The Secretary General of the
Yoruba Council of Elders, Dr. Kunle Olajide, has said the North is a big
problem and a great obstacle to the development of Nigeria.
Olajide said this in reaction to the
statement credited to the Chairman of the Arewa Consultative Forum and a former
Inspector General of Police, Alhaji Ibrahim Coomassie, who said that Nigeria
could not survive without the North.
Olajide spoke in Osogbo on Thursday
at the first memorial lecture of Nathaniel Abimbola organised by the Osun State
Council of the Nigeria Union of Journalists.
Abimbola, who was a reporter
with the Osun State Broadcasting Corporation, died in an accident along
the Ife-Ibadan Expressway last year.
Olajide, who was the chairman on the
occasion, said the North was home to the Boko Haram which was costing the
Nigerian government billions of naira, religious crisis, killer herdsmen as
well as numerous negative indices of quality of life.
He said, “The newspapers reported
the Arewa Consultative Forum as saying that Nigeria cannot survive without the
North. Whatever was meant by that statement credited to the ACF chairman
remains to be understood.
“However, I congratulate him for accepting
that the North as it is today represents all that is wrong with Nigeria. The
North-East is ravaged by insurgency costing the country billions of dollars
annually. The North-West is home to religious crisis, the North-Central is
ravaged by herdsmen of northern extraction. Collectively the North is home to
all negative indices of the quality of life. Infant mortality rate is highest
in the North.
“Illiteracy rate is highest in the
North and the number of out-of-school children is highest in the North. The
poverty index in the North is high while the twin evil bedeviling the North is
feudalism and religious fatalism. It will not be out of place to say the North
has in fact been dragging Nigeria down since independence. All sorts of
mischievous phrases were coined by the very tiny political / military
elite of the North to give undue advantage to the North.”
The YCE scribe said the North
staged-managed the military coup which removed President Shehu Shagari from
power on December 31, 1983. He said the northern oligarch feared that there
could be revolution in the country and they allegedly planned the coup with the
military in order to ensure that power remained in the North.
Olajide stated that the late Chief
Obafemi Awolowo spent greater part of his political career and his
resources struggling to liberate the talakawas of the North from their elite
but feudalism and religious fatalism frustrated his efforts.
He said the Yoruba people were not
only insisting on the restructuring of the political architecture in the
country, they were also insisting on the wholesale reform of this
elite-centered system of government.
The Yoruba elder said the unfair
wages and remuneration of the political leadership in the executive and the
legislature must be reviewed downwards. Likewise, he said the outrageous
pension benefits and severance allowances of political office holders must be
scrapped and the entire political system must not be made financially lucrative
to ward off political contractors and charlatans.
He said if these were done, only the
service-minded people would begin to show interest to take over the political
leadership of the country.
“Let me assure Alhaji Coomassie that
much as we want a fair and egalitarian Nigerian society, it is not at all
costs. The rest of Nigeria will survive, flourish and join the league of first
world countries within two decades if the North exits. If it desires to leave
Nigeria, join me in saying goodbye to the exiting North, I wish them a safe
journey into the desert,” he added.
A member of the House of
Representatives from Osun State, Prof. Mojeed Alabi, who delivered the lecture,
said corruption was not the main problem of Nigeria but the constitution which
he said was faulty.
The lawmaker said corruption was
just a manifestation of the fundamentally faulty constitution which had raised
regional suspicion.
Alabi added that Nigeria needed to
convoke a Sovereign National Conference to determine its existence and how to
go about it.
He explained that the word sovereign
would not stop the executive, the legislature and judiciary from carrying out
their functions.
Alabi said, “In essence, my
colleagues in government have nothing to fear by the convocation of a Sovereign
National Conference. That is the way to go if Nigeria must be returned to the
path of sanity and greatness in our march to political stability, social
harmony and economic prosperity.”
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