Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,150,930 members, 7,810,590 topics. Date: Saturday, 27 April 2024 at 11:39 AM

Who Truly Owns Nigeria By @basilokoh - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Who Truly Owns Nigeria By @basilokoh (243 Views)

How True Is This? FULANI OWNS NIGERIA! / Ituah Ighodalo: Nigerians Must Vote For President Who Truly Cares / Tinubu Owns Nigeria, You Can’t Prob Him Says Magu (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply)

Who Truly Owns Nigeria By @basilokoh by Nobody: 8:28am On Dec 09, 2019
Copied from https://web.facebook.com/insidekadunanews/posts/1456672131165789?__tn__=K-R

See below and determine for yourselves who truly own Nigeria. You do not own a country by spoken words and grandstanding but by quality population, investments and possession:

1. 60% of the hotel and entire hospitality industry in Abuja are owned by Igbo.

2. 55% of total non-government investments in Abuja and the entire FTC belong to Igbo.

3. 45% of non-land investments in Northern Nigeria are owned by Igbo.

4. 90% of retail pharmacies in Abuja and FTC are owned by Igbo.

5. 40% of privately owned properties in Abuja and FTC are owned by Igbo.

6. 75% of trade in Boko Haram territory (onions, tomato’s, smoked fish and other vegetable and farm products) passing through the Cameroun corridor, are conducted by Igbo as end buyers. They move money to the primary buyers from the communities who buy and transport the products to them across the Cameroun border.

7. Practically all the rice smuggled across the unguarded Northern borders were brought there from Yaounde and Cotonou ports by Igbo.

8. The biggest buyers of farm produce in the entire Northern Nigeria are Igbo who buy from the communities and move them to Southern Nigeria. Without the Igbo, Northern farmers may not sell nearly 70% of their easily perishable farm products.

9. The largest non-indigenous speakers of Hausa and fulbe, the language of the Fulani are Igbo.
10. The Igbo are the ethnic group that own and control 40% of non-foreign-owned or controlled economy of Nigeria.

As recently told, there are more industries in Ihiala, a small town in Anambra, on the border with Imo State than the total 86 industries in Kano State of 18 million persons, the most populated and largest commercial centre in Northern Nigeria. Ihiala is not included in the indigenously owned industrial centres in Anambra which distinctly include Onitsha, Nnewi, Awka, Aguata axis etc.

In the Lagos/Ogun industrial axis, the Igbo are setting up industries bigger and faster than the indigenous Egun and Yoruba.

This is after wrestling away the Lagos Island trading axis: Idumota, Idumagbo, Jankara, Tinubu, Nnamdi Azikiwe, Martin’s, Apongbon. Balogun is still a toss up between Igbo and Ijebu Yoruba. These places have pools of traders from other ethnicities, but Igbo are the dominant groups.

If you dare to extend, the Igbo dominate, the Computer Village, Ikeja, Trade Fair complex, Alaba market, Alaba Rago, every large motor spare parts market in Lagos, including Lawanson, Clegg Street, all in Surulere, Toyota in Isolo, Trinity in Ajegunle (which faces the Tin Can port directly and which is the first and largest recipient of smuggled or stolen spare parts from the port). The only spare part market not dominated by Igbo is the …. Market after Ketu/ Mile 12.

“Kano alone accounts for one million out-of-school children in Nigeria, according to the UNICEF representative in the state. Apart from low literacy level among children, the state is also known for high infant mortality rate, child marriages as well as inadequate healthcare for children." (UNICEF)

The Fulani are consumed in the false and unfounded claim to superiority. Northern Nigeria, particularly the Muslim dominated part, remains the poorest place on planet earth and its flotsam population the sorriest uneducated and backward.

The people are enveloped in a cultural and civilizational miasma that offers them no route and perhaps no hope to easy redemption.

Fulani can continue to delude themselves that they own Nigeria and should therefore determine who gets what in Nigeria but it’s obvious that without the Igbo, their farmers cannot sell much of their farm produce in exchange for the products of the modern world which are brought to them as well by Igbo traders living and thriving in their communities.

The Hausa/ Fulani continue to push their people to take all openings in the Federal bureaucracy, believing that they are doing their region a world of good by stamping their dominance on Federal Government bureaucracy. In Nigeria, control of the bureaucracy means the control of the wealth of Government.

Control of the wealth of Government also translates to self enrichment and the location of Government projects in the North. But take a look at all the white elephant projects litering the Nigeria space and tell which one is serving the purpose for which it was built.

So if the Igbo resolve eventually to remain part of Nigeria beyond 2023 and inspite of the arrogance of the Fulani, it will be because as intelligence has revealed of secret meetings among them, that they have resolved to make Nigeria a captive market for their businesses.

They are determined now to build up as much capital as they can and then make a dive for the exits with the strength to take on any bully at the door.

The second resolution, we hear, is to diffuse their holdings by denominating their wealth in foreign currencies and increasing investments in freer economies while reducing investments in hostile areas in Nigeria.

Now tell me, between the Hausa-Fulani who refuse to work or invest for their upkeep and the Igbo who own Nigeria? Who has the greater capacity for survival in the event of a broken polity?

The real problem of the north is the death of activism, the death of ideas, the surrender to idle conservatism and religious bigotry that has no economic or progressive use in the twenty-first century.

This has exacerbated sociopolitical dissonance and placed the North on economic dependence on Southern Nigeria. Without an alternative and competing ideology, the North has surrendered to the persuasions of islamism and idle romanticism.

Judicial activism is also dead, Chief Justice Mohammed, it appears, has been appointed to promote idolatry of the worst kind, the worship of a living fallible human, in this instance, Muhammadu Buhari.

The tying of the justice system in a secular Nigeria to the political goals of an irredentist, conservative North and to the idea of a greater Islamic Fulani Empire and worldview, portends to bury the Nigeria idea in the graveyard

Political activism in the North is also dead. Kano used to be the hotbed of political activism in the entire Nigeria. This writer remembers Abubakar Rimi at the Kano Township stadium in 1983, holding the rapt attention of a crowd of 50,000 spectators for two and a half hours as he spoke in Hausa, Fufulde and English, all flawless. Where are the men like him to bring alternative worldviews to the North now? Where are the faithfuls of Aminu Kano? Sociopolitical balance in the North has been upended. Ah, the land of my youth.

Kano has now become the bastion of social and political conservatism. That Kano can choose to elect a Muhammadu BUHARI means much more than a moral death for progressivism in Northern Nigeria. Any sociopolitical system that can throw up a Muhammadu BUHARI and the worldview he represents must suffer from atrophy and the eventual death of its redeeming values.

The northern elite has acquired tastes, cultures and expectations far above the capacity of their region to provide. Elite of the North have acquired and acculturated a dependence on other regions to provide for them the creature comforts to live the exhibitionist life that is alien to their home culture and the beliefs that they espouse.

The north has stopped working and like the old Roman plebeians, stand in wait of the pillage and grains of Egypt that Caesars Army will bring. The entire region is living far above it’s means and is mindlessly ignoring it’s economic regenerative roots such that any shock to its system will have the entire socioeconomic edifice come crashing down.

The north is in dissonance not just because of the lack of social infrastructure. These can always be provided. The north is dying because it is losing it's greatest gift, empathy for it's struggling humanity. The North dies for lack of the constant renewal of spirit necessary for group redemption.

The north is dying from the falsity of its claims to power and the social regression and the complacency and disembowelment that these false claims engender.The backwardness of its people and the regressing indices of development in the region proves the lie to any fatuous claims to power. @basilokoh.

1 Like

(1) (Reply)

SERAP Gives 36 States 7 Days To Disclose Payments Of Pensions To Ex-govs, Others / Sowore: Group Urges US Embassy To Place Visa Ban On DG-DSS / Strike Suspended By The Power Sector

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 22
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.