Emir of Kano, Muhammadu Sanusi II
The Emir of Kano, Muhammadu Sanusi II, has reproached the Federal Government’s spotlight on infrastructural projects such as roads and bridges including on petroleum subsidy at the expense of the nation’s education.
According to him, the money spent on building roads, bridges and trains is better spent on educating the young ones, noting that development is first and foremost about people.
Sanusi said: “Let us invest more in education and let us give up some of the privileges that we have such as the trillions we are spending subsiding petroleum products. That money should go into educating our young people.
“We are spending too much monies on roads and bridges and trains and too little money educating our children. Let us educate these young people and they will build the roads, train and bridges. We do not need to invite the Chinese to do that for us. And until the leadership at all levels in this country and the followership understand that this is what is most important, because I do understand sometimes that if a governor does not build roads or bridges, he is seen as not have been performed by the people.
“We build all these highways and there are more pedestrians on the highways than cars and those pedestrians are most often people without education and help. Development is first and foremost about people.”
The former CBN Governor while speaking at the 6th convocation ceremony of Nile University of Nigeria, Abuja, where he was conferred an Honorary Degree of Science alongside the Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Lamidi Adeyemi III, also counselled Nigerians on their choices of leaders saying the idea of electing leaders that have no solid education should be quashed as the quality of leaders’ education will tell on the nation’s education.
He said: “We have to take an interest in the quality of our leaders and representatives in the level of education. If you look around this country at many levels of leadership, we have elected and we have chosen to elect people who do not have an education. And because they are not educated, they cannot give an education.
“We need to lay more emphasis on the quality of people we elect to executive and legislative offices and we need to make sure that those to whom we entrust policy are themselves educated and know the value of education.”
Photos from the event