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1) weāk g0vernance, 2) limited administrative capacity, 3) chr0nic humanitarian crìses, 4) persistent social tenşions, and 5) often, vi0lence or the legacy of armèd c0nflict; 6) high rate of j0blessness, especially among the youth; 7) inability to solve the problem of hůnger among the populace; massive emigration; 9) lack of trust in the juridical system; 10) lack of trust in the elèctoral system.
When a nation or country suffers up to 4 of the things on the above list, it becomes a fäiled stäte.
Unfortunately, Nìgeria suffers from all and even more.
The country is no longer a fäiled state, one in a coma, or a dèad one; no, it is a buried one without any iota of hope of resurrection.
None of the nations that split for being a faìled state was as bad as Nìgeria before the people told themselves the truth that nothing could work again.
Nìgèria seems to have the most difficult political arrangement on earth, thanks to our erstwhile col0nial măsters, who made the system difficult for restructuring or peaceful separation.
We are only left with the situation of anārchism that we have today.
This is not the time to bläme any spirit for any of our woes because our problem is not a spiritual one. It is also not a time to cry. We have cried enough.
This is the time for all of us to come together and see how we can resolve this problem amicably via regional g0vernment, peaceful sèparation, or any other thing that can work.
We have to act fastly before it becomes impossible to do anything at all.
As you are reading this, many people are mìssing across Nìgeria. And many of them will never come back to their loved ones again because their b0dy părts are being transported to unknown destinations.
Those who have been kiĺled cannot be kìdnapped or kiĺled again. The next victims will come from those who are alive today.