Presidency, Governors Meet As Buhari Bows To Governors Pressure Over Executive Order 10

Lockdown, Almajirai And Panicky Northern Governors

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By: Undertwo

Barely two weeks after Northern states governors vehemently asserted their reluctance to embrace lockdown as a measure to combat COVID-19 pandemic, they have panicked, embraced the measure, and even embarked on many other desperate, perhaps superfluous, tactics.

The decision to oppose a lockdown was taken at a virtual conference by the governors, with their chairman, Simon Lalong of Plateau State, issuing a press statement underscoring the inadvisability of the drastic measure.

Governor of Plateau State, Simon Lalong. Northern Governors Chairman. Photo credit: The Nation

Governor of Plateau State, Simon Lalong. Northern Governors Chairman. Photo credit: The Nation

In the statement, Mr Lalong argued: “They (northern governors) agreed that at the moment, each state would adopt the measure suitable to its setting because total lockdown of the region will come at a very high cost since most of its citizens are farmers who need to go to farms since the rains have started.

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Another issue discussed by the northern governors was the issue of palliatives from the Federal Government where they regretted that so far, no state in the region had received a dime as special allocation despite the fact that some of them have recorded cases while others are making frantic efforts to prevent any outbreak, as well as prepare against any eventuality.”

Read Also: Northern Elders Pleads With Buhari, Governors To Stop Harassment Of Fulanis, Cows

There is of course some logic to the northern states governors’ argument. Lockdown has huge economic costs, and there is in addition no global proof that it is capable of achieving the desired health goal of curbing the coronavirus disease that has infected nearly 2,000 Nigerians and cost more than 50 lives.

It is also true that with the advent of the planting season, farms desperately need labourers to kick-start and energise next season’s agricultural cycle. A lockdown would cost the agricultural sector dearly, the governors say, and dispose the region and perhaps the country to hunger, if not needless deaths far more impactful than the novel virus.

They are right. So, what has changed in barely two weeks that has led the governors to abandon their distaste for the lockdown measure?

When they robustly denounced the lockdown measure on April 13, only a handful of states in the region had been affected by the virus, and insignificantly few deaths had been recorded.

In two weeks, however, only a handful of states  indeed by the NCDC account, just one have remained unaffected by the virus, with the outbreak in Kano and Borno States filling the governors with horror and consternation, particularly the rapidity with which the virus has spread.

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Read Also: DANGOTE: NORTHERN GOVERNORS SHOULD WAKE UP

The region had many weeks of unhindered advantage to prepare for a worst-case scenario of COVID-19 outbreak. They instead adopted a far more optimistic and rose-coloured perspective of the virus, with both the governments and the governed making light of the disease, pretending to some unearthly immunity, and assuming that a perfunctory approach to the disease and minimal preparation in terms of isolation centres would suffice to rein in a health crisis they were not sure would occur.

While the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) kept warning that an outbreak in the region was only a matter of time, perhaps alarmed that nothing substantial or concrete was being done to prepare for it, the northern states kept stonewalling.

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Kogi State, for instance, has suggested it had an app with which to battle the disease. The state has, however, not indicated how an app could do the job of forestalling a disease outbreak, nor shown the scientific connection between the disease and a computer programme.

Indigenes of some of the northern states, particularly religious associations, have ridiculed public paranoia over the disease, arguing that the region had seen off other epidemics, and are assured that even coronavirus would fall before their invincibility.

Alas, finally, coronavirus has berthed in most of the northern states, bar one or two states by the last count. Kano’s controversial death figures, following a disease they continue to argue is of unknown aetiology, has infused panic into the system.

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It even seemed that whatever disease is killing off the indigenes of the state is playing a cruel and morbid joke on the powerful and influential, killing off more than a dozen of them in almost one fell swoop.

Not only has the state consequently declared a complete lockdown, without graduating from mild or severe restrictions, it has had to embrace a further two-week lockdown imposed by the federal government.

Just like the northern states which for over a month did not even have one testing centre bar the one in Abuja, for a few crazy days Kano’s only testing centre, which was erected rather late in the first instance, was out of action.

It was restored a few days ago after indecipherable theories of conspiracies had run riot in the state, including one by one Prof Ishaq Akintola who incredulously tied the absence of a testing centre to a plot to depopulate the largely Muslim North.

Testing centres, though late in coming, are beginning to spring up in many states in the North. Better late than never. But vital moments have been lost. Perhaps, now, the true picture of the COVID-19 incidence in the North will manifest as a result of the establishment of more testing centres.

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By and large, the region is unfortunately not ready to handle the pandemic. But the NCDC and the federal government are beginning to rally to the side of the region, and are expected to pour money and resources to a problem that could have been handled more timely and successfully had they been less superstitious and superfluous in their naive approach to the disease.

The fear in the region and Nigeria as a whole is that the northern states are less prepared or competent, on account of their socio-cultural milieu, to tackle the pandemic. Medical facilities are few and far between. And where they exist, they are not well staffed, nor well equipped.

If the outbreak becomes an avalanche, then a tragedy of truly monumental proportion would quickly manifest. Like the rest of the country, and perhaps worse, the gross and continuous underfunding of the health sector will expectedly take a heavy toll on the country.

Poverty is also more widespread in the region, and few mitigating measures have been taken generally to address a long-standing health crisis that is now certain to be compounded by COVID-19.

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For decades, the northern states, which are plagued by the unremitting almajiri problem, have been lax in addressing many of their outdated and outmoded cultural and religious practices.

The almajiri problem has led to the proliferation of thousands, if not millions of youths, who are sent to poorly equipped and unregulated Quranic schools where they must fend for themselves at a tender age.

Kokarin Hana Bara: Mu Ma Almajirai Ne..!(2) — Leadership Hausa ...

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They have often been fodder for violent religious or any other kind of protests. Neither their parents nor their Quranic schools have generally been held accountable for the children banished to religious schools, and not catered for or nurtured roundly into adulthood.

They school in overcrowded classrooms and live in heavily overcrowded and abominable hostels. The northern states have for many years spoken glibly of abolishing the practice; but they have lacked the courage and the vision to handle the problem sensibly and pragmatically.

Indeed, early this week, the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Boss Mustapha, bemoaned the neglect to which Nigerian youths, in this case, the almajirai, have been subjected.

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Speaking during the daily briefing by the Presidential Task Force on COVID-19 last Monday, Mr Mustapha warned: “There is nothing wrong about them learning the dictates of their faith. But we must prepare them equally for the future. Equip them, skill them so that they can become educated in their states and also become productive citizens in the future.

If we do not deal with the issues relating to the almajiris, we are building an army that would overwhelm us as a people and as a nation in the future.” The SGF was, in other words, saying that hastily banning the almajiri practice was not enough to mitigate its deleterious effects. There must be a scientific approach to a cancer that had been foolishly allowed to fester for decades.

Kebbi State governor, Abubakar Bagudu, told the media some 10 days ago that northern states governors had agreed that almajirai in the region would be returned to their home states to allow the governors and the states to deal with the pandemic and to tackle a practice they see has evidently become a disease vector.

The North is littered with trucks conveying many of the almajiri youths back to their home states, all of them cutting a pitiful picture of abuse and abandonment. It brings into sharp focus the absolute lack of responsibility demonstrated by the affected state governments and parents in dealing with a problem that should never have been allowed to take root in the first instance.

Yet, in all the effort to repatriate the almajirai, little has been said about parents who have wilfully subjected their children to such degrading treatment and practice, a practice sometimes implausibly defended as not being inconsonant with religious precepts.

The affected children are being returned to their states, as indeed they should, but the state governments have a duty to fish out parents who deliberately abandon their responsibilities to their children.

Surely the states can find a corollary of the law to charge such offending parents in the court. If the mounting COVID-19 cases in the country are a true reflection of the spread of the disease, and not a scheme to finagle the system of the little left in the national treasury due to shrinking oil exports and revenue, it is time then to fight the neglect, irresponsibility and abominable practices that have fostered the rampage of a disease the country should have controlled far better than it did.

While the entire country cannot be absolved of blame for allowing the pandemic to run riot, northern governors share a huge and inglorious part of the blame.

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