THE ROAD AHEAD
BEING AN ADDRESS AT THE
FIRST NASARAWA STATE SUMMIT OF NASARAWA LEADERS OF THOUGHT BY
ALHAJI ABDULLAHI ADAMU, (SARKIN YAKIN KEFFI) EXECUTIVE GOVERNOR
OF NASARAWA STATE, ON THE 25 SEPTEMBER,
1999.
On behalf of the state government
and myself I warmly welcome you to this historic summit. Your
presence here is a source of joy and inspiration to us, and an
eloquent testimony to your unflinching support for the programmes
and policies of our administration. We cannot thank you enough
for this singular show of support and solidarity. We thank the
Almighty Allah for making this meeting possible. May He continue
to guide us in our sincere and collective efforts to take our
people to the promised land.
This assembly today is the first
in a series of consultative meetings we have initiated to keep
you fully briefed on the state of affairs in Nasarawa State. This
forum is not intended as a talk shop. We conceived it as an
important forum to put our heads together to meaningfully respond
to the needs of our people and chart a course for the future of
our state.
We have invested hopes in this
forum. Through it, we will periodically appraise you of the
activities of our administration and shop for your views and
suggestions to enrich our thinking and help us in the urgent task
ahead. I urge you to speak freely.
We must all be active participants
if the forum must serve its purpose. Our views must be objective
and our proffered solutions must be informed and practicable. Let
us not dress them in the false garments of vested personal,
sectional or even religious interests.
We have not convened this meeting
in response to any criticism or pressure from outside. It is out
of our conviction that the good people of this state have a right
to take part in the process of governance.
Since our inauguration a little
over one hundred days ago, we have involved the relevant segments
of our society in our programmes and policies. As some of you
would recall, the broad policy thrust of this administration
evolved from the collective wisdom of the leaders of the
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and informed indigenes of
the state.
We lay no claims to monopoly of
wisdom or infallibility. We are always open to opinions and
suggestions offered in the interest of our people. As far as we
in this administration are concerned, only the interest of the
people matters. In the face of the urgent task facing us to make
a difference in the lives of our people, we cannot spare time to
massage anybodys ego.
You are the political and opinion
leaders in this state. We expect you to be genuinely concerned
about what is going on in the government and the state. Where you
feel that something is going wrong, you have a moral duty to say
so. My humble advice is for all of us to resist the temptation to
rush to the gallery for purposes of wanting to be heard or to
score cheap political points. Leaders must learn to criticise
from an informed position. And they should criticise with the
objective of helping to build and not to destroy.
Our doors are open. We urge all
those who have something to offer to come forward. I assure you
that we are not, and do not ever intend to be, lone rangers.
Let us see the depressing picture
of our depressed state as a challenge. Our duty, our challenge
and our obligation all rolled into one, is to change this
unacceptable face of our state. In the last three months, we have
mapped out strategies for this change. The strategies are
anchored on the cardinal objectives of our programmes and
policies, namely:
- The evolution of a
clear socio-cultural philosophy for the efficient management of our
human, financial and natural resources for the
greatest good of the greatest number of our
people.
- Coordinated
infrastructural development for a meaningful
empowerment of our people.
- Poverty alleviation
through self-actualisation within the context of
a holistic socio-economic empowerment.
- Rapid educational,
agricultural and industrial development of the
entire state.
- Transparency and
accountability in the conduct of government
business.
The execution of our policies and
programmes is a teamwork. On August 12th 1999 we
formally constituted the state executive council. The council is
made up of men and women whose commitment to the service of our
people is transparent. For reasons that will become evident in
the next few months, we call ourselves the dream team. We shall
dream of a modern and prosperous Nasarawa State together. And
together, we shall actualise our dreams to the joy and happiness
of our people.
The dream team can do little
without your active support. The backbone of any administration
is a sound, committed and motivated civil service. We inherited a
demoralised civil service.
But we are in the process of its
comprehensive re-organisation to tailor it to the needs and
exigencies of a democratic government. The recent removal of
Permanent Secretaries is part of this re-organisation.
We have taken steps to motivate
our civil servants. We have paid all outstanding salaries and
allowances. We have also promoted those who were due. We have
introduced the furniture loans scheme for workers. Arrangements
are in top gear to distribute motor cycles and bicycles supplied
by the PTF on loan to workers.
Civil servants now enjoy a
one-hour break from 12pm to 1pm. This has helped to reduce cases
of loitering during office hours. Workers who have children in
school can now take them home during their official break. We
have also provided cafeteria services for civil servants at the
workplace. To encourage interaction among the civil servants,
staff clubs for senior and junior workers are being established.
Most importantly, we have started
routine on the job training and retraining programmes for civil
servants in the state.
A characteristic of this
administration is its determination to let its actions speak
louder than words. Within our first hundred days, we demonstrated
that beyond any reasonable doubts. We promised during our
electioneering campaigns to provide a hospital in every local
government headquarters where there is none.
We have begun to fulfill our
promise. We commissioned the Akwanga and Wamba general hospitals
on September 6 as part of events marking our first one hundred
days in office. Keana, Obi and Awe general hospitals are next in
line.
We plan a women and
childrens hospital in Doma. We are expanding the Nasarawa
Comprehensive Health Centre with a wing for women and children.
We are providing a similar facility in Nasara-Eggon. A new
hospital in Keffi is in the pipeline because the federal
government is taking over the present hospital and will convert
it into a National Health Centre. We are also working on the
Mararaba health centre in Karu.
Given our lean financial
resources, we do not promise to provide health for all by the
year 2000. But we promise to solve the basic health problems of
our people within one year of our assumption of office.
As you very well know, lack of
potable water is a major problem in most areas of the state.
Existing water supplies are grossly inadequate. In many cases,
facilities for providing potable water have broken down. Again,
we took immediate steps to meet this basic human need. I am
pleased to report that today, potable water flows in Lafia, Obi, Keana, Nasarawa
Eggon, and Nasarawa. The water supply in Nasarawa
is now over 60 percent of installed capacity.
Education is the backbone of
modern development. This administration lays due emphasis on the
provision of qualitative education in the state.
Despite handsome votes for
education at federal and state levels over the years, education
in the country generally has suffered from the violence of
half-hearted approach to its development.
The result is that the standard of
education is low. Our state is educationally backward. If we must
catch up with the rest of the country, then we must do more than
pay lip service to our educational development.
Our first step in this important
sector as soon as we took over was to intervene and end the
protracted strike by primary school teachers. We were able to
resolve this problem through a constructive dialogue with the
Nigerian Union of Teachers, NUT. We thank the teachers for their
understanding and cooperation.
To improve the physical facilities
in the schools, we have constructed two additional classroom
blocks in each of the 13 local government areas.
To urgently remedy our science
education, we have established six Science Secondary Schools for
boys and girls, two in each senatorial district. The schools are
located in Nasarawa, Garaku, Wamba, Nassarawa-Eggon, Lafia and
Obi.
We are also setting up a science
and technology agency. To expand educational opportunities for
our children, we will establish a state University and a state
Polytechnic. A technical committee is looking into a suitable
location for the polytechnic.
We have reconstituted the
committee on the state University. We expect the University to
take off as soon as practicable. For the moment we are
concentrating on the groundwork for its ultimate establishment.
The establishment of a university to provide requisite manpower
for our state in the next millennium is a task that must be done.
There is no going back on this.
Lack of industries has been the
bane of our under-development. It is an irony that a state so
richly endowed with natural and agricultural resources to sustain
viable medium to large scale manufacturing industries, has none.
We believe that we need to urgently address the question of our
industrial development. As a take off point, we have commissioned
the services of economic consultants to help chart a course for
the rapid and comprehensive industrial development of the state,
using its natural and agricultural resources.
We are talking with potential
investors and financial organisations for the establishment of
the following industries: Salt factory in Awe; Fertiliser plant
in Lafia; Marble processing factory in Toto; Cashew and Citrus
processing plant in Keffi; Dairy in Karu; Burnt Bricks factory in
Keffi and Karu; and cement plants in Kadarko and Keana.
Meanwhile, work on the
International Market project in Mararaba which was abandoned
before the inception of the present administration will resume
soon. The potential of the market as a gateway to our commercial
development is obviously immense.
Our social, economic and
industrial development is hampered by lack of electricity. Six
towns in the state are to be linked with the national grid. The
state will also benefit from President Olusegun Obasanjos
rural electrification project in which he plans to provide light
to 186 communities nation-wide in the next six months.
This welcome development will
still leave some communities unprovided for. Our rural
electrification scheme is designed for such communities. We are
holding meaningful discussions with the appropriate agencies such
as NESW and Siemens on this. We are reactivating the generators
in Awe, Uke and Karu.
Distinguished ladies and
Gentlemen, we did not set out to bore you with a long list of
modest achievements in our first hundred days in office. We hope,
however, that we have provided you with a comprehensive report on
the current state of our state. Even with the little that we have
done or are doing, it is obvious that the picture of the state we
inherited is changing. Indeed, we have done no more than provided
the catalyst for a comprehensive development of the state.
The challenge is enormous. The
problems are gigantic. But our resolve to tackle them is
unwavering. Our greatest achievement so far is the creative and
resourceful application of our lean financial resources for
maximum mileage.
As I said at the swearing-in of
the commissioners and special advisers last month, our people
must not only know that there is a change of government, they
must see it and they must feel it.
We are encouraged by the
enthusiastic support of the people. In my working tour of the
local government areas, I saw the hunger for activity in the eyes
of our people. I saw their readiness to do their part if the
government will do its own. I assure you and them that this
government will fully play its part.
The challenge to make a difference
is for all of us, in and out of government. We do not need to be
in government to be part of it; to dream dreams with the
government and to actualise those dreams for the progress and the
upliftment of our people. The fate of our state and its people is
in our hands.
You are the cream of this society.
You have the financial muscle to help make a difference. You have
local and international contacts to attract serious investors to
the state. It is now time for all of us to think home. No one
will develop this state for us. We must do it ourselves.
This is no time for indifference.
This is no time for sitting on the fence. It is time for action.
Our hands must be on deck. Our thoughts must be creative. Because
we are all in this together.
We fought for the creation of this
state. We won our struggle. That victory would be in vain if we
cannot make Nasarawa the State of our collective dreams.
We must now put away our
political, religious and other differences and forge a bond of
unity without which we cannot go forward as a team and as a
people. Our tribes and our religions must be forces for unity and
strength and not for disunity and weakness.
I extend a hand of genuine
friendship to all other political parties and ask them to join us
in the urgent task of developing our state.
Permit me to conclude this address
by re-emphasising our expectations from this historic summit. We
need well-reasoned, and practicable ideas and solutions to the
following crucial problems facing the state:
|
How do we stamp out the
decadence in institutions of government, curtail fraud,
and restore sanity and public confidence in government as
an instrument to do good to the greatest majority of the
people? |
|
How do we boost our meager
internally generated revenue from a pitiable sum of N6
million monthly to increase our resource base and
capacity to address the lack of infrastructure without
which development will be difficult to attain. |
|
How do we as a state reverse
our legacy of total absence of industries, scientific and
technological capacity, to a position of basic industrial
and technological take off? |
|
How do we as a state attract
domestic and foreign investors to develop our huge
mineral and agricultural potential? In other words, how
do we project Nasarawa State and its potentials to the
world to attract the needed investments to create wealth
and prosperity for our people? |
|
How and what do we do to
restore quality and values to our educational system
which is actually in a total state of decay and
emergency? |
|
How do we move our people
from their relative lack of entrepreneurial skills and
awareness, to informed and active players in the market
place? |
|
What are we, the leading
elites of Nasarawa State, prepared to do individually and
collectively to develop the state? |
|
What sacrifices are we
prepared to make to give this state the head start in all
key sectors especially industrialisation, educational and
infrastructural development? |
|
What is your frank, objective
and somber assessment of what we have tried to do so far? |
|
What areas of our focus and
priorities need improvement to maximize the impact of our
interventions in the various sectors? |
|
Finally, how do we improve
popular participation by our people in governance and
public affairs? How do we consolidate our infant
democracy? For it is our strong conviction that given our
abject financial position, we must constantly be creative
in mobilising our people to take up the challenge of
cooperative community development through self-help
initiatives to transform the state for the better. |
What steps do we as a state
take to redress the glaring injustice we suffered in the
assets sharing with our brothers in Plateau State.
The foregoing are the challenges
to which we seek urgent answers and solutions.
Permit me to caution once more
that this August summit is not a political rally. It is not an
arena for partisan diatribe and intemperate exchanges. It is a
non-partisan forum called to enable us discuss as a family on the
way forward for our state. Let our tune and tone of discussion be
parliamentary, and our contributions well thought out and
delivered in the most mature and civilised language so we can
benefit from this effort.
Elections are over. Now is the
time for collective action to develop our state.
Ladies and Gentlemen, now you know
the challenges and the problems of our state. In your pockets and
your minds lies the solution. As the Hausa say: Ga fili, ga
doki.
Thank you for your patience and
attention. I wish you fruitful deliberations. May God bless our
efforts.
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