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Written By Yushau A. Shuaib
THE YOUTHS SPEAK OUT
New Nigerian January 22, 1995, Democrat December
2&7, 1994
If elders possess the
experience, the youth have the energy, if elders are the planners, the youth are
the builders, if elders are blessed with the benefit of hindsight, the youth are
enriched by foresight, powerful dreams and visions - General Sani Abacha
The above articulate phrase was
made by no other person than the Nigerian Head of State, Gen. Sani Abacha at the
last National Youth Conference on Nigeria in the 21st Century. The conference,
which was organised by the Yakubu Gowon Centre, afforded the youths from all
over the country the opportunity to freely express their views and proffer
solutions to the problems of Nigeria and draw from the forum perspectives and
agenda for the 21st century.
In the conference, which was
witnessed by highly intellectual professionals from within and outside the
country, including an African scholar of universal repute, Professor Ali Mazrui,
wide range historical and contemporary problems and issues important to Nigeria
were analyzed in terms of their implications and possibilities for the 21st
Century, including the place and the role of contemporary Nigerian youths in
addressing and helping to resolve those and other issues being at present
discussed at the Constitutional Conference.
About 300 participants who
attended the conference either came in response to official invitation or were
nominated by their respective states or organizations such as the National Youth
Service Corps scheme, universities and various youth organisations nationwide.
Unfortunately, the conference
which was the largest congregation of Nigerian youths from Lagos to Yobe, Delta
to Sokoto and diverse religious, tribal, cultural and ethnic backgrounds, got
very little attention of the media. Only a little segment of its proceedings in
form of news stories on papers and speeches delivered by speakers who were not
youths were used in the press. I hereby found it necessary, as a participant at
that conference, to point out some of the issues that reflect the state of
Nigerian society today and tomorrow. The youth expressed themselves logically
and maturely on various sensitive issues, which even the adults, have not
succeeded in discussing calmly and rationally. It took time to discuss relevant
matters fully as noted by the former Head of State, Gen. Yakubu Gowon.
What the conference, however,
failed to discuss and fully define or resolve was a definition as to who should
be regarded as a youth. At the conference, for instance, some elderly people
with beard or grey hair were noticed among the participants, not as ordinary
observers. In defining the concept of youth, some see the youth as any person
between ages of 6-30. Others said from 17-45. Physically and statistically, the
two views may be acceptable. At the same time, one would wonder if a person
between 30-45 is not too old to be a youth.
Most of the elderly women at
the conference dressed and talked girlishly while the older men were seen
dancing boyishly at the party hosted for the youth. The decree establishing the
National Youth Service Corps scheme, which exempted anybody below 17 and over 30
years of age, I suggested, is more appropriate and more acceptable as a
criterion. On the youth National development, the youth resolved that the
National Youth Commission should be established as an apex agency for a uniform
and central coordination of the efforts of all youth organisations in the
country.
This observation is
necessitated by the anti-youth posture which has remained an impediment to the
inclusion of youths in the policy and decision making structure of society,
either by convention or by decree. For this reason, the representatives of
Nigerian youths recommended that the proposed Commission should be autonomous,
independent and free from ministerial red-tapism and be charged with the
effective implementation of the National Youth Policy. The staffing and
composition of the commission should be in such a way that vanguard youth
organisations are given a prominent and central role to play.
For meaningful contributions
towards the development of our fatherland, the youth called on members of the
Constitutional Conference to regard the youths as a special constituency for the
purpose of constituting the executive and legislative organs of government at
all levels. They should reserve a minimum quota of 25 per cent of incumbent
positions strictly for the youth.
The Nigerian Youth also
recommended that the proposed National Youth Commission should work hand in hand
with the National Commission for Women in addressing the problems that emanate
from the Gender Question and that the programmes of women organisations and
agencies designed to correct gender inequalities should focus more on the
youths.
The Federal Government should
also make a deliberate policy favouring the female gender in employment
opportunities and in admission to higher institutions of learning.
The most widely discussed issue
at the youth gathering was on political instability and the search for a viable
democratic polity. Can we have a military democratic government? The youth
critically observed that classes cut across ethnic, religious and sectionalist
differences among Nigerians so as to perpetuate their hegemony as a class.
It was saddening and highly
disheartening for the youths, the future leaders, to realise that bribery and
corruption which are mechanisms for primitive accumulation of capital, have
created a selfish political class and an envious followership, which misplace
values and misdirect orientation. It is in view of the foregoing that it has
become necessary for the government to eradicate poverty by encouraging
extensive agricultural practice and providing employment to break the myth of
money politics. That has been the backbone of the class control of political
leadership.
Whether it is diarchy,
two-party or multiparty system of government or even the advocated dual
sovereignty idea by the keynote speaker, Professor Ali Mazrui, it is necessary
to enable various ethnic groups accommodate each other with a mechanism put in
place to enable efficient identification of membership that should cut across
the nation. Politics should be open to popular contests and there should be a
process of power sharing that would discourage the attitude of winner-takes-all
from being entrenched in the constitution. What Nigerians need is a stable
government of the people, NO MORE, NO LESS.
Although, different scholars
and speakers viewed economic development from different perspectives, the
congregation of Nigerian youths at the conference looked at it as resting solely
on the country’s ability to exploit and utilize its natural, economic and
intellectual endowments for the production of goods and services which would
benefit all its citizenry. It is the belief of Nigerian youths that for a
genuine economic transformation, the country needs a committed and patriotic
leadership that will strictly adhere to budgetary provisions and fiscal
discipline.
It is also necessary for the
Federal Government to invest in human resource’s sectors such as agriculture,
which in recent times have been left at the peril of some small-scale producers.
There is no denying the fact that our educational system has deteriorated. The
crisis in our institutions of higher learning is attributed to inadequate
funding. The youth unanimously resolved that government should invest more in
schools and provide equal opportunities for children with respect to education
at all levels, both in rural and urban areas so that the standard could be the
same.
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