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Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? - Politics - Nairaland

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North Is North, There Is No Middle Belt — Yahaya Kwande / See Why The North Is Uncivilized Compared To The Cultured East / "Support For President Buhari In The North Is Now Religious" - Farooq Kperogi (2) (3) (4)

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Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by agwom(m): 4:22am On Dec 06, 2016
It is not my style to respond to an opinion piece, but when data or statistics is incorrectly presented, one finds it difficult to remain silent especially if the issue strikes at the heart of one’s professional practice. Although, I learnt about the comments by the South-South activist Annkio Briggs through Eugene Enahoro’s thought piece (Daily Trust, 29 November 2016), I felt a deep sense of duty to correct a misconception that the North is feeding fat on the Nigerian federation.

There are hardly any empirically established correlations between what our states bring into the Nigerian federation coffers and what they receive in Federal Accounts Allocation Committee (FAAC) allocations. The fact is that the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) data, on its own, is sometimes incomplete, and almost impossible to do any robust analytics on - analytics that should provide insights on or help us to established empirically patterns of relationship between the states’ contribution to the Nigeria federation coffers and the FAAC allocations. To use the NBS data on its own, therefore, it is important to understand the methodological approach of the particular set of statistics before commenting on them. Without such understanding, we really cannot say our comments are informed or even evidence-based.

So here is what we know. In 2013, at the height of the recent oil boom, four states of the Nigerian federation - Akwa Ibom (N296.1 billion), Rivers (N247.4 billion), Delta (N219.2 billion) and Bayelsa (N188.9 billion) between them received N0.95 trillion or 33% of the N2900.4 trillion net FAAC allocations for the year. If we use the 2010 population figures as metrics (discounting the estimated 2.5% annual population growth), these four states minus Rivers had the same population as Kano state.

Kano state received N97.2 billion from the federal account in 2013; it occupied 6th position on the FAAC Allocations list. Kano’s huge population meant that the state received N10,000 per resident-citizen, compared to N111,000 per resident-citizen for Beyelsa; N76,000 per resident-citizen for Akwa Ibom, N54,000 per resident-citizen for Delta, and N48,000 per resident-citizen for Rivers.

Interestingly, there are hardly any empirically established correlations between what our states received in FAAC allocations and how well they perform. For example, Ogun state was number 26th on the FAAC Allocations list in 2013; it received N57.1 billion or N15,000 per every Ogun resident-citizen (man, woman, young or old), but the state had the lowest level of poverty in the country if we use per-dollar or less-per -day as a metric. Jigawa state was number 15th on the FAAC Allocations list; it received N64.4 or N15,000 per every Jigawa citizen-resident. Yet, Jigawa had the 6th lowest rate of poverty in Nigeria (50.7%) - significantly lower than Rivers state (74.7%), where each resident-citizen received N48,000 in FAAC allocations; or Delta (63.6% poverty rate), where each resident-citizen received N54,000; or Akwa Ibom (53.8% poverty rate) where each resident-citizen received N76,000 in FAAC allocations.

Take another comparable metric - average number of students to a teacher otherwise known as teacher-pupil ratio in 2013. Nassarawa state received N47 billion, occupied 33rd place on the FAAC Allocations list, but has one of the lowest average class-sizes in public primary schools in Nigeria. Nassarawa’s 22 students-to-a teacher was far below the Nigerian national average of 42, and significantly below Akwa Ibom’s73 students-to-a teacher in 2013.

Now, let’s take the 13% Derivation as a further illustration. Recently, Dr Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu, the minister of state for petroleum said that despite the $40 billion that the federal government has spent in the Niger Delta region between 2004 and 2015, there seemed to be little or nothing to show for it. Apart from being a federal minister, Dr Kachikwu is an indigene of the Niger Delta region and it is unlikely that he did not know the implication of his revelation.

The fact is that Dr Kachikwu’s figures include everything from the 13% Derivation to the cost of prosecuting the Umaru Musa Yar’Adua administration’s amnesty to the cost of running the Ministry of Niger Delta, the Niger Delta Development Commission, etc. So, if we take Dr Kachikwu’s $40 billion figure face value, we really do not know how much was spent on what and when.

But this is what we know: between 1st January 2011 and 31st December 2015, the eight oil-producing states of Imo, Ondo, Abia, Akwa Ibom, Delta, Bayelsa, Rivers and Cross Rivers received N2.73 trillion - or 13% Derivation - from the federation account. Out of this amount, the core states in the Niger Delta region - Akwa Ibom (N761.4 billion), Bayelsa (N509.0 billion), Delta, where Dr Kachikwu hails from (N583.0 billion) and Rivers (N582.9 billion) between them received N2.44 trillion specifically to develop the local governments and communities where the natural gas and crude oil were lifted. This amount, N2.44 trillion, is approximately 40% of the entire 2016 budget of the federal government (N6.06 trillion).

It should be noted that the 13% Derivation is the Nigerian federation’s way of saying ‘thank you’ to the Niger Delta region and indeed to all the oil-producing states - their local governments, communities and citizens - for their contributions to the commonwealth of the Nigerian federation.

So, if the federal government’s ‘thank you’ SMS message - and the N2.44 trillion Ghana-must-go bag - had been delivered directly to the oil producing communities in the Niger Delta Region between 1st January 2011 and 31st December 2015, every local government in Bayelsa state would have received N63.7 billion in community-development and poverty alleviation funding; N32.2 billion per local government in Akwa Ibom state, N25.3 billion per local government in Rivers state, and N23.4 billion per local government in Delta state.

Similarly, if the federal government’s ‘thank you’ SMS message - and the N2.44 trillion Ghana-must-go bag - had been given as ‘pocket money’ to the people of the Niger Delta Region between 1st January 2011 and 31st December 2015, every resident-citizen (man or woman, young or old) in Bayelsa would have received N212,457 per person; N158,542 per person in Akwa Ibom state, N70,349 per person in Delta state, and N63,359 per person in Rivers state. In a country where some states in the federation are struggling to pay the N18,000 minimum wage, and going by the FAAC allocations in the five years to December 2015, it wouldn’t have been too long before Nigeria begins to replicate ‘little’ Aliko Dangotes all over the Niger Delta Region!

It seems to me that the critical issue is not so much about how much each state contributes to or receives from the federation, but how well the FAAC allocations are spent. As Nigerians, we would gain nothing when we make ill-informed comments that are capable of inciting our people against our leaders and the Nigerian state. As indigenes of the South South, South East, South West, North East, North West and North Central, we are experiencing a common, but dual challenge of poverty and development. But I’m an optimist. I’m incredibly confident and super-secured in my judgment that together we can do it; together we can make our country better. We just need to roll up our sleeves and begin to walk the talk.

So don’t let anybody tell you that one region in Nigeria is feeding fat on the other. Everybody needs somebody - and we all need one another. God Bless Nigeria, her people and its six geo-political zones.

Professor Ogunleye chairs the Nigeria’s Big Data Analytics and Innovation Conference, which was hosted last week by the National Defence College Abuja. He can be reached at oj08@hotmail.com

Read more at http://www.dailytrust.com.ng/news/opinion/who-says-the-north-is-feeding-fat-on-nigeria/174667.html#8SuKcVhQPOd7j40w.99

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by HungerBAD: 4:23am On Dec 06, 2016
Laughing.

This Professor Ogunleye is a funny guy. I had taken my time to read the article like 3 times, for me to realize that although beautifully put together, the article does not make any sense.

And it takes a lot for a senseless nobody like me, to consider a Professor's write up senseless.

All these public commentators with their gifts for spin sef.

Professor Ogunleye after giving us some Abracadabra calculations on who gets what, and how it is spent, now concluded that it does not matter what any State gets, as the most important thing is that the money is used justly.

Professor Ogunleye, the question is not whether the money is used rightly or wrongly. The question is, is the money gotten from the South considered eating from the federation fat by the North? and yes they are eating very FAT from where they should not be eating.

Nigerians are many things, but gullible we are not.

24 Likes 1 Share

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by IykeChukz(m): 4:46am On Dec 06, 2016
Scrap...

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by Nutase: 5:09am On Dec 06, 2016
Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by cjrane: 5:18am On Dec 06, 2016
A bunch of afonjas writing long nonsense because they think everyone is foolish.

If the north owned the money they were sharing amongst themselves, would they let any other part of Nigeria to even get a tiny share, talk more of getting a lion share of it as they have done with the Niger Delta resources?
Mshewww!

17 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by Izonpikin: 5:27am On Dec 06, 2016
Nonsense
Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by sarrki(m): 5:34am On Dec 06, 2016
cjrane:
A bunch of afonjas writing long nonsense because they think everyone is foolish.

If the north owned the money they were sharing amongst themselves, would they let any other part of Nigeria to even get a tiny share, talk more of getting a lion share of it as they have done with the Niger Delta resources?
Mshewww!


Proper medical checkup won't be a bad idea

Cause if your obsession for the Omoluabis

We are the pacesetter we do and others follow

Live with it

8 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by Nobody: 5:38am On Dec 06, 2016
agwom:
[s]It is not my style to respond to an opinion piece, but when data or statistics is incorrectly presented, one finds it difficult to remain silent especially if the issue strikes at the heart of one’s professional practice. Although, I learnt about the comments by the South-South activist Annkio Briggs through Eugene Enahoro’s thought piece (Daily Trust, 29 November 2016), I felt a deep sense of duty to correct a misconception that the North is feeding fat on the Nigerian federation.

There are hardly any empirically established correlations between what our states bring into the Nigerian federation coffers and what they receive in Federal Accounts Allocation Committee (FAAC) allocations. The fact is that the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) data, on its own, is sometimes incomplete, and almost impossible to do any robust analytics on - analytics that should provide insights on or help us to established empirically patterns of relationship between the states’ contribution to the Nigeria federation coffers and the FAAC allocations. To use the NBS data on its own, therefore, it is important to understand the methodological approach of the particular set of statistics before commenting on them. Without such understanding, we really cannot say our comments are informed or even evidence-based.

So here is what we know. In 2013, at the height of the recent oil boom, four states of the Nigerian federation - Akwa Ibom (N296.1 billion), Rivers (N247.4 billion), Delta (N219.2 billion) and Bayelsa (N188.9 billion) between them received N0.95 trillion or 33% of the N2900.4 trillion net FAAC allocations for the year. If we use the 2010 population figures as metrics (discounting the estimated 2.5% annual population growth), these four states minus Rivers had the same population as Kano state.

Kano state received N97.2 billion from the federal account in 2013; it occupied 6th position on the FAAC Allocations list. Kano’s huge population meant that the state received N10,000 per resident-citizen, compared to N111,000 per resident-citizen for Beyelsa; N76,000 per resident-citizen for Akwa Ibom, N54,000 per resident-citizen for Delta, and N48,000 per resident-citizen for Rivers.

Interestingly, there are hardly any empirically established correlations between what our states received in FAAC allocations and how well they perform. For example, Ogun state was number 26th on the FAAC Allocations list in 2013; it received N57.1 billion or N15,000 per every Ogun resident-citizen (man, woman, young or old), but the state had the lowest level of poverty in the country if we use per-dollar or less-per -day as a metric. Jigawa state was number 15th on the FAAC Allocations list; it received N64.4 or N15,000 per every Jigawa citizen-resident. Yet, Jigawa had the 6th lowest rate of poverty in Nigeria (50.7%) - significantly lower than Rivers state (74.7%), where each resident-citizen received N48,000 in FAAC allocations; or Delta (63.6% poverty rate), where each resident-citizen received N54,000; or Akwa Ibom (53.8% poverty rate) where each resident-citizen received N76,000 in FAAC allocations.

Take another comparable metric - average number of students to a teacher otherwise known as teacher-pupil ratio in 2013. Nassarawa state received N47 billion, occupied 33rd place on the FAAC Allocations list, but has one of the lowest average class-sizes in public primary schools in Nigeria. Nassarawa’s 22 students-to-a teacher was far below the Nigerian national average of 42, and significantly below Akwa Ibom’s73 students-to-a teacher in 2013.

Now, let’s take the 13% Derivation as a further illustration. Recently, Dr Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu, the minister of state for petroleum said that despite the $40 billion that the federal government has spent in the Niger Delta region between 2004 and 2015, there seemed to be little or nothing to show for it. Apart from being a federal minister, Dr Kachikwu is an indigene of the Niger Delta region and it is unlikely that he did not know the implication of his revelation.

The fact is that Dr Kachikwu’s figures include everything from the 13% Derivation to the cost of prosecuting the Umaru Musa Yar’Adua administration’s amnesty to the cost of running the Ministry of Niger Delta, the Niger Delta Development Commission, etc. So, if we take Dr Kachikwu’s $40 billion figure face value, we really do not know how much was spent on what and when.

But this is what we know: between 1st January 2011 and 31st December 2015, the eight oil-producing states of Imo, Ondo, Abia, Akwa Ibom, Delta, Bayelsa, Rivers and Cross Rivers received N2.73 trillion - or 13% Derivation - from the federation account. Out of this amount, the core states in the Niger Delta region - Akwa Ibom (N761.4 billion), Bayelsa (N509.0 billion), Delta, where Dr Kachikwu hails from (N583.0 billion) and Rivers (N582.9 billion) between them received N2.44 trillion specifically to develop the local governments and communities where the natural gas and crude oil were lifted. This amount, N2.44 trillion, is approximately 40% of the entire 2016 budget of the federal government (N6.06 trillion).

It should be noted that the 13% Derivation is the Nigerian federation’s way of saying ‘thank you’ to the Niger Delta region and indeed to all the oil-producing states - their local governments, communities and citizens - for their contributions to the commonwealth of the Nigerian federation.

So, if the federal government’s ‘thank you’ SMS message - and the N2.44 trillion Ghana-must-go bag - had been delivered directly to the oil producing communities in the Niger Delta Region between 1st January 2011 and 31st December 2015, every local government in Bayelsa state would have received N63.7 billion in community-development and poverty alleviation funding; N32.2 billion per local government in Akwa Ibom state, N25.3 billion per local government in Rivers state, and N23.4 billion per local government in Delta state.

Similarly, if the federal government’s ‘thank you’ SMS message - and the N2.44 trillion Ghana-must-go bag - had been given as ‘pocket money’ to the people of the Niger Delta Region between 1st January 2011 and 31st December 2015, every resident-citizen (man or woman, young or old) in Bayelsa would have received N212,457 per person; N158,542 per person in Akwa Ibom state, N70,349 per person in Delta state, and N63,359 per person in Rivers state. In a country where some states in the federation are struggling to pay the N18,000 minimum wage, and going by the FAAC allocations in the five years to December 2015, it wouldn’t have been too long before Nigeria begins to replicate ‘little’ Aliko Dangotes all over the Niger Delta Region!

It seems to me that the critical issue is not so much about how much each state contributes to or receives from the federation, but how well the FAAC allocations are spent. As Nigerians, we would gain nothing when we make ill-informed comments that are capable of inciting our people against our leaders and the Nigerian state. As indigenes of the South South, South East, South West, North East, North West and North Central, we are experiencing a common, but dual challenge of poverty and development. But I’m an optimist. I’m incredibly confident and super-secured in my judgment that together we can do it; together we can make our country better. We just need to roll up our sleeves and begin to walk the talk.

So don’t let anybody tell you that one region in Nigeria is feeding fat on the other. Everybody needs somebody - and we all need one another. God Bless Nigeria, her people and its six geo-political zones.

[size=16pt]Professor Ogunleye[/size] chairs the Nigeria’s Big Data Analytics and Innovation Conference, which was hosted last week by the National Defence College Abuja. He can be reached at oj08@hotmail.com

Read more at http://www.dailytrust.com.ng/news/opinion/who-says-the-north-is-feeding-fat-on-nigeria/174667.html#8SuKcVhQPOd7j40w.99[/s]

Afonja will go any length to defend their Hausa-Fulani masters. SMH.

18 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by sanandreas(m): 5:40am On Dec 06, 2016
Just look at the crap written by a professor. The North contribute religious fanaticism and street beggars to the economy.

6 Likes

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by Afam4eva(m): 5:41am On Dec 06, 2016
It's funny how people write articles laces with grammar but lacks the commonest of sense. The writer chose to console and conciliate himself by analyzing issues that supports his position. Yes, the North and the entire country feeds fat on Nigeria and the Niger Delta specifically. Why is it so far to decipher? It it wasn't then we will not be talking about diversificatio of the economy. Currently, we are an oil depends economy and much of our oil comes from the Niger Delta. Whether Kano's population is 5 billion is highly irrelevant as they're supposed to use what they produce to feed themselves. You don't use the resources of another state and region to validate why you should receive more allocation. That makes you a parasite with entitlement issues.

11 Likes 1 Share

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by blackpanda: 5:47am On Dec 06, 2016
So many braindead wailers wont bother to read. Logic or common sense doesnt come to them easily. Rather they prefer simplified hatred and silly unfounded tribalism.

2 Likes

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by tit(f): 5:50am On Dec 06, 2016
saint7000:


Afonja will go any length to defend their Hausa-Fulani masters. SMH.

the erudite professor ogunleye is not depending the north any thing.
dont forget the SW gets 20% of the oil money awuuf.
ze south east kumai gets about 9%.
so better watch eat
Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by Boleyndynasty2(f): 5:56am On Dec 06, 2016
I even thought the epistle was written by a Northerner sef undecided

3 Likes

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by Nobody: 6:29am On Dec 06, 2016
MASTER CHIEF HONORABLE PROF ,
It doesn't take a doctorate to make simple deductions from data. If you want to find out who is feeding fat on whom then compare how much of every dollar spent is home derived lol. So the metrics up here are pretty much useless. Until you say how much of kano's expenditure is from home/northern sources ( *cough* oil *cough* ), likewise how much of delta, rivers or akwa abasi ibom's is from their states. Just summarize and tell us how much is received back for every dollar contributed lol, smart ass. Pls this is just insulting. It's 2016 and not '79 or some shit. Make proper presentations Sir.

5 Likes

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by overall90: 6:47am On Dec 06, 2016
Boleyndynasty2:
I even thought the epistle was written by a Northerner sef undecided

I'm equally surprised.
This man just want to attract insults to his tribe.

3 Likes

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by freeze001(f): 7:34am On Dec 06, 2016
I am not surprised, it's their stock-in-trade.
He didn't need to bother his professorial head arguing or deriving nonsense as he did. All that is necessary without drama is to state where the FAAC allocation is sourced from to share to the North as 'constitutional' entitlement. How much of those funds is sourced from the North? Is the larger percentage sourced from the North or the South?

The next thing would have been to analyse the NASS upper n lower chambers then calculate the number of Northern Senators compared to the South. He should then compare the number of local governments created in the North with representatives in the HoR to those on the South. After that he should then solve the maths of their earnings after stating d source of that NASS allocation o! Also take into cognisance the fact that they occupy more of the leadership positions in the NASS thereby earning even more than their Southern counterparts. He may need to go into the justice of one state havin 44 LGAs all catered for by d FG while another, despite its massive contributions, is left with just 8 which trabslates to minute representation.

When all of these are done, he can then draw his conclusions on who feeds fat from whom and hopefully, he will take his face out of the gambari groin long enough to let his afonja brain reset and properly state the obvious truth. He's free of course to return to his favourite sport afterwards- ballz n arse lickin!

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by CSTR13: 7:40am On Dec 06, 2016
sarrki:



Proper medical checkup won't be a bad idea

Cause if your obsession for the Omoluabis

We are the pacesetter we do and others follow

Live with it
You are pacesetters in afonjaism.
I can't find any single good thing afonjas are pacesetters in.
yeye people.

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by superstarDikk(m): 7:42am On Dec 06, 2016
.
Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by profhezekiah: 7:55am On Dec 06, 2016
d person dat turn ur life upside down n fill U with hatred will never eat meat
cjrane:
A bunch of afonjas writing long nonsense because they think everyone is foolish.

If the north owned the money they were sharing amongst themselves, would they let any other part of Nigeria to even get a tiny share, talk more of getting a lion share of it as they have done with the Niger Delta resources?
Mshewww!
Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by WINNERMENTALITY: 8:02am On Dec 06, 2016
Anything to make them called Nigeria United..lol

Its funny a Notherner can't make this comparison....

My people let our tribe come first in our planning, the One Nigeria with Over 500 tribe and a dominated extremist religion is a fallacy, an illusion.

2 Likes

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by malton: 8:07am On Dec 06, 2016
HungerBAD:
Laughing.

This Professor Ogunleye is a funny guy. I had taken my time to read the article like 3 times, for me to realize that although beautifully put together, the article does not make any sense.

And it takes a lot for a senseless nobody like me, to consider a Professor's write up senseless.

All these public commentators with their gifts for spin sef.

Professor Ogunleye after giving us some Abracadrabra calculations on who gets what, and how it is spent, now concluded that it does not matter what any State gets, as the most important thing is that the money is used justly.

Professor Ogunleye, the question is not whether the money is used rightly or wrongly. The question is, is the money gotten from the South considered eating from the federation fat by the North? and yes they are eating very FAT from where they should not be eating.

Nigerians are many things, but gullible we are not.





@ the emboldened, you seem to not realize how much trouble a comment like this is capable of brewing.

Not all parts of a any place, country or community, are abundant in natural resources. Even in the Delta, not all communities are oil rich. Should they then be left to suffer their fate alone?

The argument in support of the practice in place is that of redistribution of income so as to achieve even broad economic growth.

Ideas like yours has imbued in people's minds that the north is the enemy reaping where she didn't sow. How convenient that you make it seem like every other southern state is that productive or rich.

The glaring lack of trust and loathe that the average southerner has towards the northerner is as a result of such negligible but impactful pronouncements; not necessarily because they have had enough encounter with a northerner to form an opinion.

It is unlikely that we will become internationally relevant without our own larger country to prop us up. Nigeria as a country, has to meet the needs of a people who actually do not just see themselves as just citizens, but who wish to share in the benefits of being countrymen.

While the Niger-Deltans deserve a better treatment than they are getting, you should please stop making it seem like the northerners are responsible for even the headache a southerner gets.

4 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by freeze001(f): 8:10am On Dec 06, 2016
WINNERMENTALITY:
Anything to make them called Nigeria United..lol

Its funny a Notherner can't make this comparison....

My people let our tribe come first in our planning, the One Nigeria with Over 500 tribe and a dominated extremist religion is a fallacy, an illusion.

Exactly my position on a thread yesterday, it's time to get real about this one Nigeria propaganda.

freeze001:

It's high time politicians in the South learnt to put a Southern agenda forward first and foremost and stop allowing themselves to be blackmailed by the same Northerners who do worse. If we've got to learn nepotism and tribalism then we better do cos no be only Northerners sabi do civil service work or get appointment and thankfully, we're always more than qualified.

Let the truth be told; from the reading of the op, one Nigeria is only a blackmail attempt to keep the South in perpetual servitude and that must stop!

1 Like

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by WINNERMENTALITY: 8:23am On Dec 06, 2016
freeze001:


Exactly my position on a thread yesterday, it's time to get real about this one Nigeria propaganda.

If funny sha, with all our acquired education, business sophistication and other sophistication we are all sidelined by what we term illiterates and Cow heads.
I don't even know where SOuthern Nigeria got it wrong whether it was before or after civil war or pre-independence cos what am seeing now is beyond my understanding.

This professor is what we call an Efulefu that would always turn their own down because they want to sound politically correct.

His type is everything wrong with Southern Nigeria.

3 Likes

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by freeze001(f): 8:35am On Dec 06, 2016
WINNERMENTALITY:

If funny sha, with all our acquired education, business sophistication and other sophistication we are all sidelined by what we term illiterates and Cow heads.
I don't even know where SOuthern Nigeria got it wrong whether it was before or after civil war or pre-independence cos what am seeing now is beyond my understanding.

This professor is what we call an Efulefu that would always turn their own down because they want to sound politically correct.

His type is everything wrong with Southern Nigeria.

Sickening I tell u. Efulefu nke ya a pugo ahia nkwogwe...lol

2 Likes

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by QuotaSystem: 8:36am On Dec 06, 2016
HungerBAD:
Laughing.

This Professor Ogunleye is a funny guy. I had taken my time to read the article like 3 times, for me to realize that although beautifully put together, the article does not make any sense.

And it takes a lot for a senseless nobody like me, to consider a Professor's write up senseless.

All these public commentators with their gifts for spin sef.

Professor Ogunleye after giving us some Abracadrabra calculations on who gets what, and how it is spent, now concluded that it does not matter what any State gets, as the most important thing is that the money is used justly.

Professor Ogunleye, the question is not whether the money is used rightly or wrongly. The question is, is the money gotten from the South considered eating from the federation fat by the North? and yes they are eating very FAT from where they should not be eating.

Nigerians are many things, but gullible we are not.


You must be kidding me. I expected an intellectual numerate argument to challenge the Professor's computation and all you could do is wave it off as 'abracadabra'?

Is your entire notion of the North feeding fat "from where it should not be eating" not based on the illogical and pedestrian notion that the nation's resources belong to a certain region, which is inconsistent with the law of the land i.e the Land Use Act?

Can you really argue that the fundamental issue is not how allocations are used to better the lives of the people, but how much is allocated to states to be looted by their executives?

Allowing sentiments to take the place of logic presents one in the most unflattering light.

1 Like

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by okasebe(m): 8:39am On Dec 06, 2016
Sometimes it amazes me whenever a particular region calls others parasites. ...
Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by WINNERMENTALITY: 8:46am On Dec 06, 2016
okasebe:
Sometimes it amazes me whenever a particular region calls others parasites. ...
Bro they may not be parasites but they behave like parasites....
They are the only region that will chicken away from any call for conference talk with other region. They would send their minors and later disagree at the back.

Its funny such agreement has been happening since 50yrs and u don't expect the affected regions to clap for them.

4 Likes

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by Obipat(m): 9:02am On Dec 06, 2016
What do they have? Groundnut and sugar cane

2 Likes

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by Curlieweed: 9:06am On Dec 06, 2016
How the fvck did this slowpoke obtain a professorship?

4 Likes

Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by QuotaSystem: 9:49am On Dec 06, 2016
Curlieweed:
How the fvck did this slowpoke obtain a professorship?

Clearly by sheer hardwork.

Intellectually disputing any of his points will be better than any pedestrian comments.

Emotional outbursts like the ones that have filled this thread don't count.
Re: Who Says The North Is Feeding Fat On Nigeria? by project8(m): 10:37am On Dec 06, 2016
HungerBAD:
Laughing.

This Professor Ogunleye is a funny guy. I had taken my time to read the article like 3 times, for me to realize that although beautifully put together, the article does not make any sense.

And it takes a lot for a senseless nobody like me, to consider a Professor's write up senseless.

All these public commentators with their gifts for spin sef.

Professor Ogunleye after giving us some Abracadabra calculations on who gets what, and how it is spent, now concluded that it does not matter what any State gets, as the most important thing is that the money is used justly.

Professor Ogunleye, the question is not whether the money is used rightly or wrongly. The question is, is the money gotten from the South considered eating from the federation fat by the North? and yes they are eating very FAT from where they should not be eating.

Nigerians are many things, but gullible we are not.




u are not making sense atall

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