Posted By Adoga Michael Oyi
The keynote address entitled : ‘ Leadership and the Future of Nigeria , ’ delivered by former Commonwealth Secretary- General , Chief Emeka Anyaoku , at the 10 th memorial anniversary lecture of the late leader of the National Democratic Coalition ( NADECO) and Afenifere , Senator Abraham A . Adesanya in Lagos .
My first words must be about the man in whose memory this occasion has been organized, the late statesman Senator Abraham Aderibigbe Adesanya . It is now ten years since he left us to join his God and ancestors .
I thank the Planning Committee of this event for the honour of the invitation to be the Guest Speaker .
Senator Abraham Adesanya was a symbol of authentic combination of loyalty to one ’ s ethnic group and loyalty to one ’ s country .
He was at the same time an outstanding leader of Afenifere that sought to promote and protect the interest of the Yoruba and a nationalist leader of NADECO that sought to promote and protect democracy in his country , Nigeria .
Inspired by the sage Chief Obafemi Awolowo, he led a life of idealism in which service to the Yoruba and to Nigeria was an uncompromising credo .
Senator Abraham Adesanya ’ s unflinching political activism was devoted to the promotion of democracy in Nigeria . He was a political activist that dedicated his political career to the righting of wrongs without deference to any form of prejudice, be it personal , ethnic or religious .
I recall here that even without having met me in person , Senator Adesanya put up a stout defence of me in the Senate in 1983 when some members of the Senate Screening Committee sought , for clearly perfidious reasons , to mess me up during the Ministerial confirmation hearing before my appointment by President Shagari as Nigeria ’ s Foreign Minister .
The incident was illustrative of how, in an uncommon public friendliness , Senator Adesanya could proceed in the defence of truth and public interest .
I come now to the theme of this symposium , Leadership and the Future of Nigeria . I must first state that throughout this presentation , leadership implies good leadership in Nigeria and in other countries .
A leader must , in my view, possess to a good degree inter alia the following attributes : the capacity to inspire and form affinity with the people that the leader is leading ; the capacity to have and articulate a vision of where he /she plans to take the country concerned ; the capacity to deliver electoral promises; and the capacity to identify with and be seen to be tackling the challenges facing the people he /she is leading .
Hence, leadership is primarily about service, and servant leadership enables the building of trust with bonding and continuing inspiration of the people .
A good leadership must be defined by discipline , resilience, perseverance , determination, unyielding devotion, and , above all , a strong political will to act without deference to sectionalism.
It is not always easy to find a convergence of all these attributes in a single individual .
Nevertheless , I shall want to mention three examples of leaders whose performance in their countries had demonstrable achievements , especially in putting their countries on the global map and in some cases , lifting them from the nadir of developmental challenges .
A common feature of their successful leadership is their capacity , during electoral campaigns and on assumption of office , to spell out in clear and unambiguous terms the goals and guiding principles that would define their tenure in office .
My first example is Prime Minister Muhammad Mahathir in Malaysia.
At the time our country attained its independence in 1960 , by virtually all economic and social indices — education and health , roads construction, agriculture , etc — , Nigeria was at par or even a notch above Malaya that subsequently became Malaysia in 1965.
It is common knowledge that Malaysia now the world ’ s largest producer of palm produce obtained the seedlings for its palm plantations from Nigeria , which was then the world ’ s largest source of palm produce.
Today , Nigeria imports palm oil from Malaysia. And in the wider scale of development including industrial, agriculture , and human skills , Nigeria now ranks below Malaysia. All this was mainly due to the leadership of Prime Minister Mahathir .
To recall an illustration of Mahathir ’ s dedication and resilience as a leader, in 1981 when as Commonwealth Deputy Secretary-General I visited his office , he showed me a stand with aluminium panels on which the progress of projects being executed by the various Ministries of his Government was periodically recorded.
And when eleven years later he received me as Secretary- General in his same office , he showed me how he was still regularly monitoring the performance of the Ministries but now using a computer on his desk .
My second example of good leadership is Mwalimu Julius Nyerere of Tanzania. When he assumed the presidency of his country in 1963 , Tanzania had one of the highest rate of illiteracy in Africa, and the bulk of the population who lived in far flung villages and towns were largely lacking in schools and medical facilities.
Julius Nyerere inspiring his people and winning their trust with his clear articulation of his goals for their welfare and unity of the country , proceeded , initially with his socialist Ujamaa policy which he subsequently moderated by accepting a more liberal economic policy , to build a large number of schools , hospitals and health centres , and impressive transportation facilities that included roads and the famous TanZam railway built with assistance from China to serve Tanzania and provide access to the sea for its land - locked neighbour, Zambia .
Thus in a relatively short period , the literacy rate and human skills development in Tanzania began to compare favourably with other African countries .
My third example of good leadership is Prime Minister Lester B Pearson of Canada. Mike Pearson ( as he was fondly called by his friends and colleagues) was the Prime Minister when in 1968 Canada faced a major political crisis of imminent disintegration.
The country ’ s major French - speaking province of Quebec was on the verge of seceding from federal Canada.
The then French President , Charles de Gaulle , had the previous year in a state visit to Canada while addressing a huge audience in Quebec said “ vive le Quebec , vive le Quebec libre ” meaning “ long live Quebec , long live live independent Quebec ” .
Prime Minister Pearson , himself English -speaking, was then approaching retirement and had to face the task of steering his political party in finding his successor .
To the surprise of the long - standing senior members of his party , the Liberal Party , he jumped over the heads of such very senior party stalwarts as Paul Martin snr and others to support a relatively junior French - speaking party member , Pierre Elliot Trudeau , from Quebec who had been in parliament for only about three years and with only about eighteen months ministerial experience.
Pierre Trudeau ’ s prime- ministership arrested the secessionist movement in Quebec . Mike Pearson was able to achieve that because of the strength of his bonding with the citizens of Canada, and his wisdom in recognizing the importance of inclusive policy in the governance of a pluralistic country that Canada, like Nigeria , is .
I would like to recall here that I had accompanied the first Commonwealth Secretary- General , Arnold Smith who was a Canadian , on a visit to the leader of the Quebec secessionist movement , Mr Ronie Levesque , in the middle of that crisis and that Arnold Smith had not succeeded in persuading Levesque to give up his quest for an independent republic of Quebec .
Let me now speak about leadership and the future of our country , Nigeria .
The core of my submission is that the present state of affairs in our country represents not only a clear case of national dysfunction , but also a bleak future with no assurance of the country ’ s continued existence as one political entity if the proposal that I shall proffer later in this presentation is not actively pursued in one form or the other by our Governments and peoples.
There are facts about our country that I believe are incontestable to any objective observer .
The first and overaching fact is that the very substantial revenue that Nigeria has earned from its crude oil exports over the years has had little or no impact on the lives and welfare of the vast majority of the population .
In education Nigeria , in addition to having over ten million children out of school , has retrogressed to having only one University ( UI ) ranked 601 st among the top 800 world Universities and 14th in Africa, ie lower than Universities in Ghana and Uganda ; in agriculture ,
• it has retrogressed from being the world ’ s largest producer of palm produce and second largest producer of cocoa to being an importer of palm oil and minor producer of cocoa ;
• it has retrogressed from having efficient railway transportation from Lagos through the North West to the South East regions of the country to having haphazard rail lines that are now being sporadically rehabilitated and built ;
• it has retrogressed from having first - rate hospitals such as the University Teaching Hospital in Ibadan which at one time attracted medical tourism from Saudi Arabia to now having such poor medical facilities that Government officials and the citizens who can afford it are compelled to seek medical treatment abroad ; and perhaps most worryingly , Nigeria has retrogressed from being a country where people lived with their property in relative safety to being a country where insurgents , kidnappers and lately marauding Fulani herdsmen are killing men, women and children in significant numbers on a daily basis .
In sum , our country Nigeria is currently drifting with decreasing respect for the sanctity of human life and as a result , has become number thirteen in the Wikipedia list of the world ’ s fragile states .
In singling out absence of good leadership as one of the factors that have led to this unhappy state of affairs , I would like to quote one of the country ’ s literary icons, the late Professor Chinua Achebe who wrote that :
The trouble with Nigeria is simply and squarely a failure of leadership . There is nothing basically wrong with the Nigerian character . There is nothing wrong with the Nigerian land or climate or water or air or anything else .
The Nigerian problem is the unwillingness or inability of its leaders to rise to the responsibility , to the challenge of personal example which are the hallmarks of true leadership .”
But I must however hasten to say that we have had some flashes of relative good leadership in Nigeria , particularly in the immediate post - independence years during the First Republic .
In the First Republic , we had the focused and service- oriented leadership of Sir Ahmadu Bello that saw such achievement as the groundnut pyramids and vast plantations of cotton in the Northern region ; of Chief Obafemi Awolowo that brought to the Western region free and universal education and the introduction of the first television service in sub - sahara Africa; and the good leadership of Dr . Michael Okpara that achieved the world -scale production of palm produce and the burgeoning industrialization of the Eastern region .
Nigeria ’ s political and economic progress began its retrogression with the military intervention in the country ’ s governance in January 1966. For thirty - three years thereafter until May 1999, minus the relatively short period of the second republic ( October 1979 to December 1983) , the successive military regimes became responsible for dismantling the foundations of the country ’ s political stability and economic progress.
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