Nigerian Ex-Patriots Want to Promote More U.S. Trade, Halt Corrupt Practices and Promote Education and Healthcare throughout Nigeria

In a land known more for cowboy hats, boots, oil, and big business, Nigerians living in the United States and Canada were called upon during a weekend national conference in Dallas to help reform Nigeria’s political system, eliminate corruption, and rebuild the country’s education and healthcare systems.

The two-day national economic conference of Egbe Omo Yoruba, which represents more than 400,000 native Nigerians or people of Nigerian descent living in the United States and Canada, featured several erudite Yoruba scholars, including renowned Nigerian economist Dr. Benjamin Ola. Akande, President ofWestminster College, in Fulton, Missouri; Dr. Toyin Falola, Professor of African Studies and History at theUniversity of Texas Austin, among many others.

The conference was held Friday and Saturday, June 24-25, and was designed to bolster national efforts to attract American investment in Nigeria, accelerate economic growth and prosperity for the Yoruba people, and unite and promote the cultural and professional spirit of the Yoruba community in North America.

Speaking in one of his two keynote addresses, Akande, who was recently elected the first Nigerian-born president of a prestigious university, highlighted some of the problems bedevilling the country. “Our beloved Nigeria isn’t working,” he lamented. “Our Nigeria is mired in incompetence and corruption. Many of our public institutions barely function. In most respects, to refer to Nigeria as a third-world country is to insult other third-world countries.”

He noted that while President Muhammadu Buhari has launched a new campaign to battle government corruption, “the real challenge is whether it will have any staying power.”

He added that while no one expects Buhari to tackle all of Nigeria’s problems in one term, he “has had a front row seat of leadership in Nigeria for nearly 40 years. His last 12 months on the job simply don’t reflect that vast experience.”

Akande said, for example, Buhari’s initial plan was to establish 37 special courts across Nigeria to help facilitate his war on corruption, which ultimately was abandoned because only one judge – Danladi Umar – “could pass the integrity test.

“My friends,” he asked the audience of about 500 attendees, “is it possible that we can’t find 37 upright, fearless judges out of 170 million people?”

He added that the war on corruption could only be won if the government adopted serious prison reforms, solid witness protection programs, and efficient anti-corruption agencies. “We need to exert unparalleled pressure on our politicians to become more accountable or be prepared to bear the consequences of bad behavior,” he said.

Akande called upon the government and people of Nigeria to rebuild the country’s ailing educational and healthcare systems, and to elect officials who “understand realistic goals and the importance of timelines, don’t make bombastic declarations and hollow promises, and show their cluelessness over sound fiscal policy.”

He also challenged all Yorubas in Nigeria to elect better leaders. “In choosing many of our leaders, we have settled for mediocrity. We have allowed and have traded the boys in khaki (military-run government) for over-dressed vagabonds and their rent-seeking thugs. In effect, we have abdicated our responsibilities as citizens in a Democracy,” he said.

“My message is that we can – and we must – do better,” he said. “It’s time to put an end to the era of rogues, narcissists and megalomaniacs as leaders. Let’s find leaders who put the ‘servant’ back in ‘public service,’ leadership that is truly committed to providing service and is willing to sacrifice for the people.”

Akande’s remarks were echoed by Dr. Falola who urged “Yoruba scholars all over the world to unite to pursue a set of related objectives, use Yoruba to universalize scholarship, that is, to turn our own data into theories with universal applications.”

He said Nigerians must leverage “the knowledge economy,” which he said “is more lucrative than the oil economy,” Nigeria’s biggest export. “The knowledge economy is tied with all forms of technologies and information that generates progress, and it can be created in abundance, far more than any resources that are lifted from the ground.”

Falola said “the benefits from a knowledge economy can be translated and converted to limitless possibilities for people throughout Nigeria. Technology and sustainable development would help drive Nigeria’s economy and benefit Yorubas worldwide.”

The conference, which ended early Sunday, focused heavily on economic opportunities for the U.S. in Nigeria, and for Nigerian businesses in North America.

The event was sponsored by Dallas-based Axxess, a leader in providing integrated software for home health agencies, Excelle Financial Services, and Pure Pack Oil & Gas USA. The conference also included YorubaFest, a music, art and fashion-filled event designed to promote the rich Yoruba culture in North America and in Nigeria.

EDITORS NOTE: A variety of high-resolution photos are available for your free and clear use athttps://www.dropbox.com/sh/xsgfa88n2du75hr/AABOcgX92FaHPeeHiOSWLf-Xa?dl=0

CONTACT INFORMATION: For questions, please contact Tom Pagano, 1-314-602-7549, or tompagano(at)mostrata.com

DALLAS, TEXAS (PRWEB) JUNE 30, 2016

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