe it is New York or Johannesburg,-places I haven't
been to! 419 is not a good thing but it has solved the
problems of many unemployed graduates! It may have disrupted
the future of many youth as well. I know a boy who dropped out
of University to concentrate on 419 activities but I heard he
is really broke now.
The underlying issue really is that the Nigerian government
has neglected the issue of state welfarism and many Nigerians
just devised whatever desperate means of survival that they
can pull together. In a society where corruption is tolerated
and public servants enrich themselves to the detriment of the
society at large, what do you expect? People have resorted to
self-help and then, anything goes.
Imagine the ongoing case of the former police boss.
Wherever the case terminates will not be the issue, the crux
of the matter is that the entire system called Nigeria needs
cleansing. What about the out-gone politicians, senators and
legislators who bought houses that belong to the government of
Nigeria? How did they have so much money in four years? Did
they save all of their salaries? Didn't they spend that on
something to keep life going? Where will the new and in-coming
groups live?
Festac is my base and I feel so defenceless on this 419
issue because I know it is true. But what has the local, state
or federal government done in the last 20 years for example to
prepare for the future of this generation of internet rats?
What have they done or what are they still doing other than
stealing, looting and gallivanting like nonentities? May the
Glory of Nigeria come, soon!
- Aderounmu lives in Stockholm, Sweden