My dear Asiwaju,
I am compelled to write this open letter to you because of the
state of affairs of the Yoruba nation. Firstly, I wish to acknowledge that fate
has put you in a prime position to determine to a large extent the direction
that the Yoruba people will go. The indisputable truth is that one may quarrel
with your politics but your sagacity is never in doubt. Even those who don’t
see eye to eye with you agree that you are imbued with unusual native
intelligence, uncommon people skills and unrivaled foresight. You, more than
any other person, has been the game changer since the advent of democracy in
1999. It is for these reasons that I have chosen to direct this letter to you.
My singular purpose is to tug at the strings of your heart. I am
not writing to appeal to partisan considerations but to see, if per chance, I
can pour out my heart to you in a manner of speaking. God has blessed you even
beyond your wildest imagination. You have installed Senators and Governors. You
have removed Governors and even a President. You have also installed a
President. There is nothing you have wished for or desired that you didn’t get.
Fortune has smiled on you. Goodwill follows you everywhere you go. You have
done very well- more than most men ever will. However, there is one area that
is begging for your urgent attention. This area may well define you and all you
have ever achieved.
This matter, in my opinion, is the only difference between you
and the late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo. Let me restate for the purpose of
emphasis that this is the area in which the late sage and Leader of the Yorubas
stand head and shoulders above you. It is the reason his name has been a
constant denominator in our regional and national politics. It is the reason
politicians, friends and foes invoke his name for political advantage and
personal glory. It is also the reason why we can’t stop talking about him
almost thirty years after his death. What will anyone say about you thirty
years after you have transited?
Asiwaju Sir, you may be wondering what I’m talking about? It is
the issue of legacy. According to Peter Strople, ‘Legacy is not leaving
something for people, it is leaving something in people’. Legacy is building
something that outlives you. Legacy is greater than currency. In the words of Leonard
Sweet, ‘ What you do is your history. What you set in motion is your legacy’.
You can’t live forever, Sir. No one can. But you can create something that
will. Enough of speaking in parables- I shall now speak plainly.
When destiny brought you on the scene, we were enamoured because
you championed the case for true federalism. It was your belief then that the
Yoruba nation will fare better under a restructured arrangement than under the
type of unitary government we run while pretending by calling it a federal
government. Everyone knows that there is nothing federal about our government
at all. If truth must be told, the Yoruba nation has fared very badly since the
advent of our new democracy. And this is not about holding power at the centre
Let me bring this home: someone passed a comment recently that
he would want Biafra to become a reality because he knows the Igbo nation will
survive. That comment led me to deeper introspection as I wondered if the
Yorubas can truly survive. Let me cite my first example. From Oyo to Osun, Ogun
to Ondo, Ekiti to Kwara and Lagos, hardly will one see any serious industry or
manufacturing concern owned by a Yoruba person. I am not talking about
portfolio businesses or one-man business concerns. Most industries in Oyo State
are owned by the Lebanese. The native business and industry gurus who dominated
the landscape- Nathaniel Idowu, Amos Adegoke, Lekan Salami, Alao Arisekola,
Adeola Odutola, Jimoh Odutola, Chief Theophilus Adediran Oni and others- are
all gone with no credible replacements. I’m sure you remember the tyre factory
of the Odutolas and how Jimoh Odutola was even asked by the Governments of
Kenya and Ghana to set up a similar factory in their countries.
Chief Theophilus Adediran Oni, popularly called T.A Oni &
Sons started the first indigenous construction company in Nigeria. He willed
his residence- Goodwill House, to the Oyo/Western state government, to be used
as a paediatrics Hospital, which is now known as T.A Oni Memorial Children
Hospital at Ring Road in Ibadan. This sprawling family Estate and residence was
cited on a 15acre piece of land, 65 rooms, with modern conveniences, Olympic
Swimming Pool and stable for Horses, etc.
People like Chief Bode Akindele started companies like Standard
Breweries and Dr Pepper Soft drink factory at Alomaja in Ibadan. Broking House
built by the late Femi Johnson, an insurance magnate, still stands glittering
in the mid-day sun as an epitome to a rich history that Ibadan has. The most
serious and only notable Yoruba entrepreneur we have now is Michael Adenuga. I
say this quite consciously because most of the other names are oil and gas
barons. Most of what stood as testaments of industry in Oyo State are gone—
Exide Batteries, Leyland Autos and many others. In its place are shopping malls
and road side markets but no nation develops through buying and selling alone-
especially when you’re not actually producing what you’re selling.
Hypermarkets and supermarkets have taken over because of the
need to feed our insatiable consumer-appetite and foreign tastes. In one
instance, an ancient landmark in the form of a hotel was demolished to pave way
for a mall. That is how low we have sunk. If our past is better than our
present- if we always look back with nostalgia frequently, then there is a
problem.
The case of other states is not different. Osun’s case is
pathetic. Ditto for Ondo and Ekiti. Ogun State can boast of some factories at
Sango-Otta and Agbara axis but most of them are not owned by the Yorubas. There
is no significant pharmaceutical company owned by any Yoruba except for Bond
Chemicals in Awe, Oyo State- and its wallet share is very insignificant. For
Lagos State, more than 70% of the manufacturing concerns and major industries
in the State are owned by the Igbos. If the Igbos were to stop paying tax in
Lagos State, the IGR of Lagos State will reduce by over 60%.
In contrast, Sir, go to the South East and look at the
manufacturing concerns in Onitsha, Aba and Nnewi. Please don’t forget those
were areas ravaged by civil war a mere forty something years ago. The Igbos
have certainly made tremendous progress but the Yoruba nation has regressed. I
wish to state that this letter is not meant to whip up primordial
considerations or ethnic sentiments but just to put things in proper
perspective.
Asiwaju, I will like to also talk about the state of education
in the Yoruba nation. Our education has gone to the dogs. We have a bunch of
mis-educated and ill-educated young men and women roaming the streets. Ibadan,
for instance, had the first University in Nigeria and the first set of research
centres in Nigeria ( The Forestry Research Institute, the Cocoa Research
Institute (CRIN), The Nigerian Cereal Research Institute Moor Plantation
(NCRI), the NIHORT (Nigerian Institute of Horticultural Research), the NISER
(Nigerian Institute of Social and Economic Research), IAR&T (Institute of
Agriculture, Research and Training), amongst several others). Ibadan was the
bastion of scholarship with people like Wole Soyinka, JP Clark, D.O Fagunwa and
Amos Tutuola as residents. In the May/June 2015 West African Senior Secondary
Certificate Examination, Abia came tops. Anambra came 2nd while Edo was 3rd.
Lagos placed 6th while Osun and Oyo was 29th and 26th. Ekiti was 11th, Ondo
State was 13th and Ogun State was 19th. In 2013 WASSCE, only Lagos and Ogun
States were the Yoruba States above the national average. If we do an analysis
of how Lagos placed 6th in 2015, you will discover that it was substantially
because of other nationalities resident in Lagos.
For proof, please look no further than the winners of the
Spelling Bee competition which has produced One-Day Governors in Lagos State.
Since inception in 2001, other nationalities have won the competition six times
(Ebuka Anisiobi in 2001, Ovuwhore Etiti in 2002, Abundance Ikechukwu in 2006,
Daniel Osunbor in 2008, Akpakpan Iniodu Jones in 2011 and Lilian Ogbuefi in
2012). Sir, there is something seriously wrong about our state of education.
From the vintage times of Obafemi Awolowo who initiated ‘free education’, we
have regressed into a most parlous state.
Let me talk about roads, housing and infrastructure . The first
dualized road in Nigeria, the Queen Elizabeth road from Mokola to Agodi in
Ibadan was formally commissioned by Queen Elizabeth in 1956. The first Housing
Estate in Nigeria is Bodija Housing Estate (also in Ibadan) which was built in
1958. The state of roads in the Yoruba nation has become pathetic. Our
hinterland are still largely rural. Even some state capitals like Osogbo and Ado-Ekiti
are big villages when you compare them to towns in the South East. How many new
estates have been built over the last decade? Even Ajoda New Town lies in
ruins.
We have abandoned the farm settlement strategy of the Western
Region and only pay lip service to agriculture. Instead of feeding others like
we once did, others now feed us. We plant no tomatoes, no pepper and the basic
food that we require. The Indians have bought the large expanse of water body
that we have in Onigambari village. The water body in Oke Ogun of Oyo State can
provide enough fish to feed the whole of the South West. From being a major
cocoa exporter many years ago, one can point to just a few vestiges of
factories that still deal with Cocoa in the Yoruba nation. 80% of Cocoa processing
industries in the South West have been shut down. The Chinese have taken over
the cashew belt at Ogbomoso in Oyo State. They have even edged out the
indigenes as brokers.
They now come to the cashew belt to buy from the local farmers,
sell on the spot to other Chinese exporters who now process the cashew nuts and
import them back into Nigeria at a premium. Sir, there are only 7 major cashew
processing plants in Nigeria and you can check out the ownership. The glory has
departed from the Yoruba nation.
Apart from Asejire, Ede, Ikere Gorge and Oyan dams built ages
ago, where are the new dams to cater for increased population and water
capacity for the Yoruba nation? How have we improved on what our heroes past
left us? Maybe apart from certain areas in Lagos State, others can’t even
supply their citizens with pipe-borne water.
Our youth which we used to take pride in are largely a mass of
unemployed and unemployable people. Have you noticed the abundance of street
urchins, area boys, touts and ‘agberos’ that we now have all across the Yoruba
nation? Have you noticed the swell in the ranks of NURTW (I mean no disrespect
to an otherwise noble union)? Have you noticed the increase in the number of
Yoruba beggars? There was a time that it was taboo for a Yoruba man to beg- but
no more. The spirit of apprenticeship is dead. There was a time that people who
learn vocational skills celebrate what we referred to as ‘freedom’. While that
is largely moribund now in the Yoruba nation, the Igbos still practice it with
great success.
The only thing we can boldly say the Yoruba nation controls is
the information machinery- the press. We own largely the newspapers- the
Nation, Punch, Nigerian Tribune, TV Continental and a few others. It is because
of our control of this information machinery that we have rewritten the
narrative in the country with the misguided self-belief that things are normal
and we are making progress. A look beyond the surface will prove that this is
so untrue.
We are largely divided. For the first time in the history of the
Yoruba nation, religion is about to divide us further- and it is starting from
Osun State. You are married to a Christian. My own father-in-law is an Alhaji.
That is how we have peacefully co-existed but the fabrics are about to be torn
to shreds because of poor management of issues. Afenifere has been reduced to a
shadow of itself.
OPC that once defended Yoruba interests has gone into oblivion.
Yoruba elders have been vilified in the name of politics and partisanship. It
is no longer news to see teenagers throwing stones at their elders because of
their political indoctrination. Even under the late sage, Chief Obafemi
Awolowo, the Yorubas never belonged to just a single party- yet our unity was
without blemish. Now, our values have gone down the drain.
Asiwaju, I believe I have said enough. The task is Herculean but
I believe Providence has brought you here for such a time like this. It is time
for the Yoruba nation to clean up its acts. What do we really want? How can we
quickly right the wrongs? The Yoruba nation is in a state of arrested
development. The Yoruba nation is gasping for breath and crying for help. Will
you rise up to the occasion? I am aware you understand that all politics is
local and charity begins at home. Our fathers gave us a proverb: ‘Bi o’ode o
dun, bi igbe ni’gboro ri’. I know there are no quick fixes but I also know that
if there is anyone who has the capacity to do something about our current
situation, that person is you. This should be the legacy you should think of.
Your legacy is our future.
Yours Very Sincerely,
Adebayo Adeyinka
Adebayo Adeyinka
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