LONDON - Democracy is still on course despite some anxiety over the 2007 elections, Governor Abdullahi Adamu of Nasarawa State has declared.

Governor Adamu, who met some top British politicians in London, told them that what might be misinterpreted by foreigners as heating up of the polity over the 2007 elections should really be viewed as the necessary teething problems of a new and growing democracy should face.

Governor Adamu met and had discussions with Diane Abbott, Member of Parliament for Hackney North and Stoke Newington, and Baroness Valerie Amos, Leader of the House of Lords and a member of Prime Minister Tony Blair’s cabinet, at the Houses of Parliament in Westminster.

The Nasarawa governor told both politicians that with Nigeria just coming out of dictatorship in the last few years, it was not unlikely that when general elections draw nearer, different groups would struggle for position and press their claims for power. But he added that the third term debate going on in the country was being blown out of proportion by many of the same people who have done much damage to Nigeria. He described some of those people as political jobbers who have lost their relevance under the new dispensation and are ready to do anything to rubbish the federal government.

Furthermore, he said Nigerians themselves were vociferous people who, with the advent of democracy, have once again found their voice and were not afraid to express their views. In that wise, he said, it was not unlikely that those who were unappreciative of Nigeria’s past problems might misinterpret the current debate and disagreements as signs that democracy was in distress.

At the meeting with Baroness Amos at the House of Lords, he said: "We know President Obasanjo has not told anyone he is running for a third term and has said both here (London) and in Germany that he would keep his oath of office and abide by Nigeria’s constitution. The president is very much in the saddle and knows what he is doing."

Baroness Amos, who is the first black woman cabinet member and third woman ever to become Leader of the House of Lords, told the governor, the British government was watching developments in Nigeria with keen interest and would be hoping that Nigeria continues to be a beacon for democracy on the African continent. She said Britain was quite appreciative of the fact that "beating the path of democracy" was never easy, but said Nigeria should continue to ensure the system prospers in Africa’s most populous nation.

Baroness and the governor listed areas of cooperation between the two countries to include political and economic reforms and agreed that the cooperation must be strengthened in those areas. Governor Adamu emphasised that Nigeria had taken giant strides in the fight against corruption and would continue to need the help of the British government to tackle the cankerworm.

During lunch at the House of Commons with Ms. Abbott, the left wing Labour Party politician who in 1987 became the first black woman to be elected MP, what to do about the grave situation in the Niger Delta was trashed out. Ms. Abbott had expressed concern over the plight of the inhabitants of the oil producing areas and wondered what the Nigerian government was doing to address their concerns. Governor Adamu explained the steps that had been taken by the government, including the setting up of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) and the 13 per cent derivation agreed for the oil producing areas. But he added that what needede to be done by the Federal Government was to neutralise the impact of the nation’s dependence on the oil sector by shifting attention to other resources which are ready to be tapped. He said one of the ways to address the situation would be to empower state governments to be partners in the endeavour.

At the moment, the constitution vests the power to tap mineral resources on the Federal Government.

Governor Adamu, who has returned to Nigeria, used his meeting with Baroness Amos to invite her to the 10th anniversary celebrations of Nasarawa State in October this year.

Published by Vanguard, Friday, January 20, 2006

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