North Destroying Itself, End to Quota System Coming – Sanusi
The Emir of
Kano, Muhammadu Sanusi, has said the northerners are on the verge of destroying
themselves if they fail to address the myriad challenges facing them.
Sanusi, who
spoke at the 60th birthday of Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai, in
Kaduna on Monday, highlighted the main problems facing the region as poverty,
millions of out-of-school children, malnutrition, drug abuse, Almajiri, and
the Boko Haram insurgency.
The emir,
who insisted that no “true Northern Nigeria leader” was happy with
the problems, said the North should stop relying on a quota system and federal
character.
He said the
challenges facing the region must be addressed immediately.
The
traditional ruler said this a week after the World Bank in a report said 87
percent of the poor in the country resided in the North.
The World
Bank also described the North-West as home to almost half of all the poor in
the country.
At
El-Rufai’s 60th birthday, Sanusi singled out the Kaduna State governor for
praise. He said El-Rufai ‘s investment in education would go a long way in
addressing poverty.
He called on
other northern elites to follow in the ex-Minister of the Federal Capital
Territory’s footsteps.
According to
him, investing in education is the only way the region will save itself from imminent
destruction.
The
ex-Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria lamented that 87 percent of the
country’s poverty rate was in the North, with nine states in the zone
constituting almost 50 percent of the malnutrition burden of Nigeria.
Sanusi said
the region should not continue to rely on a quota system and federal character
to get jobs for its children at the expense of the other parts of the country
busy educating their own children and turning out graduates.
The emir
said, “When we talk about birthday, we talk about happiness. Just last week,
someone asked me, ‘ are you happy?’ And I said, ‘ I am not’. And
the person was surprised. The truth is, nobody who is a leader in Northern
Nigeria today can afford to be happy.
“You cannot
be happy with about 87 percent of poverty in Nigeria being in the North. You
can’t be happy with millions of northern children out of school.
“You can’t
be happy with nine states in the North contributing almost 50 percent of the
entire malnutrition burden in the country.
“You can’t
be happy with the drug problem, you can’t be happy with the Boko Haram problem.
You can’t be happy with political thuggery. You can’t be happy with all the
issues; the Almajiri problem that we have.
“So, we wish
Nasir a happy birthday, but we do not want him to be happy as a leader. Because
you are happy when you think you have reached a state of delivering and taking
your people to where you want them to be.
“Now,
because of the condition of Northern Nigeria, it is almost correct now to say
that, if you are seen as normal, if you are a governor in the North or a leader
in the North, and you are seen as normal in the sense that you continue to do
what your predecessors have been doing, doing the same thing, which has been
normalised, then, there is something wrong with you, you are part of the
problem.
“The real
change in the North will come from those who are considered mad people,
because you look around and say if this is the way we have been doing things
and this is where we have ended up, maybe we need to do things differently.”
Sanusi
added, “If we have populated the government with middle-aged men, maybe we need
to try younger people, maybe we need to try women. If we have spent our money
and time on physical structures, maybe we need to invest more in the
education of our children. Maybe we need to invest more in nutrition. Maybe we
need to invest more in primary health care.”
Sanusi urged
political leaders, especially, the regional governors to emulate “the sternly
quality” of the Kaduna State governor, commending him for injecting 40
percent of the budget of his state into education.
He
said, “And the truth is, if you look at what Nasir is doing in Kaduna,
with 40 percent of his budget in education, that is the only thing that is
going to save the North. I know that, when we say these things, they don’t go
down well.
“We have
been saying this for 20 to 30 years. If the North does not change, the North
will destroy itself. The country is moving on. The quota system that everybody
talks about must have a sunset clause.
“The reason
people like Nasir stand up and they are nationalists is that they don’t have
any sense of inadequacy.
“So, as we
celebrate Nasir at 60, we need to celebrate him as a public officer who is
addressing the core problems of his constituency. It is education, it’s girl
child education, it’s women’s right, it’s child begging, it is parental
irresponsibility, demographic growth, it’s managing a multi-cultural,
multi-ethnic and multi-religious society and bringing them into one community
where they are all citizens and he has done a lot that we can learn from.
Meanwhile,
the emir asked that issues of religion or tribe should have no place, but
rather emphasis should be on merit.
He said,
“You don’t need to rise on being from Kaduna State or being from the North or
being a Muslim to get a job, you come with your credentials, you go with your
competence, you can compete with any Nigerian from anywhere.
“We need to
get northern youths to a point where they don’t need to come from a part of the
country to get a job. And believe me, if we don’t listen, there would be a day
when there would be a constitutional amendment that addresses these issues of
quota system and federal character.
“The rest of
the country cannot be investing, educating its children, producing graduates
and then they watch us, they can’t get jobs because they come from the wrong
state when we have not invested in the future of our own children.
“We have
just heard how he (governor) has developed himself over the years. He is
a surveyor, he is a lawyer, he has got a master’s degree, he has had over
80 certificates from Havard because education is what makes a man.”
The emir
noted that power only comes from God and that it is transient, calling on
leaders to leave behind legacies.
He said, “It
is important to realise that the positions we hold are transient and they do
not define us.
“Anybody can
be called a governor; anybody can be called an emir; a commissioner or a
minister, but at the end of the day, you should know that God had given you a
chance to do something, do leave a mark and impact people’s lives.”
FROM punchng.com/north-destroying-itself-end-to-quota-system-coming-sanusi/
No comments