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How Africa can best attain economic development

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Ezekwesili suggests how Africa can best attain economic devt | The Guardian Nigeria News

A former Minister of Education, Dr Oby Ezekwesili, has stressed the need for a change of political culture in Africa to achieve meaningful development for the continent.

Ezekwesili made the recommendation at the matriculation ceremony of the 2023/2024 session of the School of Politics, Policy and Governance (SPPG) in Abuja on Saturday.

She said that there was an a dominant political culture across Africa that subordinates the common good to narrow interest.

Ezekwesili, who is the founder of the school, said “finding solutions to the quality of politics and economic performance of Nigeria was her reason in establishing the school”.

She said that the school was designed to correct the abnormally on the supply side of the market of politics and democracy.

According to her, “we have low-cost leadership in our politics today and you cannot produce anything from low-cost leadership.”

She said that the young people and technology would propel Africa forward, saying, however, that politics and governance process represent a major stumbling block.

“To correct these, we need to design a new pipeline that would contest against this monopoly political class that has a dominant culture.

“You can cry as loud, the next National Assembly, if filled with the same existing pipeline of political players, lawmakers will still buy new sets of Sport Utility Vehicles (SUV).

“The next set of Executive even at the state and local government levels will carry on with the same, nothing will change.

“You are a response to this hopelessness, you are the ones that will change it; we need a critical mass of people thinking with a mindset of service to the country and to the people at all levels.

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“It is not about you, it cannot be about you, you represent an answer to the most significant answer to our problem as a continent.

“We are in a place of competent anger that pushes you to design solutions; you have to be purposefu
l and intentional,” she said.

In his remarks, Prof. Wale Suleman, the guest speaker at the event, said democracy does not work in Africa because the people do not really participate.

Suleman, a neurosurgeon, said that democracy is a system of government of all eligible citizen represented in the Executive, Legislature and Judiciary.

According to him, vision, capability, ability and capacity are expected of the executive, to servant and selfless leaders with higher moral values to represent the people.

The neurosurgeon said that the independence of the judiciary and the legislature was not negotiable, saying that was not the case in practice in Nigeria.

He said that democracy had moved to a selective process rather than elective process in Nigeria as “we now have godfathers without true representative democracy”.

According to him, money politics where power go to the highest bidder has become the order of the day, stressing the need to move from naira politics to nation-building ideology politic

“A lot of things are not working in Nigeria because the processes are broken and nobody is doing anything to fix it.

“This is why I am very impressed with my school, SPPG; we need to transition from godfathers to people-focused democracy.

“Political a-party of the people leads to poor representation, the elites, academic, the youth and all of you here need to get involved, democracy does not work without the participation of the populace.

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“Formal and informational education is fundamental to nation building, reorientation of our people is very critical,” he said.

Suleman said that there was a need to read the life of the heros that voted for Nigeria’s independence in 1959 and move away from worshiping corrupt leaders.

The professor urged the students to study hard to become drivers of the economy and be watchful not to emulate conquerors.

“It is up to the youth to change our society. It is difficult. It is going to be challenging, there will be people who will say ‘you cannot do this’, remember impossibility is just a word, success is first achieved in the head.

“Once you are committed and willing to put in the work, nothing can stop you, you have to grow and aim high and let us not be conquered by a minority group that see themselves as colonial masters.

“Democracy is a way to transition Nigeria in the right direction, we are all critical stakeholders and I wish all the students a successful journey,” he said.

Earlier, the Vice Chancellor of the Institution, Dr Alero Ayida-Otobo, said SPPG is an unconventional school that runs for 10 months, November to August.

She said that there are a total of 300 students for the 2023/2024 session drawn from different works of life with various aims and objectives.

“There are some individuals who have intentions to run for public office, that includes positions such as President, Governors, Senators, House of Representatives, State Houses of Assembly, Councilors, and Local Government Area chairpersons.

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“There are those who are interested in working within the government as policy makers, ministers, support staff, or special advisers to elected officials.

“There are individuals who provide consultancy services related to politics and policy to those in government and civil society.

“There are professionals who work in the private or non-profit sectors, particularly in the media industry, finance, legal, healthcare, education and so on who interface with the government.

“There are individuals who aspire to be effective advocates and engaged citizens and want to become skilled in engaging with the government,” she said.

Ayida-Otobo urged the students to take their programmes very seriously, saying that it requires commitment, focus, diligence and hard work.

She said that the SPPG curriculum consists of seven fields and over 120 topics that enable students to make meaningful impact in the society.

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