The leader of the Northern Elders Forum (NEF), Professor Ango Abdullahi, says the region will resist any attempt to restructure the Nigeria based on the current agitation.
In
this interview with PAUL ORUDE in Bauchi, the former Vice Chancellor,
Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, speaks on the focus of NEF under his
leadership.
He has
harsh words for Northern Governors, who he calls irresponsible leaders
over their statement calling for the establishment of ranches as
solution to the clashes between farmers and herdsmen in parts of the
country.
“We
have all personalized restructuring with a view to targeting a section
of the country and this is the area that we feel very sensitive about
and we will resist it. Even if we don’t resist it objectively, we can
resist it politically”, he warned.
Why
did you decide to take the leadership of the Northern Elders Forum
(NEF) at this critical time? What is your focus, and what do you hope to
achieve for the body?
Well,
let me start by saying that I did not seek the leadership of the
Northern Elders Forum. The leadership of NEF was foisted on me by
members, so let me make this very clear. Ango Abdullahi has never been
ambitious in terms of positioning wherever he finds himself. All my
political life you will never see me frantically jostling for position. I
have always believed in teamwork and the team players in the Northern
Elders Forum decided that I should take on the leadership of the forum
so that is why I think I should make very clear from the beginning.
Number two relates to the issue of what is the focus; the focus remains
what brought out the NEF in the first place. The focus of the forum has
always been that as a civil society organisation it has responsibility
in ensuring that there is a role in the socio economic and political
development of the country and wherever it seems that things are not
going according to the expectations of Nigerians, especially according
to the constitution of the country which stipulates how Nigerians should
live in the country and so on, of course the northern elders forum will
come out and make its views known.
The
Forum has been searching for a presidential candidate that will be
acceptable to the northern region and Nigeria. Are you looking at the
younger generation or the age you belong or even where the incumbent
president belongs?
Well
let’s go back to 2015. The north insisted then that the north should
produce the next Nigerian president and this is what we worked on. Thank
goodness some of the parties or some of the players responded and this
was what brought about the dislodgement of the PDP as a government and
the loss of the presidency by Jonathan and takeover of government by APC
and the presidency by General Buhari. This is what we did and I like to
correct that we have not started searching for a presidential candidate
but our eyes and ears are wide opened. We are looking at all options on
the table -old, middle age, young- all are options on the table and
irrespective of which politics they profess, what we will be looking for
is a good presidential material that is going to serve the needs of the
county effectively and so on so all our options are on the table. It
has no age limit and perhaps our age limit is the voting age. If there
is a very competent 18 years old may be but this is not very likely but
all options are on the table, we have not started searching yet but we
will keep our eyes and ears opened to ensure that the principles upon
which we argued and argued in the previous elections will still be the
principles that will guide us in supporting a presidential material from
amongst many that perhaps would like to offer themselves for the
position.
Some are suggesting that NEF is almost pushing itself as an opposition to the Buhari administration. How true is this?
But
how could this be true? If there is any group that stood firm for the
principles of equity and justice for all sections of this country, that
was our platform and then on the basis of this principle one party
decided that a presidential candidate of northern extraction should
contest on its platform while the other party decided against our wishes
that presidential candidate of non-northern extraction would contest on
its platform. This was the basis on which we supported that party and
that candidate. That party that said yes, candidate of northern
extraction should emerge and one emerged and we didn’t determine who
emerged. This is one emphasis that I want to make in this interview: we
didn’t determine in the course of the primaries run by the APC which of
the contestants will win the primary. But we waited until one emerged
and once one emerged, we came out in support and this is perhaps what
gave birth to Buhari presidency. But we also made it clear that
irrespective of the geographical origin of the candidate, we want to
make sure that the candidate performs and wherever his performance is
below what we consider a good standard, we will be able at all times to
say no, where no is needed and yes, when yes is needed and perhaps this
is what must have given the impression whenever we say no to certain
policies, people construe that this is an opposition but it will be
irresponsible of any civil society organisation like the one we lead to
see things going wrong and will not say that things are going wrong. So
if this our honest assessment of situations as they developed is what is
construed as opposition, then it has to be but there is no way we will
back out of telling the truth whenever one is required. There are a
number of interviews I gave, I remember personally and sometimes
officially, saying that we want to see internal democracy in all the
political parties. I want to say and this is a personal opinion, that I
am opposed to automatic ticket- from councillor to presidency, so if a
party has a constitution that spells out a way for candidates to emerge,
they should follow it even if it is mere endorsement, let them follow
the procedure. We have advocated and these are some of the positions
that people are misconstruing that this is opposition to the presidency
or his government. This is not true.
The
man heading the Benue Livestock Guards, as recently revealed by
Saturday Sun, was a wanted Boko Haram suspect. How do you react to this?
My
first reaction is to congratulate The Sun newspaper for carrying out
this investigation. This is what the media are supposed to do. They are
supposed to be watchdog of things that are going right or wrong in the
society. When it was brought out, appropriate reports were made to
authorities that they should take action and this is part of the crisis
we are going through in this country. People are not being honest. Now
that you have mentioned this issue of Live Stock Guards in Benue, and so
on, this now brings me, even though you haven’t asked the question,
this brings me up to the media reports of Friday, March 2. The Northern
Governors Forum to me, irresponsibly, came out with a statement that the
northern governors should adopt a policy of ranching as solution to
whatever their own understanding of livestock development or peaceful
co-existence between herders and farmers is. It is an irresponsible
statement. Emphatically, because these governors have been sitting there
for years, virtually with no policy on how to develop agriculture
generally let alone how to develop livestock industry in this country
and they have waited until some of these crises started manifesting and
now we know we are in election year and a lot of the statements that
seem to come out from the politicians including the governors are
self-serving statements. I don’t know whom they are trying to please or
where they are trying to escape to in terms of responsibility that they
have to bear. You see, either they are speaking out of sheer ignorance,
tactical ignorance of what agriculture is or what livestock development
or industry is or they are speaking to the gallery, or speaking to both
during elections. I am a professional agricultural scientist. I was at
one time Director Agriculture Research Institute of Ahmadu Bello
University (ABU) before I became its Vice Chancellor and we know what
agricultural development is in its comprehensive forms in terms of crop
development, in terms of livestock development, in terms of other
branches that are relevant to agricultural development and we have been
working on this for years and we have the relevant information available
on our shelves, sometimes information that has been passed on to the
Agriculture Extension Services of the states and this research
information is supposed to be used in each state for the benefits of
farmers, whether they are crop or livestock farmers. And these are
things this government has consistently ignored and these are things
that have taken us to the crisis stage that we are in now. And the fact
that we have arrived at this crisis point will not allow anybody,
governors inclusive to hoodwink Nigerians into projects that are
unrealistic and cannot be achieved. I challenged any governor to go and
show me his ranch so that livestock owners can go and learn from the
ranch. I challenge any governor to go and show me how he has
successfully or his state government has successfully created a pilot
scheme to demonstrate how a ranch is established and operated. I
challenge them. And they have failed to read history. If they had read
history of agricultural development correctly in terms of livestock
development, they would have seen responsible governments in the past,
particularly our regional government, here I want to make a distinction
between a responsible regional government which we had, and I served
under one of the them, the Northern Nigerian Government-they tried their
hands, and honestly and genuinely tried their hands on grazing reserves
which were established and gazetted. They also tried model ranching
scheme. The most famous is Mokwa Cattle Ranch. If they had forgotten
their history, they should go and read their history books particularly
on ranching development that was. But all these failed, some for
careless reasons, some for purely unavoidable ethical reasons, they
failed. So for them to be talking to us about ranch now, I consider it
irresponsible and deceptive but I challenge them, we want to see model
ranching in each state that talked about ranch now within the next 12
months. I try to restrain my comments over this for some time now. I
have seen this now more or less in the light of 2018 where we are, one
year to the election and politicians including governors, politicians
from all levels here, I don’t make any exception, are trying to play to
the gallery, in playing to the gallery, they are looking for votes.
Well, we are not going to allow them to deceive the people by way of
these cheap, irresponsible statements, in trying to hoodwink us into
believing that what they are saying is correct and the solution to the
problem. Certainly, they should know that this is not a solution to a
problem that had been with us for hundreds ofyears. Even when the
British came, they saw livestock as an important component of
agricultural development policy and they did everything to make sure
that it thrived and the way they did it was not necessarily to go for
ranching even though they came from an environment where ranches were
working or worked. They decided that they had to create something that
fit the Nigerian environment. The circumstances of the Nigerian
environment include lack of education on the part of the crop farmers,
lack of education on the part of the livestock farmers and all manners
of policies that had to be introduced that will enhance crop production
and that would also enhance livestock production. First and foremost in
the case of livestock, they decided that grazing reserves should be
created as models for people with means, they could create their own
pastures where their animals could feed throughout the year, and that is
why they created a number of grazing reserves across the country.
Unfortunately
again, irresponsible governments ignored this element that are vital to
livestock industry, allowing the grazing reserves to disappear. They
created cattle routes right from the border with Niger republic down to
the coast and gazetted them. As you speak to me, when Buhari was the
Chairman of PTF, he engaged me and my firm to trace these cattle routes
and that was how I drove in a four wheel drive between the border in
Niger and that was how we were able to locate the cattle routes gazetted
even during the colonial times but all of them are gradually being
encroached by farming, which again shouldn’t have been allowed by any
responsible government, and they have done nothing about that. The steps
required to be taken to ameliorate the difficulties of livestock
farmers in relation to crop farmers is to demarcate these routes so that
there is easy passage from one part of the country to another with
livestock that is looking for grazing and I cannot accept the argument
that it is shortage of land that is creating this. Again, ignorant
statement. At the moment, only 35 percent of Nigeria’s territory is
under cultivation. The remaining 65 percent is open range forest. So you
cannot argue that it is shortage of land that is causing conflict
between farmers and livestock owners.
And if
you look at this 35 percent I am talking to you, as an agronomist, we
don’t require even the 35 per cent to do all that we require in terms of
food production, including exports and raw materials; you only need a
quarter of it. If you apply the technology that we researchers have
developed over the last 40 or 50 years, I as a farmer knowing what to
do, I can produce seven tonnes of maize on one hectare today, given the
knowledge that is available, not only in research institutes but should
be available to our agriculture extension workers, they should be
teaching farmers. As I speak to you now, our farmers are only able to
produce 13 bags, 1.2 tonnes of maize per hectare because the extension
services of the state governments are not working and the policy
supports services, which include subsidy to agriculture and so on are
not being applied. The livestock farmer does not even know that there is
subsidy while the crop farmers are being given subsidies on fertilizer.
As a Director in the Research Institute 30 years ago, the minimum
fertilizer requirement in this country is four million tonnes 40 years
ago. So you can imagine what has happened to our soil 40 years ago, we
probably require 10 million tonnes of fertilizer now. Go and check the
total fertilizer that is available to famers in Nigeria today, it is
less than one million tonnes. So where are these policies that talk
about agriculture development. The livestock farming where we need our
meat, where we need our milk and other things gets nothing except this
vendetta, I call it political vendetta. The summary is this: what is
driving all this noise about herdsmen-farmers clash is political, mixed
with ethnic and unfortunately in some cases, religious bigotry. I want
to emphasise that this is dangerous. The time has come for us to stop
it before it gets worse than what it is now.
Atiku
has made restructuring of Nigeria a focal point of his subtle campaign
and appeal to other parts of the country. Does NEF support the idea of
restructuring as being championed by the former VP?
Well,
let me speak first on a personal note. When I started politics 1987, I
started together with Atiku under the umbrella of Shehu Yar’Adua group
so I know him very well. In fact, the first party we formed was People’s
Front of Nigeria and Ango Abdullahi was its first National Chairman and
Titi Ajanaku was its first Secretary, so we know ourselves well. Of
course, he is a Nigerian politician and whatever may appear to be a soft
spot for the Nigerian politician to press his finger on in order to
gain support he will do. Restructuring if you look at it objectively and
dispassionately, when Nigeria was put together in 1914, that was the
beginning of restructuring of the country so that it can eventually come
to be what Nigerians will wish it to be. When the amalgamation took
place in 1914, that was the first restructuring that the colonial
masters did bringing the Southern and Northern Protectorates together
into one country, and eventually over time, began to introduce
structures that will begin to bring the different structures together.
So many constitutions were enacted between the amalgamation and 1960
when Nigeria attained independence; so much has been going on in the
country which is all restructuring of the Nigerian arrangement that will
make the system work, not for anybody, but work for the people of
Nigeria. In 1960, Nigeria was granted independence under a federal
system of government, with a parliamentary system of government, with
three regions, Northern, Western and Eastern regions. The first
additional restructuring that followed 1960 was the adoption of the
Republican system of government in 1960 and the same time brought about
the fourth
region, the Midwest Region. Of course, the military intervention in
1966 brought about certain changes, in that we moved from four regions
to 12 states created by the Gowon administration. I think this is
restructuring from what it used to be-one amalgamated country, to three
federating regions, then later four federating regions, then 12 states
and so on and these processes continued. My skepticism of the current
call again takes me back to the issue of politicizing everything that we
do.
If we
want Nigeria to be restructured, the only thing that is required is for
us to call a Sovereign National Conference. It is the only conference
that Nigeria has not experimented. But can you call a sovereign national
conference while there is a sitting government? And there is a sitting
National Assembly, there are sitting States Assemblies and governments
and so on? They have to step aside. They have to be brushed aside for a
sovereign national conference to take place and the verdict of the
sovereign national conference must be binding. But as long as these are
enshrined in our constitution, the only way is for amendments to be
proposed to the appropriate bodies that have the responsibility of
amending our various provisions. That is the only sensible thing to do
but if this would be discussed sensibly
without
apparent blackmail and furore about so so and so, we have all
personalised restructuring with a view to targeting a section of the
country and this is the area that we feel very sensitive about and we
will resist it. Even if we don’t resist it objectively, we can resist it
politically. But if there is sense and genuineness, nobody will be
against change that will benefit the people. For example, I am an
advocate of state police. Personally now, I am not talking about
Northern Elders Forum. I am also an advocate of the abolition of the
State Independent Electoral Commission because they are even worse than
state police. The State Independent Electorate Commissions do the
bidding of the state governors. I can give you a recent example in Kano.
How could in Kano recently a PDP state, PDP failed to win even a
council seat? Something is basically wrong. So the manipulation of State
Independent Electoral Commission is for me, today, the most dangerous
threat to democracy in Nigeria.
So for
me, if there is going to be restructuring in the country, first, we
should change from the presidential system of government to
parliamentary system, and in terms of institutions that are in charge of
elections; we should abolish the State Independent Electoral
Commissions and we should ban any party from contesting elections unless
it has direct primary where all its members will come out and decide
who is going to contest council chairmanship up to the presidency.
What does the nation expect towards 2019?
We are
expecting a very peaceful transition of power from the present set of
leaders at the national, state and local levels based on free will and
free choice of Nigerians. That is our expectation.
Sun News
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