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How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by Gigacom: 10:42am On Apr 15, 2017
How a Political and Economic Integration Can Transform Igboland into an African Economic Hub
by Chinedu George Nnawetanma

https://ynaija.com/opinion-political-economic-integration-path-transforming-igboland-african-economic-hub/


Igboland is an ethnocultural region in the present-day southeastern Nigeria. It differs from the South East Geopolitical Zone of Nigeria in that it encompasses both the zone and other adjoining territories of the eponymous Igbo ethnic group.

With an estimated 35 million inhabitants, it is comparable to the US state of California in population and would be the 12th most populous country in Africa were it independent, surpassing the likes of Ghana, Angola, Côte d’Ivoire, Cameroon, Senegal and Zambia.

A repository of natural resources, including coal, natural gas, petroleum and arable land, in addition to its wealth of human capital, Igboland is well-equipped to become one of Africa’s foremost engines of growth and development. However, repeated failures in optimising these human and natural resources have seen it serially underachieve.

Like much of the rest of the continent, it is enmeshed in underdevelopment, with the usual subplots of pervasive unemployment, infrastructure deficit and a very low production base featuring prominently. It is also particularly beset by an acute emigration rate among its economically active population, as they are regularly haemorrhaged for better opportunities.

Whilst myriads of factors have contributed to Igboland’s hobble over the years, the chief culprit has been its administrative balkanization. Unlike many other homogeneous regions the world over, it does not constitute a single polity. Rather, it is politically broken up into five Nigerian states, namely Anambra, Enugu, Ebonyi, Imo and Abia; with parts of its territory jutting out into a further eight – Delta, Rivers, Cross River, Benue, Akwa Ibom, Kogi, Edo and Bayelsa.

As different governments often translate to different modi operandi and even partisan inclinations, this arrangement has robbed the region of cohesion in the utilization of its resources, a predicament that is compounded by the pint size and multiethnic composition of most of these states, leaving only fragments of its resources in the hands of each state government and intensifying communalism over their distribution in the process.

Amidst the reluctance of the Nigerian federal government to restructure Nigeria’s convoluted 36-state system into fewer, larger and more viable regions along ethnic lines – as stronger federating units would whittle down the power and influence of the center – the key to extricating Igboland from economic stagnation in the interim and navigating it towards sustained development is politico-economic integration.

The coalescence of the political pieces of Igboland into an economic union of harmonised policies, combined resources, shared responsibilities and collective goals will, among other things, unlock the potential of the region by mitigating the bureaucratic, political and socioeconomic bottlenecks scuttling its progress thus far.

A single market covering Igboland will represent one of Africa’s most attractive investment destinations. Its huge population (which is more than the combined population of the Netherlands, Austria and Switzerland), compact land mass and considerable mineral wealth will provide a large labour pool, proximate consumer base, readily available raw materials and easy accessibility for investors coming into the region.

Buoyed by that and its strategic location near the intersection of West and Central Africa (and, by extension, Anglophone and Francophone Africa), it can serve as a springboard for businesses reaching out to both subregions whose combined population of 530 million outstrips that of each of the European Union and the United States of America.

As well as putting Igboland on the world map as an attractive investment destination, a politico-economic integration will equally pave the way for the realization of joint projects that will boost the socioeconomic profile and investment climate of the region, such as a rail link between its major northern corridor cities of Asaba, Onitsha, Nnewi, Awka, Enugu and Abakaliki and its major central and southern corridor cities of Orlu, Okigwe, Owerri, Umuahia and Aba.

It will also galvanise public-private partnership in the region by presenting a central platform for high-level collaboration between the private sector and the government in bringing investments that will create much-needed job opportunities necessary for retaining its teeming economically active population and preventing them from putting their skills to use elsewhere.

It is no longer news that at least 50% of the economic means of Ndigbo are domiciled outside Igboland. An Igboland Economic Union will arrest this anomaly by persuading Igbos worldwide to make Igboland the centrepiece of their investment drives and its fast-tracked development a top priority.

In a century when the drivers of the world’s economic growth are expected to shift from Asia to Africa, Igboland must be foresighted by repositioning itself now to be integral to and benefit from this process. As a first step, adequate and accelerated measures must be put in place to realise the comprehensive integration of Igboland, without which it will never come close to reaching its full capability and competing favourably on the global turf.

Chinedu George Nnawetanma; Email: chinnawetanma@gmail.com; Twitter: @Chinedu17George

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by agaba77: 11:51am On Apr 15, 2017
Excelllent write up..however, the devil is in the details..

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by Gigacom: 12:16pm On Apr 15, 2017
Lasticlala, OAM4J, Mynd44
Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by OreMI22: 2:16pm On Apr 15, 2017
Excellent write up.
It's been a very long time folks have been calling for a reliable railway link in the SE especially as the FG appears determined to avoid the zone in allocation of railway resources in the country. With the appalling state of federal roads in the Southeast due to deliberate neglect of the zone by FG, the railway link as an alternative transport mode is critical.

I think a PPP arrangement of BOT with a good Chinese company will do it.

5 Likes

Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by Nobody: 3:59pm On Apr 15, 2017
I dream of the day when all Igboid group will walk over the civil war defeat, and be proud of their heritage with no apology. The unity of Igboland is a miracle worth beholding.

7 Likes 1 Share

Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by PDJT: 4:29pm On Apr 15, 2017
Good.
-Add Igbo language institute to that project.

-Ohaneze, I hope una don read wetin this lad write.
Please implement. We can do it. Mbakwe Airport is a classic example of what we can achieve. Calling for Igbo townhall meeting on the project is a good start.
I'm happy to fund the website, with e-donation facility, for the project.

6 Likes

Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by OreMI22: 4:48pm On Apr 15, 2017
When Nigeria had 19 states, Owerri was the ONLY state capital without an airport. When Sam Mbakwe asked FG to build in Owerri an airport as they had built in the other 18 state capitals, he was flatly told NO!

So Mbakwe was undeterred by FG rejection and went on to mobilize his people to build the Owerri airport when it was thought to be a mission impossible for a state government.

Since the FG excluded the SE region from federal railway projects, the region should mobilize and build it's own railway network.

The total length of a railway network connecting these cities isn't even up to 600KM.



So it's not a big deal if the affected states work together.



.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4UW0CE6A_bo




.

6 Likes 1 Share

Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by Nobody: 5:14pm On Apr 15, 2017
PDJT:
Good.
-Add Igbo language institute to that project.

-Ohaneze, I hope una don read wetin this lad write.
Please implement. We can do it. Mbakwe Airport is a classic example of what we can achieve. Calling for Igbo townhall meeting on the project is a good start.
I'm happy to fund the website, with e-donation facility, for the project.
We are already working on something close to it. A complete portal.... more like a suite with social media capability. I'll follow you so I can keep you posted on progress.

2 Likes

Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by PDJT: 5:18pm On Apr 15, 2017
blues20:

We are already working on something close to it. A complete portal.... more like a suite with social media capability. I'll follow you so I can keep you posted on progress.

Ok. Waiting..
Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by Igboesika: 5:55pm On Apr 15, 2017
Anything to make Us better is welcome devt.
Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by profhezekiah: 6:06pm On Apr 15, 2017
please who read the epistle should give us summary
Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by Gigacom: 6:18pm On Apr 15, 2017
.
Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by ExplorerReturns(m): 7:27pm On Apr 15, 2017
i have always said this: the greatest hindrance to Igbo economic progress is the balkanization of igboland after the civil war by Nigeria. as long as the status quo remains, Nigeria will never progress and Biafra agitation will continue. oji Onye nala ji owne ya!

8 Likes

Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by Newsi: 7:46pm On Apr 15, 2017
Beautiful write-up. I think this deserves to hit the front page so that our Igbo policymakers will see it.

4 Likes

Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by Nobody: 8:13pm On Apr 15, 2017
OreMI22:
When Nigeria had 19 states, Owerri was the ONLY state capital without an airport. When Sam Mbakwe asked FG to build in Owerri an airport as they had built in the other 18 state capitals, he was flatly told NO!

So Mbakwe was undeterred by FG rejection and went on to mobilize his people to build the Owerri airport when it was thought to be a mission impossible for a state government.

Since the FG excluded the SE region from federal railway projects, the region should mobilize and build it's own railway network.

The total length of a railway network connecting these cities isn't even up to 600KM.



So it's not a big deal if the affected states work together.



.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJvzIj-nxFA




.
If this is true......... hmnnnnn shocked shocked shocked

2 Likes

Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by Newsi: 8:58pm On Apr 15, 2017
OreMI22:
Excellent write up.
It's been a very long time folks have been calling for a reliable railway link in the SE especially as the FG appears determined to avoid the zone in allocation of railway resources in the country. With the appalling state of federal roads in the Southeast due to deliberate neglect of the zone by FG, the railway link as an alternative transport mode is critical.

I think a PPP arrangement of BOT with a good Chinese company will do it.
True talk bro. The Igbos say that "Onye ajuru adiro aju onwe ya." Since the federal government is not ready to do anything for the Igbo region, the onus lies on our political and business leaders to take the bull by the horns.

5 Likes

Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by cheruv: 9:15pm On Apr 15, 2017
blues20:

We are already working on something close to it. A complete portal.... more like a suite with social media capability. I'll follow you so I can keep you posted on progress.
I've a team working on project HanGbo,which essentially sees to the use of Chinese characters in writing Igbo. We've achieved quite a milestone and we're moving forward.
Soon I'd kickstart a thread in the culture section regarding it

4 Likes

Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by PDJT: 9:51pm On Apr 15, 2017
OreMI22:
When Nigeria had 19 states, Owerri was the ONLY state capital without an airport. When Sam Mbakwe asked FG to build in Owerri an airport as they had built in the other 18 state capitals, he was flatly told NO!

So Mbakwe was undeterred by FG rejection and went on to [b]mobilize his people to build the Owerri airport
when it was thought to be a mission impossible for a state government.

Since the FG excluded the SE region from federal railway projects, the region should mobilize and build it's own railway network.

The total length of a railway network connecting these cities isn't even up to 600KM.



So it's not a big deal if the affected states work together.
[/b]


.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJvzIj-nxFA




.

-I remember as a school kiddo, been given money to give to my school mgt as my contribution toward the Airport, which I have now benefitted as an adult. Yes, school kids then did their bit.
Igbo Amaka.

6 Likes

Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by Newsi: 9:51pm On Apr 15, 2017
PDJT:
Good.
-Add Igbo language institute to that project.

-Ohaneze, I hope una don read wetin this lad write.
Please implement. We can do it. Mbakwe Airport is a classic example of what we can achieve. Calling for Igbo townhall meeting on the project is a good start.
I'm happy to fund the website, with e-donation facility, for the project.
Ohaneze and other Igbo leadership groups or individuals must really sit up. These are the kind of ideas they should come up with. I hope the Ohaneze is not just a talk shop and forum of political retirees.

7 Likes

Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by Newsi: 9:53pm On Apr 15, 2017
profhezekiah:
please who read the epistle should give us summary
People like you are the reasons why Africa is still underdeveloped.

7 Likes

Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by Newsi: 9:55pm On Apr 15, 2017
lalasticlala
Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by profhezekiah: 10:13pm On Apr 15, 2017
Ask those that av commented to summarize what was written there, only about 5% will read what was written to d end
Newsi:
People like you are the reasons why Africa is still underdeveloped.
Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by Feraz(m): 10:17pm On Apr 15, 2017
cheruv:

I've a team working on project HanGbo,which essentially sees to the use of Chinese characters in writing Igbo. We've achieved quite a milestone and we're moving forward.
Soon I'd kickstart a thread in the culture section regarding it
Similar to Nsibidi?

I hope and pray this comes to fruition!

Imagine working in a financial hub in Onitsha, catching fun in Owerri, checking up your farm produce and processing in Abakaliki, going to the producers of the shoes you wear in Aba, getting petrochemical things in Asaba and living in Enugu all within short distances. Such bliss. cheesy

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by Agumbankembu: 10:30pm On Apr 15, 2017
Feraz:
Similar to Nsibidi?

I hope and pray this comes to fruition!

Imagine working in a financial hub in Onitsha, catching fun in Owerri, checking up your farm produce and processing in Abakaliki, going to the producers of the shoes you wear in Aba, getting petrochemical things in Asaba and living in Enugu all within short distances. Such bliss. cheesy

Nwanne, ihe oma na-adi gi mma na ndu.

2 Likes

Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by Newsi: 11:03pm On Apr 15, 2017
profhezekiah:
Ask those that av commented to summarize what was written there, only about 5% will read what was written to d end
How did you scientifically arrive at the conclusion that only 5% will read it till the end?

2 Likes

Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by footballbogger: 11:01am On Apr 16, 2017
salient points raised there.
Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by Nobody: 11:04am On Apr 16, 2017
Op, thanks for this post. We need more of this.
Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by OreMI22: 1:28pm On Apr 16, 2017
PDJT:


-I remember as a school kiddo, been given money to give to my school mgt as my contribution toward the Airport, which I have now benefitted as an adult. Yes, school kids then did their bit.
Igbo Amaka.

I must thank you for your contribution. it is such spirit of everyone doing their little bit that is still needed today. Especially as the APC led FG has made it clear that it does not consider SE a part of Nigeria and therefore will not be considered in infrastructure funding. But of course, they will always name it first each year on the budget infrastructure list. Just to give people false hope and keep them quiet for another year until the next budget.

2 Likes

Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by footballbogger: 6:59pm On Apr 16, 2017
.
Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by Bawsse(m): 9:27pm On Apr 16, 2017
blues20:

We are already working on something close to it. A complete portal.... more like a suite with social media capability. I'll follow you so I can keep you posted on progress.

Follow me back too, I'm interested
Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by Nobody: 9:56pm On Apr 16, 2017
Bawsse:


Follow me back too, I'm interested
Just followed you. We will need beta testers on the platform, before we go live.
Re: How Integration Can Transform Igboland Into An African Economic Hub by Bawsse(m): 10:28pm On Apr 16, 2017
blues20:

Just followed you. We will need beta testers on the platform, before we go live.

Okay how will that work

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