The Impossible Mission
By Damilola Omosebi
In English:
Dele Momodu has accepted an impossible task; breathing life into the withered reputation of a politician whose scandals have become his shadow. To many, this is a hopeless mission, a futile endeavor akin to squeezing virtue from a stone. Yet, armed with nothing but his silver tongue and a Rolodex of media contacts, the veteran journalist must achieve this unachievable goal, or watch his efforts become another doomed mission in Nigeria’s long history of political rebranding.
In Latin: “Missio Impossibilis” Dele data est; negotium inexplicabile viri corrupti in statum honorabilem revocare. Res infacta videtur, fatum irremediabile quod omnes timent. Sed Dele, contra spem, opus inefficax in gloriam convertit.
In Spanish:
A Dele Momodu le han encargado una misión imposible: lavar la imagen de un político cuyo descrédito es legendario. Para la mayoría, es una tarea imposible, una empresa inalcanzable condenada al fracaso. Pero él debe alcanzar este objetivo irrealizable, o su trabajo será tan solo otra causa perdida.
In French:
Dele Momodu s’est vu confier une mission impossible : redorer le blason d’un politicien au passé sulfureux. Certains murmurent que c’est une tâche impossible, une entreprise vaine destinée à échouer. Pourtant, il doit réaliser cet objectif inatteignable, ou son projet ne sera qu’une cause perdue de plus.
The Weight of Expectations
This is no ordinary image laundry. The politician in question carries baggage heavier than a cargo of sins; financial scandals, broken promises, and a trail of disillusioned followers. To resurrect such a figure requires more than PR; it demands political alchemy, turning the lead of disgrace into the gold of statesmanship.
Dele’s tools? Strategic interviews where past failures become “valuable lessons.” Photo ops at orphanages where the politician’s smile doesn’t quite reach his eyes. And, of course, the oldest trick in the book; blaming the system while repackaging greed as “youthful idealism.”
But Nigerians are not easily fooled. The public, weary of recycled villains in saintly disguises, watches with folded arms. “Let’s see how far this goes,” they murmur, as Dele’s typewriter churns out op-eds framing corruption as “misunderstood ambition.”
The Ultimate Test
From “doomed mission” to “causa perdida”, Dele’s challenge is Sisyphean. Yet, if anyone can make Nigerians briefly forget the unforgivable, it is him; a maestro of perception, a weaver of alternative truths.
But beware: in a nation where memories are long and patience is short, even the most polished lies eventually tarnish. And when they do, will Dele’s own reputation survive the fallout?
Or will this, too, become another unforgivable spin in the annals of Nigerian politics?
“In Nigeria, redemption is always for sale. The only question is; who’s buying?”














