The Sultan of Sokoto, Muhammadu Sa’ad Abubakar on Thursday in Kaduna slammed northern leaders, saying they must stop hiding under the shadow of of the late Premier of the defunct Northern Region, Sir Ahmadu Bello, the Sardauna of Sokoto, and move to work as visionary leaders for the development of the North and its people.
According to the Sultan, the late Sardauna carved a niche for himself as a committed, detribalised, selfless and visionary leader whose interest was mainly for the progress and development of the North.
The Sultan, who
stated this while delivering his speech during the 50th commemoration of the
demise of Sir Ahmadu Bello organized by the Memorial Foundation, said it was
time the present crop of leaders must hands on deck to reverse the
socio-economic backwardness facing the North.
While emphasizing
that northern leaders needed to be focused and committed to tackling problems
such as illiteracy, poverty and unemployment, he noted that the time to work is
now.
“Fifty years after
Sardauna’s death, let’s work with his blue prints and the ethics he left for
us, let us avoid all forms of religious bigotry and rivalry,.” he noted.
The Sultan who is
also the President, Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs of Nigeria as well as
Chairman Northern Council of Chiefs, tasked northern governors and other
leaders to especially find solutions to the lingering unemployment problem in
the region.
He stated that
“unemployed youths are like time bomb waiting to explode. Whoever has nothing
to do will do anything available. Therefore find a way to engage our jobless
youths and get our children off the streets and make them useful to the
society.”
As a means of
tackling part of the unemployment problem, the Sultan urged the northern
governors to see to the resuscitation of the Ajaokuta steel company and other
comatose industries in the region.
He also advised the
northern governors to find a way of diversifying the economy of the north from
being oil dependent to agriculture-based, noting that “If we face these issues
of Ajaokuta revival, employment creation and diversification from oil to
agriculture squarely, in the next four to five years, the north will be better
for it.”
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