There was jubilation in parts of northern Nigeria today as President
Goodluck Jonathan bowed to pressure from a section of northern Nigeria
politicians and relieved the Chairman of the country’s National
Population Commission, Mr Festus Odimegwu of his position. The president
appointed Sam Ahaiwe, the Commissioner representing Abia State in the
Commission, to act as chairman pending the appointment of a new chairman of the commission.
Observers were not surprised at the abrupt removal of Odumegwu who at
a public function had said: “No census has been credible in Nigeria
since 1816. Even the one conducted in 2006 is not credible. I have the
records and evidence produced by scholars and professors of repute; this
is not my report. If the current laws are not amended, the planned 2016
census will not succeed”.
Sequel to that indicting statement, which echoed the views of many
experts, northern Nigeria politicians and governors led by Rabiu
Kwankwaso undertook a virulent lobby which urged Jonathan to drop
Odimegwu. They noted that Odimegwu’s blunt statement was capable of
destabilizing the country.
Kwankwaso is the current governor of Kano state which has benefitted
the most from the same fraudulent population figures that Odimegwu
complained about.
Following his visit to President Jonathan after the vexed Odumegwu
statement, Kwankwaso offered the following statement to the media and
making a snide reference to Odimegwu’s past as boss of Nigeria Breweries
PLC: “…I also raised the issue of the Chairman of the
National Population Commission headed by one Festus Odimegwu. We are not
happy about that appointment, and think that it was a mistake. He had
only one thing in alcoholic industry (sic), all his life. And my guess
is that he’s taking a lot of his products and that is why we feel that
his appointment is a mistake because he cannot be the Chairman of NPC
and at the same time attack what his predecessors have done”.
Although international agencies recognise Lagos as hosting an
estimated 15 million people, making it one of the most populated
metropolis in the world, Nigeria’s last census exercise which was
fraught with fraud as Odimegwu opined, ascribes the largest population
to Kwankwaso’s Kano State instead of Lagos.
Africanewscircle learnt that President Jonathan had persuaded
Odimegwu to tender the resignation which he accepted today (Thursday).
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