He frowned on the educational quality of some National
Assembly members, saying they can barely write their names. Ekweremadu stated
this in Awka, the Anambra State capital on Monday while delivering the 2012 Zik
Lecture Series organised by the state council of the Nigeria Union of
Journalists. The lecture was entitled, ‘True Federalism and the Political
Ideology of the Great Zik’.
He said it was still a surprise to him that as
educationally advanced as the South-East “we still send to the National
Assembly some people who can barely write their names”. Ekweremadu, who
described the late Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe as a knowledgeable leader, said without
knowledgeable leadership, the country was heading nowhere.
This is so embarrassing not that Im surprised. You can imagine the minimum educational require to be there and compare that to minimum requirement to work in most corporate organisations in Nigeria.
According to the lawmaker, the country needs leaders that
are patriotic, selfless, knowledgeable, incorruptible, who have a lot of
integrity and who will always put country first. He said, “For Nigeria’s,
particularly, low development or rather lack of it has been variously traced to
successive national leadership.”
Ekweremadu said though a proper federal structure and an
error-free constitution were desirable, without purposeful and transformational
leadership, they would not help the situation in the country .
He said, “Even the best constitution or federal structure
in the world cannot yield the best of democracy dividends or drive the lofty
dreams of a nation unless there is a general commitment by the leadership and
citizens alike to live by the principles and letters of that constitution and
the norms that promote development.”
Ekweremadu added that Nigerian leaders had often mistaken
stubbornness and arrogance as principles in politics, saying “this hasrobbed
Nigerians of great opportunities of linking up with modernity and technology”.
He added, “Leaders who cannot think beyond their
immediate environment have nothing new to offer their people.”
Ekweremadu urged Nigerian leaders to adopt sound
principles like Azikiwe did in his days so that they could lead the country
into the elite corps of nations. First son of Azikiwe and Owelle of Onitsha,
Chief Chukwuma Azikiwe, said for any leadership to have meaning it must
identify with the downtrodden.
He said, “If our farmers and the have-nots are empowered,
then they will impact our economy and themselves.”
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