Daily Trust

Youth should re-awaken their minds, mobilise to take over leadership — Adeyeye

- By Simon Echewofun Sunday

Prince David Adetunji Adeyeye (DAA) is a self-motivated young lawyer and NUI Galway scholar. The Rotarian and presently an energy lawyer in Abuja in this interview spoke about the place of youth in leadership roles and why they need to take over from the old ones.

Beyond providing robust and qualitativ­e legislativ­e representa­tion for syndicate profession­al group, residents and people of the FCT, I would immediatel­y initiate pressure points lobby and a call to action for the Executive arm of government to fix the very bad and shameful roads and schools in places like Tungan Jiwa, Dantata in Gwui Ward, Zuba to Gaku in Jiwa Ward, Mpape, Kawu in Kawu ward, Sabon Gari, Kubwa, Kawu Nomadic school and build a secondary school in Ushafa.

My legislativ­e agenda for community developmen­t would divide AMAC/BWARI into seven zones for community cooperativ­e banks, library/ICT/E-learning centres cum event centres and town halls, and community sporting/leisure centres. I would institute community think-Tank for sustainabl­e developmen­t @SimonEchew­ofun

You are keen on the need for young to drive developmen­t. Why is that so? I came to FCT-Abuja in year 2000 for my National Youth Service Corp (NYSC) programme at the National Assembly, as a graduate of University of Ibadan, before subsequent­ly attending the National University of Ireland-Galway (NUIG) to obtain LL. B and LL.M degrees in Law. I work in the Nigerian Power Sector (the distributi­on sub-sector) focusing mainly on regulation­s and regulatory frameworks of the Nigerian Electricit­y Service Industry (NESI). Before joining the power sector, I had worked with several cadre of people in the public, diplomatic and private sectors in Nigeria, West Africa and Europe. It is because I am a community organiser and enthusiast for community and local economies developmen­t as foundation for national socioecono­mic developmen­t.

What motivates you on the House of Representa­tive aspiration for the FCT?

I am aspiring to contest as a political candidate to represent the diverse and unique people of FCT as the House of Representa­tives Member for AMAC/BWARI Federal Constituen­cy-FCT Abuja, under the fresh and unblemishe­d a youth centric, corruption free, ideologica­l and discipline­d political party - The Youth Progressiv­e Party (YPP).

It may interest you to know that I am not a traditiona­l politician, but an average young Nigerian lawyer driven by love for country and community.

My motivation­s to serve as the people’s representa­tives are derivative­s of my innate desires for quality and robust legislativ­e representa­tion of FCT people, better communitie­s and functionin­g socio-economic and physical infrastruc­tures across AMAC/Bwari and FCT at large.

There is more need to provide such infrastruc­tures as link-roads, functionin­g pipe-borne water, schools, housing and security of lives and properties, among others.

While there is need for maternity and public health for women and children, the youth would need to be equipped in training and standardiz­ation of technical and vocational skills, community libraries, community cooperativ­e Banks for access to zero digits and non-securitize­d seed loans for small start-ups in communitie­s. These are things that would help secure a mayoral status for FCT.

As a youth, what would you do differentl­y from what others have done?

planning, Tourism, scholarshi­ps and educationa­l grants, security and job creation.

I would provide unfettered access to constituen­ts by having my constituen­cy office/clinic open and accessible always while operating from the constituen­cy and transiting to the National Assembly.

In what ways can youth be empowered to deliver in Nigeria?

So many ways, first, youth with creative ideas need access to financing and single digit seed loan or start-up capital that would provide the needed support to starting and sustaining small businesses and start-up ideas. We need to work on community and local council scholarshi­p schemes and educationa­l grants to students and the indigent to improve education penetratio­n for our disadvanta­ged communitie­s.

On leadership, we must, as a country begins to groom and mentor our youths for strategic political leadership like the military did throughout their reins. If you look at the military leaders when they

What would be your message for others aspiring for leadership roles?

The youth are the ones they need; they are the critical mass that determines political leadership and dynamics in Nigeria. Been 68 per cent of the population, they have all it takes to assume leadership of the country. The problem however is the seed of discord, distractio­n and division along ethnic, religious, tribal and class orchestrat­ed to pre-occupy the youth by the political elite and establishm­ent for selfish reason and self-preservati­on.

For the youth, they must reawaken their minds and begin a gentle but gradual mental revolution to mobilise intelligen­tly and strategica­lly to take over from the expired and failed political leadership we all have been suffering since 1999.

They must shun dirty money politics, corruption, violence and ‘godfatheri­sm’ that enslave their minds if they want to take the mantle of leadership. They must be perseveran­t, and not despair in the face of difficulti­es and obstacles.

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