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Poverty Cause of Boko Haram, Says Clinton
Former United States President Bill Clinton on Tuesday canvassed
ways through which Nigeria could effectively deal with Boko Haram
insurgency and other forms of insecurity in the country.
Among the ideas suggested by him are poverty eradication,
education, equitable distribution of wealth and job creation for the
nation’s teeming unemployed graduates.
Clinton, at Thisday Newspapers awards in Abeokuta, Ogun State,
also flayed what he described as Nigeria’s failure to efficiently
manage and maximise her oil and human resources for the benefit of
all.
Nigeria, he argued, would do better if her resources were efficiently managed by her leaders.
He said one of the ways the nation could eradicate her high level of
poverty, especially in the North, was to have powerful state and
local governments.
Clinton, who added that programmes to check Boko Haram violence and
insecurity were desirious, advised that deliberate efforts should
be made by the three tiers of government to give “economic
opportunities” to Nigerians lagging behind .
“You have to somehow bring economic opportunity to the people who
don’t have it,” he said, “You have all these political problems — and
now violence — that appear to be rooted in religious differences and
all the rhetoric of the Boko Harams and others, but the truth is the
poverty rate in the North is three times of what it is in Lagos. ”
He said that poverty remained the main driver for the attacks by
Boko Haram and needed to be addressed by strong local and Federal
Government programmes.
Pointing out that “too much inequality” was capable of limiting
growth and opportunities among the citizens of a country, he stressed
that a redistribution of wealth would go a long way in addressing the
violence and insecurity in Nigeria.
The former President said, “You have about three big challenges.
First of all, like 90 per cent of the countries who have one big
resource, you have a number of ways with your own money. It shows you
have different ways. Now you are at least not wasting the natural gas,
you are developing and selling it through the pipelines. You have to do
better job of managing the natural resources.
“Secondly, you have to somehow bring economic opportunities to the
people who don’t have. This is not a problem specific to Nigeria. In
almost every place in the world, prosperity is heavily concentrated in
and around urban areas. So you have all these political problems for now
even violence .
“There appears to be political and religious differences and now,
the rhetoric of the Boko Haram and all that. You have to have both
powerful state and local governments and a national policy that work
together.
“If you just keep trying to divide the power if you will, into
loosening strategy, you have to figure out a way to have a strategy that
will help share the prosperity.”
He advised that education should be used as a tool to tackle
poverty among Nigerians, saying that if citizens were well educated,
they would be economically empowered and hence have less inclination
towards violence.
Clinton said governments at all levels needed to tackle graduate
unemployment which, according to him, is as a source of instability
across the world.
He said Nigeria, which earns billions of dollars from her oil
industry and is a major supplier to the US, must not take a “divide the
pie” approach towards attacking poverty.
“It’s a losing strategy,” the former President said. “You have to
figure out a way to have a strategy that will have shared prosperity.”
Boko Haram killed at least 792 people last year in Nigeria, according to an Associated Press count.
A group, Ansaru, which is believed to be a splinter group from
Boko Haram, on Monday claimed the kidnappings of seven foreigners — a
British , a Greek, an Italian, three Lebanese and one Filipino in
northern Cameroon.
Analysts say that poverty, despite decades of military rule by
leaders from the North, coupled with a lack of formal education has
driven the region’s exploding youth population toward extremism.
On agriculture, the former US President called on Nigeria and other
African countries to maximise the potential of small farmers rather
than dabbling in mechanised and commercial agriculture.
This, he said, would ensure food security in the continent.
Also speaking on the occasion, Governor Ibikunle Amosun, said that
early contact of the people of the state with the Christian missionaries
gave it a head start in Western education.
“We have the largest number of higher institutions in Nigeria. We
believe education is the key to the fulfillment of our mandate. Indeed,
educated people are easily governed,” he said.
Fifteen teachers and ex-teachers from primary, secondary and tertiary
institutions from across the country were honoured with the Thisday
Awards of N2m each. The Thisday Lifetime Awards were also given to
others, including prominent industrialists, Oba Otudeko and Chief Razaq
Okoya as well as the Osile of Oke-Ona Egba, Oba Adedapo Tejuosho.
Amosun and his Delta State counterpart, Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan, also won awards.
Amongst the dignitaries who attended the event were former
President Olusegun Obasanjo; the Chairman of Punch Nigeria Limited, Mr.
Wale Aboderin; the Olu of Ilaro and Paramount Ruler of Yewaland, Oba
Kehinde Olugbenle; the Alake and Paramount Ruler of Egbaland, Oba
Adedotun Gbadebo; a former Governor of Ogun State, Chief Olusegun Osoba;
Publisher of Vanguard Newspapers, Mr. Sam Amuka-Pemu; a former Vice-
President of the World Bank, Oby Ezekwesili; Founding Managing Director,
Guaranty Trust Bank, Mr. Fola Adeola; ex-Managing Director, Daily
Times of Nigeria, Dr. Yemi Ogunbiyi; and Senator Olabiyi Durojaiye.
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