Kwande Source News{KSN} started production as a bi- monthly community paper based in Kwande, Benue State, Nigeria, in 2008.From our head office at Adikpo; with a wide circulation in the nook an crannies of Kwande, we promise to remain objective and focus on issues that will develop our community . This blog is targeted principally at those who due to distance, will not have access to the HARD copy of our rich publication.
Thursday, 26 July 2012
The Crab Mentality
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Akinde Ayu(He built an upstair at the age of 21 which gave Adikpo the name London) |
From 1999 till now the
Federal government has spent trillions of Naira as budget, even our dear State
has spend trillions of Naira as budget. Even the budget of Kwande LGA is in Billions (newsflash).
The total monies which has been expended in Nigeria in form of grants and aids
from bilateral donor organizations, humanitarian groups and recently indigenous
philanthropy organizations during this
period is also in billions of Naira.
However, the question
is what percent of these huge revenues have reached ‘the Kwande people’. Ignorance
they say is bliss, it makes life very easy, but beyond the simplicity of life powered
by lies and deceit are philosophies, thoughts, events and actions that should not be glossed
over for they
hold the truths the pretty
much determine our everyday life and ultimately destiny. Yet the
crafty always look for ways to divert attention from the fundamental issues
that govern our existence to superficial and irrelevant ideologies targeted to confuse and mislead. It is within this framework of wrong perception that I wish to locate my analyses and expose the defeatist nature of
the crab mentality’.
Ironically the
philosophy of crab mentality is been propagated from the same political party
which has ruled Kwande Local Government most since 1999! The simple
presentation of that analogy reveals the self denial that has made the same
situation prevalent.
It is no longer news that Kwande
is now backward in areas we used to be clear leaders;
sports, academics, politics, innovation, commerce and culture, we were an excellent people, well organized and feared because of our
numerical strength, very knowledgeable, exposure and unity. As we stand in the ashes of today
we are trapped between the past glory
and the seemingly hopelessness of tomorrow. What is worst about our situation? I used to think
we are genuinely oblivious of our predicament but now I understand our
problem; we are professing the crab mentality thereby living
in denial
of the very reason
responsible for our under development -US. This misleading notion has made it impossible for us to change our thinking,
mentality and approach
to workable solutions. A defeatist mentality is always blaming everyone but
yourself for your predicament.
Despite the huge
revenues and resources at the national level, not one kobo has reached us in
terms of infrastructural development or other investments aimed at uplifting
the standard of life of the Kwande people because there has been no one to stake our claim. But the question is
whose fault? Have we had political appointments from Kwande even at the federal
level, shouldn’t these people together with those we elected to represent us
plea our bargain? Perhaps so, but when you are conversant with the 4th republic brand of politics which is a selection and not election
resulting to promoting self interest above
societal interest,
you will zero in on the very
reason
responsible for our own undoing.
Perhaps the national
level is too far and the politics too complex so let us come closer to the PDP dominated state
level. At this level things are more complicated; from 1999-2006 it had to take
the tragedy of the Air force plane for a road to be constructed from Adikpo to
Obudu(the construction work was
sub standard and poorly done) again GTS constructed another road from Adikpo to
JatoAka, which was commissioned by GEJ(the construction work is also sub standard and poorly done as some parts of the road have started
to cave in). So even the
things which
come to us are not qualitative. But with
the number of Kwande people in government (State) since 1999 one would expect
we would have attracted
tangible development from the huge resources available
at the state level, sadly this has not
translated into any form of dividends for us as a people.
Perhaps the stench at
the Local government level will be too strong to open up it up for scrutiny. By
design local governments are suppose to be close to the people. The intention
of this design has been defeated in Kwande a long time ago. What we have continually seen is an alienated system
of governance which is one of the fundamental reasons why this
level of government
has consistently and
woefully failed in Kwande. From 1999 to now we have seen abysmal performance of successive local government administrations and lack
of innovations leading to serious deterioration in the
following sectors in the local government:
Agriculture;
does anyone care about the availability of fertilizers and improved seedlings
for the local farmers? The Nigerian government has billions of tons of improved
different species and variety of improved seedlings stored up across the
country to be distributed free of charge to farmers, what are the strategies to
tap into this? Are there still opportunities for tractor hiring as it used to
be? How about putting in place programmes for diversification to other means of
farming like grass cutter, snail,
fish etc which have huge markets?There used to be the agric show where farmers would display their
products and share ideals, what happened to it? How about investment in food
processing? Almost half of the vegetables and fruits produced by rural farmers
are wasted. What about setting up mechanized means of garri processing, develop
packaging and marketing strategies (our cassava is more rich in nutrients than
those in other states who have started to export garri in large quantities)?
The list goes on...
Sports
/recreation; have you visited the Sir Akpoo Stadium
lately, the level of decay and deterioration is alarming, how about the basket ball, volley ball, badminton and hand ball courts at ACC, which used to
take the youths away from social vices?( on the state of football, read Iorliam
Shija’s piece on Football; a dying culture)
Sanitation;
have you visited the abattoir and seen the bad hygienic conditions? Our streets
are overgrown with bush, no plans for waste disposal; the landscape that once
made us London has been compromised by lack of effective implementation and
adherence to the grand design of the town.
Infrastructural
development; our township roads are bad (Barracks
road, Kajo way) even where available, the street lights don’t work, and the
drainage systems have been overtaken by dirt. How about water? There used to be
a period where we had water on our taps in Adikpo(yes its true) Adikpo is
gradually becoming congested what are plans for phase II?
Publicity;
what is our position on the globe? Globally, business is done on the net, were
are in the realm of information
technology, does the LGA have a website? How do our people in Diaspora and
other people interested in Kwande follow events and happening back home? How do
they even contribute to the development of their LGA without correct information?
What are the investment opportunities
available in the Local Government area, what natural resources do we have that
can attract investors?
Tourism
and culture; how are we promoting the Tiv Culture of which we are the privileged
custodians? Where is Swem located, should we not sponsor a study to find the location
with a view to promoting Tiv pilgrimage to their ancestral home? (Israel,
Egypt, Saudi Arabia makes billions of dollars from these types of ventures). While
the Local government may not have the resources to do these it can build and
develop partnerships to achieve this. We have a very rich cultural heritage
that we are allowing modernization to erode with impunity
Commerce;
Which sector in the Kwande economy employs the most people and how is this
regulated and protected from unfair terms of trade? What catalytic investments can be
made to boost commerce in the land? Provision storage facilities? Setting the
agenda to create markets? Provide training on entrepreneurship? Provide skills
acquisitions training?
How about the capacity
of the local government staff? Do they have job descriptions? Do they have the
tools, the training and right motivation to do their job? What added value do
they contribute to the system?
Parnerships for development : How
have we integrated the clan development associations into the development
agenda? What role do they play? How has the government provided the right
agenda to promote volunteerism and community based development initiatives? The
excessive politicalization of the traditional and religious institutions has so
far proved to be detrimental to community led development, this has not only
commonized these
institutions
but also exposed them
to ridicule. This has to be checked and corrected.
Our failures are
predicated on the fact that we have not been able to build on the labour of our
heroes past; these should be blamed on lack of a master plan which articulate
our desires and aspiration as a people, which brings me to my last point. The Kwande
LGA agenda; The Political reality across the nation has made it imperative for
groups to have very strong sectional
agendas as a bargaining tool at the national and state levels, these agendas
are also preservation tools. The fact
about the present day politics in Nigeria is that people who are serious about
their development are
increasingly been be proactive in asserting their
developmental agendas. While some groups have adopted unconventional of agitation, we need to find the
right balance to achieve the intentions
of that plan. It could be through elections or appointments, but we should have a common agenda that bind us
as a people.
So when we talk about the crap mentality we
seem to exonerate ourselves of
our responsibility in the equation by blaming others for our failures and weaknesses, this is a distortion of the truth.
The right thing to do is to take responsibility and move from our inconsistency, mistakes and failures which have dressed us in borrowed robe.
It is only when
we acknowledge how our actions or inactions as individuals and as a people have
contributed to our present predicament that we will find a common solution. Our
failures are not necessarily because a fellow brother has pulled us down,
simply put, it is our greed, ignorance,
lack
of a clear vision, strategy,
and planning as well as innovative skills that keeps pulling us down to the pit of underdevelopment, so let
us live our fellow brother out for now. A certain man is coming who will hold the torch high
again for us to see and lead us to the way forward.
Tersoo Akula.
Feedback on
tersooakula@gmain.com
Friday, 20 July 2012
A goat stealing Syndicate Botched
The police in Ikyogen, Ikyurav Ya, Kwande local government
have arrested 3 men and one woman who formed a goat stealing gang in Mbachile,
Ikyurav ya.
Parading the criminals recently at Ikyogen, the police
reveal that, for months, the gang led by one young man simply identified
as Bem had been going around the village
at ood hours to steal other peoples goat.
In an interview session with KSN Bem confessed that he stole
because of hunger.
Luck ran out of these criminals when they stole a pregnant
goat of one Mr Tyav Tyor and two other goats belonging to Ngivan Ahemba and Mrs
Christiana Iormase. Mr Tyor led a house to house search for his goat. It was in
the process that he goat to Bems resident and discovered goat butchered parts
including the unborn babies which were cooked and hiden under bed. Them Bem and
his wife revealed the names of the other members of the gang.
The case has been transferred to Adikpo for further action,
a police source in Ikyogen told KSN.
Wednesday, 18 July 2012
The History Of Adikpo London
Although the Mbagande people have
always lived in what is today known as Adikpo London, the seeds of Adikpo town
began between 1914 To 1917, this is the period when the Obudu Adikpo Ogbema
Katsina Ala Road was opened.
The British captured Kunav and Obudu areas around 1909 and had established business and colonial administrative centres in Obudu town; but in the quest to connect the economic activities of Obudu and the sea port at Katsina Ala, which was one of the earliest colonial settlements, the need for the road from Obudu through Shangev Ya, arose.
Ordinarily, the original inhabitants (Mbagande) had no need for big markets or even needed a "town", but the influx of Mbagbendav(road workers or laborers) who were "foreigners" and later, as a transport route when the road was completed, a town was born!
It was named Adikpo after the man(son of the soil) that the colonialists made the first chief, Adikpo Ademagba Ayisa.This was in 1914.
But it was not until 1953 that the Tiv Native Authority declared Adikpo as a "settlement", but infrastructurally, development was nonexistent. Apart from Igbo men from the east who would bring "white men wares" through Obudu, as such, making Adikpo one of the earliest places to have white man wares, the town was bushy up to early the 1960s! By this I mean, 95 per cent of the town was made up of thatched houses!
Three things worked for the rapid development of the town; these were the love and ingenuity of Ako Dzungwe, Nande Nande and Atem Ityo political crises( 1958-1964). By 1958, Ako Dzungwe, an Usar man, the first Tiv engineer, was in charge of works department of Tiv NA, and from Head of Department, Works, he moved to the post of Administrative secretary of the Native Authority. He handed that department to his kinsman, James Ityowua Adzape.
The British captured Kunav and Obudu areas around 1909 and had established business and colonial administrative centres in Obudu town; but in the quest to connect the economic activities of Obudu and the sea port at Katsina Ala, which was one of the earliest colonial settlements, the need for the road from Obudu through Shangev Ya, arose.
Ordinarily, the original inhabitants (Mbagande) had no need for big markets or even needed a "town", but the influx of Mbagbendav(road workers or laborers) who were "foreigners" and later, as a transport route when the road was completed, a town was born!
It was named Adikpo after the man(son of the soil) that the colonialists made the first chief, Adikpo Ademagba Ayisa.This was in 1914.
But it was not until 1953 that the Tiv Native Authority declared Adikpo as a "settlement", but infrastructurally, development was nonexistent. Apart from Igbo men from the east who would bring "white men wares" through Obudu, as such, making Adikpo one of the earliest places to have white man wares, the town was bushy up to early the 1960s! By this I mean, 95 per cent of the town was made up of thatched houses!
Three things worked for the rapid development of the town; these were the love and ingenuity of Ako Dzungwe, Nande Nande and Atem Ityo political crises( 1958-1964). By 1958, Ako Dzungwe, an Usar man, the first Tiv engineer, was in charge of works department of Tiv NA, and from Head of Department, Works, he moved to the post of Administrative secretary of the Native Authority. He handed that department to his kinsman, James Ityowua Adzape.
From the body language of the
whitemen, they would have preferred Manor, in Ikyor, present day Ushongo Local
Government, to be the head quarters of the Kwande Sept, then comprising of the
two local governments. For example, all the first 3 Two Ter Kwandes, Sule
Agbough, Angwe Suleagbogh and Ge Kpa
were from the Ushongo axis!
Shagbaor Ako Dzungwe was to change this trend. As administrative secretary, he made sure Adikpo had security presence, a court, roads and a dispensary(he used his kinsman, Adzape to achieve some of these). So when the 196O and 1964 Nande Nande and Atem Ityough political crises engulfed Tivland ,Adikpo, for these obvious reasons witnessed an influx of people from all the areas around which had poor security and health facilities! Even the then Ter Kwande, Ge Kpa, sought refuge in Adikpo! Also note that as from 1960, the Roman Catholics have also established St Monica's hospital. This was an added advantage.
With enough security, health facilities and a market, after the 1964 crisis, so many people were reluctant to go back to their places for obvious reasons, so Chief Dzungwe used that opportunity to order for the planning of Adikpo. So the town was first planed(mainly plots allocation, free to every willing adults) in 1964.
At this time, Dutch Reformed had established the first primary school( in 1934) and Roman Catholics put up St Anns (in 1942), but up to 1964, there was no secondary schoo in Adikpol! But funilly this was when Adikpo got the name LONDON!
The man who gave Adikpo the name London was a traditional song composer, Atule Amende , an indigene of Mbakyan, Nanev. In his later life, he was known as Amende Ikpmkor London( on the life of Amende, read Charles Keil; Tiv Song). He used to compose songs for Kasev Kwande. Most of his songs have survived till date. So why would he call Adikpo a London?
It was because of the first storey building put in place by Akinde Ayu in 1961(but I suspect he might have heard about london from the Igbo beneseed merchants who were operating in canteens at that time. I am made to understand by a source that those people used to talk of London!) He sang that Adikpo was also a London, that she even had storey buildings! A London was born!
This was London without a secondary school. She got her first secondary school in 1967, St Andrews Secondary School; Adikpo Comprehensive College by Ako Dzungwe, my Alma Mata, was to follow in 1968 and so many others henceforth.
As Amende Ikpamkor sang and spread the Londoness of Adikpo, a lot of people with vision got the message and one of then was Apollos Aper Aku. When he was the chairman of Kwande between 1 January,1977 to 30 December,1978, A per Aku, who was the second Tiv graduate, gave Adikpo, a London Master plan.
Aku planned every street in Adikpo, he provided for motor parks, recreational parks. He located slots for banks, water system sketched out an electrification plan of the town. I have traveled very wide in Nigeria, but I have not seen well planned streets like the ones we have here!
Moreso, when Aku became governor by 1979, he made sure that he pushed the Londonness of Adikpo to a logical conclusion. That was the end of London!
Yes Adikpo still has her streets, yet subsequent council chairmen have failed us, they have failed Aku too. Yes, though there was a slot for a bank, a politician turned it to a motor park last year. All the public toilets have been shared out! Orfaansev bought some, our recreational parks have been sold to NURTW and Okada men for offices!
The local government secretariat that was envisioned by Aku in 1978 was only completed last year by Akputu. But the biggest blow to London was the political crises of 2004/2005.
There are good sides though. Adikpo has the highest number of secondary schools in the state, mostly, private efforts (there is no government secondary school here), Adikpo has produced the best brains I have ever met.
Today, Adikpo has a market, electricity, good streets, a police station, a stadium, a newspaper, internet facilities, GSM network, but it is not the London that it should be.
Shagbaor Ako Dzungwe was to change this trend. As administrative secretary, he made sure Adikpo had security presence, a court, roads and a dispensary(he used his kinsman, Adzape to achieve some of these). So when the 196O and 1964 Nande Nande and Atem Ityough political crises engulfed Tivland ,Adikpo, for these obvious reasons witnessed an influx of people from all the areas around which had poor security and health facilities! Even the then Ter Kwande, Ge Kpa, sought refuge in Adikpo! Also note that as from 1960, the Roman Catholics have also established St Monica's hospital. This was an added advantage.
With enough security, health facilities and a market, after the 1964 crisis, so many people were reluctant to go back to their places for obvious reasons, so Chief Dzungwe used that opportunity to order for the planning of Adikpo. So the town was first planed(mainly plots allocation, free to every willing adults) in 1964.
At this time, Dutch Reformed had established the first primary school( in 1934) and Roman Catholics put up St Anns (in 1942), but up to 1964, there was no secondary schoo in Adikpol! But funilly this was when Adikpo got the name LONDON!
The man who gave Adikpo the name London was a traditional song composer, Atule Amende , an indigene of Mbakyan, Nanev. In his later life, he was known as Amende Ikpmkor London( on the life of Amende, read Charles Keil; Tiv Song). He used to compose songs for Kasev Kwande. Most of his songs have survived till date. So why would he call Adikpo a London?
It was because of the first storey building put in place by Akinde Ayu in 1961(but I suspect he might have heard about london from the Igbo beneseed merchants who were operating in canteens at that time. I am made to understand by a source that those people used to talk of London!) He sang that Adikpo was also a London, that she even had storey buildings! A London was born!
This was London without a secondary school. She got her first secondary school in 1967, St Andrews Secondary School; Adikpo Comprehensive College by Ako Dzungwe, my Alma Mata, was to follow in 1968 and so many others henceforth.
As Amende Ikpamkor sang and spread the Londoness of Adikpo, a lot of people with vision got the message and one of then was Apollos Aper Aku. When he was the chairman of Kwande between 1 January,1977 to 30 December,1978, A per Aku, who was the second Tiv graduate, gave Adikpo, a London Master plan.
Aku planned every street in Adikpo, he provided for motor parks, recreational parks. He located slots for banks, water system sketched out an electrification plan of the town. I have traveled very wide in Nigeria, but I have not seen well planned streets like the ones we have here!
Moreso, when Aku became governor by 1979, he made sure that he pushed the Londonness of Adikpo to a logical conclusion. That was the end of London!
Yes Adikpo still has her streets, yet subsequent council chairmen have failed us, they have failed Aku too. Yes, though there was a slot for a bank, a politician turned it to a motor park last year. All the public toilets have been shared out! Orfaansev bought some, our recreational parks have been sold to NURTW and Okada men for offices!
The local government secretariat that was envisioned by Aku in 1978 was only completed last year by Akputu. But the biggest blow to London was the political crises of 2004/2005.
There are good sides though. Adikpo has the highest number of secondary schools in the state, mostly, private efforts (there is no government secondary school here), Adikpo has produced the best brains I have ever met.
Today, Adikpo has a market, electricity, good streets, a police station, a stadium, a newspaper, internet facilities, GSM network, but it is not the London that it should be.
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