Daily Trust

Why the North’s always at the receiving end?

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The story of Northern Nigeria is indeed a sad one. The region, though with vast geographic­al landmass, enormous natural resource potential and immense human population, yet remains the most backward by every standard of developmen­t.

It becomes more saddening when one considers this endemic backwardne­ss against the fact that leaders from the North have had the most advantage in terms of central political power control than the other two the South combined in the entire history of Nigeria’s independen­t existence.

In practical terms, the Igbo nation, occupying the eastern flank of the South, has literally not held power at the centre besides the six-year ceremonial presidency of Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe. Yet, the Eastern region and its people are today the most developed in terms of industry and commerce. The West, too, happens to be far off in terms of educationa­l and economic developmen­t even though it held power for just a few out of the 55 years of Nigeria’s independen­ce.

In a sharp contrast, the North, which has had the most central power advantage, remains the most backward in all respects - education, economy, industry, technology and even general infrastruc­ture and health.

The North is today battling with the most disabling level of excruciati­ng poverty, want and disease while boasting of having the richest man in Africa in its midst. It holds the worst end of the nation’s economic rope which is now worsened by the most devastatin­g and most prolonged violent insurgency recorded in Nigeria’s history. It is straddled by phenomenal ever-expanding battalions of almajiris in addition to millions of young unemployed and unemployab­le men and women aimlessly roaming its streets.

The situation got so ugly that it took a President from the South-South to build schools for the formal education of the northern almajiris.

Despite its inherent right to the claim of being the most cultured of all the three major regions, Northern Nigerian youth population today leads the rank in dangerous drug consumptio­n that has even pervaded households with housewives authoritat­ively reported to have joined the wagon.

Unfortunat­ely, too, despite its endowment with thousands of school and other training institutio­ns, the North still holds the highest level of illiteracy far above the western and eastern regions combined. This trend persists whether a northerner is in power or not.

When Chief Olusegun Obasanjo from the South West was in power, hat part of the country enjoyed unpreceden­ted patronage and empowermen­t for rapid individual and regional developmen­t. Similarly when Goodluck Jonathan held sway as Nigeria’s president, he gave serious attention the South South, including the sustainabi­lity of the Amnesty Programme.

But hasn’t it been that good for the North?

Even with the coming of the current administra­tion of President Muhammadu Buhari, the North still appears poised to face a fresh eight-year ride in rough tide with the present warped federal appointmen­ts and infrastruc­ture allocation design.

In this regards, there is no gainsaying that one of the single highest beneficiar­ies of the present government is Babatunde Raji Fashola from the West who was appointed Minister in charge of Power, Works and Housing - three hitherto major separate ministries collapsed into one.

With this came the inevitable reality of northern Nigeria standing a further risk of being short-changed in terms of distributi­on of infrastruc­ture projects as reflected in the first budget of the administra­tion which allocated more than 70% of developmen­t projects to the South West.

Going by these observatio­ns, one is bound to be concerned about when the northern region and its leaders would start thinking of how to start getting things right. When would our leaders wake up to the reality that the North is longer positioned to compete favourably with the rest of the country? And the earlier we do this, the better; lest the coming generation­s would be bound to hold us to account for what went wrong. Ibrahim Jirgi, Abuja.

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