What does the North want?
The Northern part of Nigeria
comprising 19 states is most populous region in the country. The region has
endless arable lands for agriculture; the groundnut pyramid era is a veritable
testament to the agro-based bastion of the region. The region has also produced
most numbers of leaders at the center than any other in the country.
With its advantage as the most
populated region in Nigeria, a powerful position in determining which region,
which personality gets the presidency; the region however seems lost in the mix
of evolving demands of other regions. The North appears only fixated on
leadership rather than a position substantial enough to provide it with safe
haven incase other regions succeed in acquiring their demands anyway possible.
From the perspective of
leadership, the North seem fixated on the glowing legacies of late Sadaunan of
Sokoto, Sir Ahmadu Bello, and have been so lost in that past that it is yet to
wake into the realities of today world of change in leadership icons. President
Muhammadu Buhari may have come close to a present day leader of valor, but the
past appears juicier to the religion. An adage states that, “whoever remembers
the past is not enjoying the present”.
The Yoruba’s have moved away from
the glowing era of Chief Obafemi Awolowo, today they have Bola Ahmed Tinubu.
The Ibo’s (at least a chunk of them) have left the iconic symbol of Chief
Odumegu Ojukwu for Nnamdi Kanu on their determination for a Republic of Biafra.
The North has failed to provide a potent alternative for Sir Ahmadu Bello, a
factor responsible for lack of unified direction of the region.
If the South East is demanding
for secession, the South West, confederacy, the south-south, resource control,
what does the Northern region of Nigeria want? The North appears to be having
the most patriotic position to keep Nigeria focused on the path of remaining as
one nation with collective aspirations, but deep down, the polarity level of
various regions, what becomes of the North if other regions have their share of
agitations actualized?
The north must start looking for
a thinking cap, it must establish its position with safety nets to cushion
itself in case the growing fragmented aspirations of other regions strangulates
the life out of it, leaving the region with only one choice – a position to
wield its own direction, which might be too late sooner or later.
Once the tide changes in favor of
conflicting aspirations, will the North be able to stand on its own
economically, politically; is the North the way it was “politically”; is the
North aware it is fragmented; are the states in the middle belt ready to be
part of the monolithic North?
The bourgeoning fragmented
desires of other regions in the country may not necessarily eclipse the nation
Nigeria just yet, but the need to have a buffer plan for the North is becoming
imperative, especially now that the region is on the spotlight for all forms of
insecurity and insincerity.
The North has suffered immensely
as victim of poor experience in adverse effect of paucity in educational level
among people living in a geographical space, with hydra headed monsters of
poverty and terrorism. Sadly, The North is seen not as victim but perpetrators
of terror. Already Nigerians from other parts of the country believe the Buhari
led administration is set to Islamize Nigeria, based on manifest experience of
the more than isolated killings of Christian population by herdsmen and skewed
political appointments.
The region is perceived to be
power drunk, filled with religious fueled ego of seeking to keep the leadership
position at the center as prebend of the Muslim dominated North. Some Nigerians
believe the rising onslaught of herdsmen in Christian communities is based on
pogrom to use force to Islamize Nigeria. Most Christian dominated states like
Plateau, Benue, Taraba, parts of Kaduna, Kwara, Kogi are affirming their stance
as Middle belt, hoping to separate themselves from the political North on
account of religious based tension.
The ill wish of a section of
Nigerians targeted at the person of Buhari is based on the loath against the
North and what appears like ceaseless penchant of Nigerians hating incumbent
leaders. Sadly, the inglorious cyber based ethno religious battles has left the
wound of hate very fresh as every divide seeks to inflict salvos of injuries
along divisive sentiments. In a bid to extricate the region from poor
perceptions, some of the elites from the region condescend into negative
statements, endorsing fears of other regions.
With the squeeze seeping the life
out of the North, escalating demands of other regions to distance them from the
North, what does the north want and how will it help when the anchor is down?
We must state it clear to ourselves that mere wish to remain one Nigeria is not
enough to calm the frail nerves of people from other regions determined to walk
away from the federation. Once again, what does the north want?
Every other region appears to
have a focused agenda at taking off the slice of their perceived inheritance to
further a cause separate from that laid by our founding fathers, except the
North. The North seems not to realize it is fragmented, bereft of recognized
leadership and stereotyped by other regions. It must therefore state what it
wants, before it finds itself wanting everything it cannot have.
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