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Nigeria @ 53: Senators Decry Slow Pace Of Development by eddyddon234(m): 12:21pm On Sep 27, 2013

ABUJA—AS Nigeria clocks 53 years of
independence on Tuesday, senators,
yesterday, lamented that the country had
not met the expectations of its founding
fathers.
The senators, who spoke during debate on
the motion, titled “Congratulations to
Nigerians on her 53rd Independence
Anniversary” sponsored by Senators Victor
Ndoma-Egba,PDP,Cross River Central and
Ita Enang, PDP, Akwa Ibom North East,and
ten others, regretted that Nigeria was still
far below expectation, especially when
compared with its contemporaries like
Malaysia and Brazil.
They insisted that Nigeria was in a pitiable
state when compared to some other
countries in the world that became
independent nations about the same time
as Nigeria.
Contributing to the debate, Senator Smart
Adeyemi,PDP, Kogi West, said though at
independence Nigeria was considered to be
one of the emerging great nations of the
world, it was more or less a dashed hope,
even in its present state at 53.
He identified parochialism as one of the
major problems of modern day Nigerians,
particularly in the realm of leadership.
He said: “At 53, were Nigeria nation being
governed the way it is supposed to have
been governed over the years, we shouldn’t
be talking about federal character.”
“Unlike patriotic leaders like the late Sir
Ahmadu Bello, the late Nnamdi Azikwe, the
late Chief Obafemi Awolowo, etc, who
started the Nigerian project on a very solid
note, anchored on maximizing the greatest
goods for the greatest number of people,
most of the modern day leaders after the
independence era, have been running
aground the Nigerian nation, being
parochial leaders.”
Adeyemi said the problem of parochial
leadership rocking the country at the
moment had turned most of the state
governors to be governors of the ethnic
group they belong to in the states, as well
as other highly placed public officers, thus
adversely affecting the country’s
development.
“For Nigeria to be great as hoped from the
beginning there is need for possible change
of mindset of all Nigerians, both followers
and leaders, to the Nigeria project.
”We need to start seeing ourselves first as
Nigerians before remembering any other
primordial identities, the needed national
orientation used by countries like India,
Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore etc, all
that were at the same level with Nigeria in
the 60’s but far more developed than it
today,” he said.
Also speaking, Senator Ganiyu Solomon,
APC, Lagos West, said at 53, it was
regrettable that Nigeria was still where it
was when compared to other countries that
started the journey of independent
nationhood with it.
He urged self-assessment to reflect on the
nation’s past for the needed insight into
how to position her for the future through
collective responsibility.
In his own contribution, Senator Ademola
Adeseun, APC, Oyo State, talked on the
need for the National Assembly to be more
proactive in setting the agenda for Nigerian
development in the coming years.
According to him, the first republic that was
rated to be the best era in the nation’s
history was more or less driven by the
parliament.
Senators Mohammadu Magoro, PDP, Kebbi
South, Eyinaya Abaribe,PDP Abia South,
Kabiru Gaya,APC, Kano South, noted that at
53, problems such as teeming youth
unemployment, poor electricity supply,
incessant ethno-religious crises etc, were to
be things of the past for the country.
They, therefore, tasked government at all
levels to be more serious on the
development of the country.
Senate President, David Mark, in his own
remarks, regretted that the attitude and
behaviour of most Nigerians today were
contrary to what “our old National Anthem
stood for.”



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