Obaifeiye Shem, the
Lagos Commandant of the Nigerian Security and Defence Corps, would never
have imagined in his life that he would start off a viral and new-Naija
lexicon with his famous phrase, ‘my Oga at the top‘.
I caught the bug just a day back when I started receiving blackberry
broadcasts with whimsical coinages about it and I had to go on youtube
to see the interview for myself. Briefly, Commandant Shem was asked to
give the correct web address of the NSDC and he made the now-famous
phrase..’my oga at the top will not allow me..’ or something close to
that.
As hilarious as this may be to millions
of people, it is also a sad reminder of our societal genuflection as a
people. The whole apparatus of the Nigerian administrative organogram is
strangleheld by so many ‘Ogas on top’. An effective
‘checks-and-balances’ system which works seamlessly in other climes is
made impotent here in Nigeria by a wicked system of administrative
despotism. Nothing gets done except the top guns approves, even your
visiting the restroom!
It’s more shameful in the political
landscape where there are so many ‘Ogas on top’ that no one ever knows
who the buck stops with unless it comes to sharing money looted from the
national till.
‘The Oga on top’ syndrome is really not
new in Nigeria. It has always been there. It was just given a new
colouration by Commandant Shem and found a new acceptance by the vibrant
and active social media crowd who are always looking out for
catch-phrases. Within a few hours of the short clip being posted on
youtube, a hurriedly produced song had been streamed with the phrase as
its chorus and now T-shirts with the emblazoned phrase are being sold!
It is good to see how Nigerians in mirth have accepted the phrase, which
is a stark portrayal of the drudgery of our social and political
aspirations.
Someone told me this morning that the
phrase seems to have caught on among the market women. His wife went to
the market to buy Catfish and the seller in trying to catch her
attention screamed; ‘Costomer, come buy my fish for your Oga on top’!
Another fellow sent me a mail this
morning in which he narrated that while driving along Sanusi Fafunwa
Street in Lagos last night after closing from work, he could have sworn
the call girls standing along the road called out. ‘ Honey, stop naa! My
oga on top, come naaa’! God help us. Perhaps soon, in wedding ceremonies in
Churches and registries, the marriage vows would be rephrased to ‘ Do
you promise to marry your ‘oga on top..’ and to love and cherish, till
death …’ Perhaps, we just might have another phrase for a ‘Madam on top’
and I don’t think the meaning of that would be far removed from the
bedroom, if the missionaries stop making their positions known on this
matter. All pun intended.
So, who really is this nebulous ‘Oga on top’ we joke about? It is that
innate fellow in you who believes the world must stand still if you are
not a factor in getting things done. Everyone is just an ‘oga on top’
that you really wonder who then is the person below. No one wants to
accept full responsibility for either personal or collective failings.
Everyone is just an Oga, down to the clerk in the office.
How about this poem I just wrote: and if any you are going to lift this poem, kindly credit it to the original author; me.
‘My Oga on top,
Make you chop so me sef fit chop
Nor finish the water for my cup
Or wetin I go drink if you nor stop?
My oga on top,
nor drive pass my bus stop
becos you dey Aso Rock.
Nor forget say me sef wan chop
from dat national sower sop.
My oga on top,
Nor chop cake come give me lollipop
Or else your show go flop.
I don warn you, my oga on top.’
CHARLES NOVIA
‘My Oga on top,
Make you chop so me sef fit chop
Nor finish the water for my cup
Or wetin I go drink if you nor stop?
My oga on top,
nor drive pass my bus stop
becos you dey Aso Rock.
Nor forget say me sef wan chop
from dat national sower sop.
My oga on top,
Nor chop cake come give me lollipop
Or else your show go flop.
I don warn you, my oga on top.’
CHARLES NOVIA
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