By
George Akume
culled from THISDAY, June 1, 2006
The events of the last few years have brought home very forcefully, the consequences of our lack of unity and common purpose. I shall highlight only a few of these consequences. We are all aware of the privatisation of the nation's assets as part of the reform programme to make the economy more private-sector driven and thus more efficient. This exercise has left the North a loser, as our people could not mobilise the kind of funds needed to buy stakes in the public institutions that have been privatised. We lost out because the South has dominated the finance sector, including banking and insurance, which provided funds for these acquisitions. Today, the Bank of the North, which was the sole financial backbone of the North, has been taken over as is the case with others like Lion Bank, Inland Bank etc.
The telecommunications revolution, particularly the GSM component, that has
recently taken our country by storm, has blown past the North as we are left
to be mere onlookers. Investments in the telecommunications business along
with the Information Technology sub-sector, are almost wholly in the hands
of Southern entrepreneurs. Given the importance of the Information and
Communications Technology (ICT) in the modern world, our lack of involvement
in the business in Nigeria portends grave danger for the future development
of the North.
It is perhaps in the area of education that the scales are so massively
weighed against the North. The educational statistics in every respect, be
they enrolment figures, number of institutions, number of teachers,
admissions into tertiary institutions, percentage of passes in WAEC and NECO
examinations or what have you, show that the North is far behind the South.
And this is in spite of the tremendous effort that I am aware have been made
by states in the North in the area of educational development. In order to
drive home my point, permit me to touch briefly some of these statistics.
It is common knowledge that almost every state in the South has a Federal
University and a state university or a private university. Some states such
as Ogun, Ondo, Edo, Anambra, Rivers among others have all three. Here in
the North if my memory is correct, only Benue State may lay claim to three
universities with the recent take-off of the NKST Church sponsored
University of Mkar. When combined with Federal and State Polytechnics,
Federal and State Colleges of Education etc, we can begin to appreciate the
advantage the South has over the North in terms of trained manpower and the
socio-economic and political head start this gives the South.
At the political level, the recent nation-wide tension that the Third Term
Agenda threw up showed that the formidable political unity that used to be
the strength of the world is under severe strain. Perhaps the several years
of military rule, with emphasis on allegiance to the centre; the creation of
states, with the recent polarisation of interests; and divided party
allegiances have left their toll. We must however, be reminded of the fact
that 2007 is only around the corner. If the North is to win the Presidency
in 2007, which is due to it under the rotational system, then the time for
unity is now. Here again our royal fathers can assist by bringing together
their prominent sons and daughters who are vying for the position of the
President to adopt a common platform that would ensure that the North does
not lose the post as a result of their mutual antagonism. Indeed, royalty
can always gently admonish those who have backslided in our legislatures to
order.
Our esteemed Royal Fathers, distinguished ladies and gentlemen, for the
North to move forward to meet our yearnings and aspirations, we most first
address some of the threats that have tended to undermine Northern unity.
First and foremost is the threat of ethno-religious and communal crises.
Almost every state in the North has been ravaged at one time or the other by
violent conflicts of a religious, ethnic or communal nature, which have left
untold human misery in terms of loss of lives, destruction of properties and
displacement of large populations. These crises have not only diverted
much needed resources from areas of development but also torn apart
long-standing bonds and destroyed mutual understanding and cooperation,
which are the bases for unity.
Politicians and other elites in the North, who have tended to exploit our
diversity for parochial ends, must have a re-think, and begin to give
greater consideration to the common good. If the elites in the North in
politics, business and other areas of endeavour, reach out to one another in
cooperation and understanding, we may begin to make a headway in our quest
to reposition the North. In this regard therefore, pressure organisations
such as the Arewa Consultative Forum, the Middle Belt Forum and the Northern
Unity Forum must begin to talk among themselves and build upon their areas
of common interests.
Your Excellencies, Royal Fathers, ladies and gentlemen, I have spoken at
length about the problems which confront our desire for unity and
development in the North and in passing, alluded to some of the steps that
we need to take individually and collectively towards finding solutions to
such problems. The quest for Northern unity is a task that must be
accomplished. How do we begin to accomplish it and what should be the role
of traditional rulers?
I would like to once again, underscore the important position of the
traditional rulers as the custodians of our cultural values and the
authority that has been recognized by our people over a long period. As the
authority that is closest to the people and is in constant touch with their
mood, feelings and yearnings, you are in a better position to mobilise them
to achieve the goals we may set for ourselves. You speak the language our
people understand. You know their interests and can assist in articulating
them for the attention of the relevant tiers of government. You have the
capacity to do this as indeed many of you have already been doing. For you
to be able to continue to discharge these responsibilities on a scale that
the entire North will feel your impact however, you must be organised under
a forum that will afford you the opportunity to share ideas and map out
common strategies.
The Conference of Northern Traditional Rulers is a forum that I believe
meets the need for such a platform of unity. By the time you consider and
adopt resolutions on issues of representation, frequency of meetings,
leadership, among others, I am confident that the Governors of our states
will be willing and able to support the forum to find its feet. Unity among
yourselves on a one-to-one basis is also important and should be promoted
through exchange visits, inter-marriages and the award of chieftaincy titles
to deserving subjects. Unity and understanding among you will impact
positively on your people and ultimately on the North as a whole.
We may also begin to achieve our goal of unity by reinventing and sustaining
the vision and ideals of the founding fathers of the North, particularly the
emphasis on one destiny, one love and one North. There was a time when
Northerners in positions of leadership took pride in helping their brothers
and sisters to also climb up the ladder of responsibility. With unity and
understanding, we can begin to reclaim those virtues of being our brothers'
keeper.
Similar to the reinvention of the vision of pioneer and past leaders is the
necessity of upholding and promoting our core values as a people. The North
used to be synonymous with honesty, integrity, respect for elders and
constituted authority, hard work among other positive attributes. You, our
traditional rulers, can assist the North to begin to recover these core
values. In particular, our youths must imbibe not only these values but in
addition they must avoid quick and easy paths to success, embrace hard work,
good character and high moral standards. They are our insurance for a
better tomorrow and we owe them the responsibility to bring the up aright.
The North must return to the practice of agriculture on a scale that makes
agriculture the oil of the North. Agriculture will not only guarantee our
food sufficiency but also open up employment opportunities for the teeming
number of unemployed able-bodied men and women. With emphasis on
agriculture using appropriate technologies for increased production, the
North can open up new vistas in agro-based industries and meaningful rural
development. You, our traditional rulers, can assist our governments at the
local and state levels to convince and enlist our youths in agriculture as
there is pride, wealth and fulfillment in agriculture as a profession.
For us to move forward, the North must encourage full enrolment in
education, particularly at the primary and secondary levels. Furthermore,
we need to encourage and promote vocational education so that products of
our technical schools can be self-employed. Our goal should be to
strengthen the institutional capacity of our educational sector to gradually
and progressively narrow the gap between the yawning gap that currently
exists between the North and the South.
The necessity for and importance of peace, security, law and order as the
ingredients of a conducive atmosphere that would promote meaningful
development in the North cannot be over emphasised. Related to this is the
need to borrow a leaf from the Sardauna by encouraging strong enrolment into
the military, the police and other professions. The history of Nigeria has
shown that the military especially, will continue to play key roles in the
power dynamics of the nation.
Your Excellencies, Royal Fathers, ladies and gentlemen, by way of
conclusion, I want to emphasize that my call for a new approach to Northern
unity is by no means a threat to the unity and integrity of Nigeria. As a
region with more than half the nation's landmass and population, a peaceful
and developed North can only be an asset and not a threat to the Federal
Republic of Nigeria. As I mentioned earlier, the unity, progress and
development of the North will provide strong impetus to the unity and
progress of the entire nation.
As we look forward to the contributions of our royal fathers in the quest
for this new unity, I want to end my address by commending the Chairman of
the Northern Governor's Forum, His Excellency Dr. Bukola Saraki, for making
it possible for this important conference to be held. I commend the
continued interest and support of my colleagues for sustaining the
Governors' Forum. I recall that in December 2004, the Forum convened the
Conference on Peace Building and Conflict Resolution in Northern Nigeria. I
am convinced beyond any doubt that this conference, like the previous one,
will give a welcome stimulus to the search for a new understanding in the
North.
• Governor Akume delivered this lecture at the forum of Northern traditional rulers in Kaduna last week.