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The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun - Politics - Nairaland

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The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by Nemere2020: 6:56am On Jan 02
It has now become something of a yearly tradition that someone would share a video of hundreds, or perhaps even thousands, of beggars lined up on one of the priciest real estates in Nigeria—Bourdillon Road, Ikoyi, Lagos. Already always striking in Nigeria, the paradox of poverty and prosperity jars your eyes. These people queue up for hours, their bodies exposed to weather action accruing the circumstances that will take eventual tow. Usually taken at night, the video displays these panhandlers seeking charity in the unofficial presidential residence.

To be clear, Bourdillon Road is not unique in this respect. I grew up in Ibadan, Oyo State, and the sight of economically challenged people assembling in front of the house of well-to-do Muslims to beg for alms is not exactly rare. If you mingle with them, you will marvel at the complexity of the poverty that will make someone travel—as they claim—a considerable distance to beg. You will be surprised at the distance some of those who resume at Bourdillon have travelled just to fritter away time while expecting the man—or any of his affluent visitors—to extend them some handouts.

People like that come expecting to be given alms because their shared religion with the benefactor stipulates that moneyed people must transfer some income to the poor to maintain the munificence of providence. That explains why wherever you have Islam and poverty, you are guaranteed a nuisance of beggars. That is also why I think FCT Minister Nyesom Wike was wasting time when he started haranguing beggars in the nation’s capital. When religion validates panhandling, you cannot do away with the social tradition it engenders by making a noise. Rich and well-organised Islamic countries do not have this problem for self-evident reasons.

Going by Bola Tinubu’s admission during his recent presidential media chat, it turns out that he has been hosting these professional charity seekers for as long as 25 years! Some of those beggars must be familiar with the street layout and its changing appearance and perhaps have been a fixture there long enough to share a vicarious interest in Bourdillon Road real estate value. They probably do not consider the ungainly sight of themselves hanging around the varnished surface of one of the choicest real estate a blemish but, in fact, as part of the value it carries.

In a society where you can earn social credit through ostentatious performances of charity, the sight of many humans begging an individual for their survival attests to the benefactor’s valour and value. They index his popular support, allowing the man to establish a populist ethos that ultimately shores his political capital. The more the man’s political value rises, the higher the price of items associated with him (including the street he lives). However unseemly the sight of those panhandlers might be, they are part of Tinubu’s wealth and that is probably why he has not thought of doing anything about them. In his media chat, Tinubu sounded as if their besiege of his homestead was an inevitable social reality. It does not look like a tradition that is about to cease.

One would think that after all these years, he should have thought of reorganising the beggars that converge on Bourdillon Road. If people have been crowding your streets for so long, and in that spate of time, you have held leadership positions ranging from governor to the shady title of “governor emeritus”, at what point does it strike you that the sight of suffering humans in front of your house should be considered an eyesore and, therefore, restructured into something more dignifying of humans? Here is a man who has occupied leadership positions for a quarter of a century but refuses to come up with an original idea regarding how to do charity while simultaneously maintaining people’s dignity and public decency.

Rather than having them line up on the streets just so they can be handed a pittance after they have been deemed to have suffered enough, why not establish proper feeding centres in several zones in Lagos, where people can show up at scheduled times to pick whatever welfare items you want to give them? Philanthropy should not require that people be debased before they are fed. We get it, maintaining a crowd feeds your inner Narcissus, but what of the associated risks of that many people standing by the roadside? Then there is the issue of the public resources that would need to be regularly deployed to maintain security around that place. As he is president, security agents must have had to heighten surveillance activities around his house to ensure that mischief-makers do not hide among those beggars. Why the need for that much waste when there are far more efficient ways of doing things? He can redirect the people to the feeding centres where trained personnel will take care of the business smoothly and humanely. If he does not want to run a charity programme all year round, the centres can do it quarterly. What matters is that the “human” is not taken out of humanitarianism.

Looking at that sight, I have also wondered if Tinubu ever spares a thought for his neighbours who invested in real estate only to be forced to endure the nuisance of beggars invading the area, especially around festive periods. Prime real estate as a place like Bourdillon Road claims to be should ideally be typified by an aesthetically pleasing environment. Three factors typically differentiate quality real estate—access (to cultural centres and the added benefit of the nearness of transportation infrastructure such as the airport), appearance (serenity, clean and well-maintained environment, good air quality, etc.) and amenities (from excellent public schools to well-maintained public parks). If you live in a place like Bourdillon Road, the last thing you should ever wake up to see is the endless queue of beggars. Otherwise, what is the point of purchasing luxury?

Beyond his neighbours, there is something about the sight of people hanging around a president’s residence that does not speak well of his leadership capabilities. Maybe no one has nudged him to see it, but the impression that spectacle on Bourdillon Road generates is that Tinubu enjoys the sight of suffering humans and thrives in—and through— their poverty. If all these years, impoverished people hang around you and you remain comfortable enough to keep them just so they can be handed tokens of your large heart, then it means you have a pro-poverty mindset. Such a frame of mind is oriented toward cultivating poverty rather than stimulating abundance. That is why he could unproblematically relate the story of his “friend” who went from using five Rolls Royce to a far-less valued car and not consider the import of the nonsense he was saying. That spurious account was an indication that this is a man for whom poverty—of others, not himself—is an ideal.

If how he thinks this is the way fathers of actual prosperous nations like the United Arab Emirates imagined wealth generation, the country would not be the haven that drives Nigerian leaders to rob people to just to buy their luxury estates. The difference in their respective mindset largely explains why his approach to economic reforms is to first beggarise the nation. His reforms could have been activated with a view toward generating prosperity not a sadistic mentality that relishes seeing someone with five Rolls Royce reduced to nothing, but no. Thanks to his vision, Nigeria now has more beggars, on the streets, social media, public bureaucracies, and corporate offices, likely more than at any time in its history. You can hardly greet people online these days without getting a request from someone begging for money.

https://punchng.com/the-eyesore-on-bourdillon-road/

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Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by Alhajikd: 7:35am On Jan 02
It's terrible

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Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by sagitariusbaby(m): 7:42am On Jan 02
"Beyond his neighbours, there is something about the sight of people hanging around a president’s residence that does not speak well of his leadership capabilities. Maybe no one has nudged him to see it, but the impression that spectacle on Bourdillon Road generates is that Tinubu enjoys the sight of suffering humans and thrives in—and through— their poverty".

Tinubu is a desaster.

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Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by AntiChristian: 7:43am On Jan 02
grin

Awon Critics aye!

7 Likes 5 Shares

Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by helinues: 7:44am On Jan 02
Imagine the whole long epistle with no back up pictures

What a poor reportage

131 Likes 9 Shares

Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by toluleke(m): 7:44am On Jan 02
Blogger

1 Like

Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by Mindlog: 7:46am On Jan 02
Well written.

Tinubu loves having that crowd of beggars outside his home as it feeds his messiah complex that is well garnished with narcissism.

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Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by Maxtipulation(m): 7:48am On Jan 02
Skullers have an ambiguous relationship with begging

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Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by Archmed(m): 7:49am On Jan 02
Food don done
Breakfast is ready.

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Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by gasparpisciotta: 7:49am On Jan 02
As a Muslim, Tinubu believes that is part his zakat.

Alms giving has become part of our society especially when it involves our people from the North.

Even if he organizes them, they will still find a way to circumvent the motive, I believe he is used to them hanging around for a day or two after when they all disappear to reappear when it’s time to converge again🤣

No matter what you give those guys they will come back to the street

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Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by Splashme: 7:50am On Jan 02
helinues:
Imagine the whole long epistle with no back up pictures

What a poor reportage

Keep fooling yourself
Pictures & videos are everywhere
.

67 Likes 5 Shares

Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by Mindlog: 7:50am On Jan 02
helinues:
Imagine the whole long epistle with no back up pictures

What a poor reportage

Cheap deflection.

Below is an image....satisfied?😂😂😂

68 Likes 3 Shares

Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by Risingblue008(m): 7:51am On Jan 02
This is what dey want exactly
Push the masses into poverty
Intimidate d masses
Give dem penny and foods
Then forget the rest
Then poor masses will call u dier messiah.

40 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by shoodboi2: 7:53am On Jan 02
If you want to address the issue of people lining up in front of Tinubu's house, address it. What concerns Muslims with this? Or did the author go around asking the people lining up whether they are Muslims or otherwise? He started well but that part where he tried attributing it to Islam is wrong.

People line up in front of politician houses every year. Growing up in Lagos back then, area boys used to come to my dad's house to collect their sallah money and they would always create a big scene until our dad settled them 😁 Such behavior is not unusual and has nothing to do with religion.

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Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by BoboKush(m): 7:53am On Jan 02
Too deep I had to read everything

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Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by Hemanwel(m): 7:53am On Jan 02
This is the same thing Northern elites are doing to their citizens.

Impoverish them and later throw crumbs at them.

38 Likes 3 Shares

Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by omowolewa: 7:54am On Jan 02
Nice write up, good foe research.

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Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by Djuggernaut(m): 7:55am On Jan 02
The West didn't stop colonialism. The handed the playbook to the blacks, and the black made colonialism look like child's play.

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Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by Mindlog: 7:55am On Jan 02
gasparpisciotta:
As a Muslim, Tinubu believes that his part his zakat.

Alms giving has become part of our society especially when it involves our people from the North.

Does alms giving done dignifying the humanity of the recipients, not part of Zakat?

The writer, wrote this: :"Here is a man who has occupied leadership positions for a quarter of a century but refuses to come up with an original idea regarding how to do charity while simultaneously maintaining people’s dignity and public decency".

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Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by Fryx: 7:56am On Jan 02

3 Likes

Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by lexy2014: 7:58am On Jan 02
helinues:
Imagine the whole long epistle with no back up pictures

What a poor reportage

will this suffice?

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/HcIxSnqYj58

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Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by Jeezuzpick(m): 7:58am On Jan 02
Nemere2020:


https://punchng.com/the-eyesore-on-bourdillon-road/

Why won't he attract beggars when he's the one who beggared most of them?

His policies got the majority of them started in their begging careers.

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Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by gasparpisciotta: 8:00am On Jan 02
Mindlog:


Does alms giving done dignifying the humanity of the recipients, not part of Zakat?

The writer, wrote this: :"Here is a man who has occupied leadership positions for a quarter of a century but refuses to come up with an original idea regarding how to do charity while simultaneously maintaining people’s dignity and public decency".

I understand your point but you see religious sentiments will trump normal reasoning when dealing with street beggars.

Any attempt to organize those guys will be chaotic, those people organize themselves and wait for handouts. They come quietly and leave as they come.

Do you think that is the only type of alms he gives? I believe he has organized more alms giving for people other than those you see around his premises.

2 Likes

Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by diamond68: 8:02am On Jan 02
If you think all these are poor people then you are clueless. You think someone travelled all the way from akure and ibadan to come and beg for a bag of rice and money ? Their transport alone is more expensive than what tinubu can ever give them. All those people you see are witches wizards warlocks and the likes. They are there to come collect money and use that money for witchcraft . Wealth transfer witchcraft 🧙‍♂️

1 Like

Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by lexy2014: 8:04am On Jan 02
If all these years, impoverished people hang around you and you remain comfortable enough to keep them just so they can be handed tokens of your large heart, then it means you have a pro-poverty mindset. Such a frame of mind is oriented toward cultivating poverty rather than stimulating abundance.
the summary of tinubus style of governance.
that is the mentality he has brought into governance

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by Mindlog: 8:04am On Jan 02
gasparpisciotta:


I understand your point but you see religious sentiments will trump normal reasoning when dealing with street beggars.

Any attempt to organize those guys will be chaotic, those people organize themselves and wait for handouts. They come quietly and leave as they come.

Do you think that is the only type of alms he gives? I believe he has organized more alms giving for people other than those you see around his premises.

The Mayor of London is Muslim and I don't see the poor lining up in front of his residence, waiting to be given alms and that does not mean he is less Muslim than Tinubu.

He should key into the people’s ability to organize themselves and build on it, change the location and develop means the alms gets to them, effectively.

12 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by lexy2014: 8:04am On Jan 02
diamond68:
If you think all these are poor people then you are clueless. You think someone travelled all the way from akure and ibadan to come and beg for a bag of rice and money ? Their transport alone is more expensive than what tinubu can ever give them. All those people you see are witches wizards warlocks and the likes. They are there to come collect money and use that money for witchcraft . Wealth transfer witchcraft 🧙‍♂️

whose wealth are they using their witchcraft to transfer?

1 Like 1 Share

Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by FuckYeyeMods: 8:06am On Jan 02
Ode! Go give pastor.
Travel to Dubai or Saudi Arabia and comeback with same story.
You guys should continue this religious shading and see if Nigeria will grow. Instead of addressing the real issue, people like the columnists is busy writing trash from his myopic mind.
UK is not a Muslim country but a nurse held a patient hand to pray in the name of Jesus but she was deposited back to her hole.
Because of politics, religion have become what people pitch against each other.
Out of 3hrs Sunday service, pastors will use 1.5hrs preaching against other people.
Kizz Daniel said in his lyric that "I no go follow pastor beef imam, father na father".
Travel to the city of New York or New Jersey, you'll see homeless, beggers food banks everywhere.
Yeye people.

5 Likes

Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by gasparpisciotta: 8:07am On Jan 02
Mindlog:


The Mayor of London is Muslim and I don't see the poor lining up in front of his residence, waiting to be given alms and that does not mean he is less Muslim than Tinubu.

He should key into the people’s ability to organize themselves and build on it, change the location and develop means the alms gets to them, effectively.

Do the beggars in London have the habit of lining up in their mayors house to beg for alms?

Do they see their mayor as a philanthropist or just another leader?

Please answer this questions

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Re: The Eyesore On Bourdillon Road - Abimbola Adelakun by mannobi(m): 8:08am On Jan 02
G

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