THISDAY

Nigeria’s Population is a Liability, Says Sanusi

- James Emejo

The Emir of Kano, Muhammdu Sanusi II yesterday described the present Nigerian population as a liability rather than an asset.

Speaking during a round-table session on

‘Nigeria in 2050 - Boom or Bust?’ at the ongoing 25th Nigerian Economy Summit, he said all the current social vices including the Boko Haram insurgency, herdsmen/farmers clashes, drug addiction, out-ofschool children- all had direct bearing to the consequenc­es of population.

Speaking alongside Chairman of the Nigeria Governors Forum (NGF) and Governor of Ekiti State, Dr. Kayode Fayemi; Founder, The Kukah Centre, Bishop Matthew Kukah; and Chief Executive, Jumia Nigeria, Mrs. Juliet Anammah, Sanusi said: “I think we should get away from this question of it (population) is an asset or liability- it is a liability.

“And all the issues you have from herdsmen/farmers clashes, Boko Haram, drug addiction, out-of-school children- these are all tied to the population we have and the question is how do you turn that into a productive one?”

He also decried the high rate of divorce between husbands and wives and called on the authoritie­s to create an obstacle to divorce.

He said currently, the process of a divorce appeared to be too cheap for man- who often times, gets away with no responsibi­lity given him to cater for the family he left behind, thereby leaving a trail of poverty.

Essentiall­y, he said husbands who seek for a divorce be made to bear the full consequenc­es by allowing him to part with his valuable assets to serve as a deterrent and reduce divorce rate.

He said there is currently no protection for divorce, adding that the country needs to put responsibi­lity on marriage divorce going forward.

The conversati­on focused on how demographi­c realities be transforme­d into social and business opportunit­ies and its implicatio­ns on internal migration and threats to sustainabl­e peace and security.

According to the monarch, “this population problem is perhaps the most important developmen­tal challenge we have to face. If we don’t have a demographi­c transition, we will never have economic transition.”

He said there’s a need for a change of mindset and for people to see the woman as humans with rights to education as well as to earn income.

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