Tag: Lugard

  • Battle for Lugard House

    The Kogi State governorship election will hold on November 2. The stage is set for the contest between the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). Correspondent James Azania examines the preparations for the poll.

    The stage is set for the governorship election in Kogi State. According to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), the exercise will hold on November 2.

    The late Prince Abubakar Audu was defeated as a sitting governor, when the  PDP snatched victory from the defunct All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP). Twelve years later, the APC, led by Audu/Faleke upstaged the ruling PDP, even though neither Audu, nor James Faleke, his running mate mounted the saddle.

    Audu died a day after the November 21, 2015 poll. The exercise was declared inconclusive by the INEC, even with the APC in unassailable lead.

    A re-run was conducted in the affected areas that led the electoral umpire to declare the now famous “inconclusive,” electoral verdict.

    Alhaji Yahaya Bello, who came second in the APC primary inherited the victory, followed by the epic court cases that ended with the judicial affirmation of Bello as the elected governor. The ruling party has, however, not ceased hemorrhaging from the wound  inflicted from the day its original standard bearer (Audu) passed on.

    The Igalas of Kogi East produced governors since the advent of democracy in 1992, the issue of power rotation was a big issue during the 2015 campaign. Audu gave his word that power will shift to either the Igbira, Kogi Central or the predominantly Okun in Kogi West, after his four-year tenure, if elected. Audu did not live to occupy the Lugard House, but his promise of power shift endured, with the governor emerging from outside Kogi East. Bello, from Kogi Central has no worry as to his proprietary to seek a second term.

    Through material and other area of support for the police and other security apparatus, Bello-led administration has been able to rein in the orgy of criminality, kidnapping and armed robbery, resurgent communal clashes in the Bassa axis  and deadly attacks by suspected herdsmen in Omala local government in Kogi East.

    Bello has so far been able to navigate the myriads of booby traps that dogged his path at inception, owing primarily to the way he emerged as governor.

    While fallouts with some of his earliest and ardent supporters and other co-travellers, including Senator Dino Melaye (PDP – Kogi West) and Chief Clarence Olafemi, a former Acting Governor, who also found his way back to the PDP, may have taken their toll, Bello’s appointees and predominantly “New Direction” devotees, remain as a bulwark in his political firmament.

    The governor’s style, including the running of local government councils through non-elected sole administrators, has continued to generate controversy.

    While Bello has been applauded in some quarters for injecting young and new faces into governance in the state, his critics assert that the appointments are anti-productive, neophytes that add no value to administration, as against those who worked for the victory of the APC at the presidential and governorship polls in 2015; an election that led to the outer of the ruling PDP.

    On the economic front, Kogi has being unable to move beyond being a predominantly civil service state, and with the alleged backlog of unpaid salaries, which the government has always controverted, the situation is precarious.

    The gains of the increase in revenue generation, developments in the business and property sector, which is better attested to in the sprouting of new private petrol filling stations and exotic buildings springing up by the day around the Government Reservation Area (GRA), Lokoja and environs, indicate that things might not be as bad as being painted.

    Baring any unforeseeable development, Bello remains the person to beat, in the race for the APC ticket. But, whether or not he will return to office for a second term, can only manifest after the November election.

    Dichie:

    From the ruling APC, Dr Tim Nda Dichie, from the minority Bassa in Kogi East, has indicated his interest to vie for governorship.

    A former member of Bello’s cabinet, he took not a few by surprise, when he abruptly resigned as Commissioner for Agriculture, barely more than a year in office.

    An experienced politician, philanthropist, insurance and business magnate, Dichie was one of the aspirants who challenged for the APC ticket during the 2015 party primary. The Basange high chief packs a lot of weight and is seen as one of those that may spring a surprise in the months ahead.

    Dichie, who prides himself as a “symbol of unity between the majority and minority” has articulated his for seeking office. He said God has positioned him to be next governor of Kogi, and that the financial strength of other aspirants would not change God’s plan.

     

    Faleke factor:

    Though it might be too early to predict, other contenders likely to bid for the APC ticket, will soon manifest, even as the Faleke factor continue to loom large in the background, as speculations as to whether or not the National Assembly member representing Ikeja Constituency at the House of Representatives, has refused to die down.

    From Ekirin-Adde, in Ijumu Local Government Area of Kogi West, Faleke’s entrance into the race in 2015, as the running mate to the late Audu, marked a turning point for the APC, and signposted the ouster of the PDP in Kogi.

    If Faleke decides to come into the race, there will be alignments and realignments, and the political configuration may not be the same again.

     

    PDP:

    Last week, PDP said it will reclaim its place as the ruling party in Kogi State.

    The party, in a communiqué by Bide Ogunmola, the Publicity Secretary, which was issued at the end of the state executive meeting held in Lokoja asserted it’s readiness for the election.

    Assuring the aspirants of a level playing ground, the party said it had no “anointed candidate,” ahead of the primary.

    PDP said: “That the party is fervently prepared to provide a level playing ground for all the governorship aspirants; the exco has no anointed candidate; and will ensure the emergence of a credible that will defeat the incumbent governor.”

    It advised members to be resolute and not be disappointed with the outcome of the last (general) election “because PDP was robbed of its victory.”

    “We have vowed to defend our votes in the forthcoming election. The exco has pledged to lead the struggle to win the next election with all determination and purposeful leadership,” it added.

    The PDP lamented that “never after now would the people suffer untold hardship in a state abundantly blessed with human capital resources.”

    It described Kogi as worst off in terms of the people’s wellbeing, particularly workers.”

    It urged members to remain united, as the APC-led administration has “outlived its usefulness, having made Kogi State the poverty capital of Nigeria.

    “The outcome of the last general election in which result showed that the PDP won in all elections by popular vote but was robbed by the APC-led administration of Governor Bello, due to intimidation, use of guns and several manipulation that is being challenged legally.”

     

    Social Democratic Party (SDP):

    The Social Democratic Party (SDP) in Kogi has also said that it would present a candidate for the poll.

    The party said it will present a credible candidate that will “rescue the Kogi from bad governance the state is currently witnessing.”

    Alhaji Muktar Atima, the chairman of SDP, said that the party would be on the ballot in the election.

    According to him, the wide acceptance enjoyed by the party in the just concluded elections has positioned it for victory in the coming governorship election.

    He blamed the Independent National Electoral Commission for “working with the APC to militarise the last elections, and outrightly rig the Kogi polls,” as the strategy employed to short change the party from being announced as winners, but assured that the party is working to ensure that the peoples’ vote in the November election count, that would see a change in baton to the SDP.

    He observed that the party made an impressive performance in the Presidential and National Assembly elections, pointing out that, if not for the infractions, SDP emerged as the third force the people of the state voted for.

    He predicted a landslide victory for SDP.

    Dr. Philip Salau of the Labour Party (LP) is and Dr. Alex Kadiri (APC) are others that may enter the race.

  • Lugard’s seat of power CRUMBLES …as govt lavishes billions of naira on centenary

    Lugard’s seat of power CRUMBLES …as govt lavishes billions of naira on centenary

    THE old secretariat along the Inner Marina, Lagos Island, was used by all the colonial governor-generals of Nigeria and was the seat of government in 1960 when the nation got her independence. But it is rather funny that except one is told, there is nothing in the secretariat that points to this. Okorie Uguru writes on the state of the building and calls on the relevant authorities to focus on such heritage, even as the nation marks her centenary celebration.

    Nigeria is marking her centenary anniversary this year. From plans unfolded by the Federal Government, the country is rolling out the drums in celebration. While billions have been raised to celebrate the centenary anniversary, some of the landmark buildings where the history of the country was shaped are in a terrible condition. One of these buildings, the old secretariat where the colonial administrators governed the country up till independence, is not properly being taken care of and may soon be lost permanently if urgent attention is not given to it.

    The building was said to be been used by Lord Lugard while directing the affairs of the Nigerian colony. It was completed in 1895. It is 119 years old. On a recent visit to the old secretariat on Marina, it is easy for one to think everything was okay with the building. The U-shaped building look well kept and tidy with a fading white paint that is turning pink. However, a close inspection of the property from the back of the building shows a building that is rotting away and in urgent need of repairs. There is a twin domes pitching on top of the building painted in green with a lightening arrestor on top of the domes. One of the lightening arrestor is bent.

    So, why has such an importance legacy of Nigeria’s history been left to be rotting away? The usual refrain was money. Environmentalist Desmond Makekodunmi of the Legacy Foundation talked about how his foundation’s efforts to rehabilitate the building as they have done with some old properties had been fruitless as the government is not ready to march their words with action. He spoke on the old secretariat: “ Legacy with the inspiration and direction of its founder, Professor John Godwin (MBE), several years back, had approached the National Commission of Museums and Monument (NCMM) about partnering with them to restore the First Secretariat in the Marina where Lord Lugard had had his office and up till today, his desk is still there. It is a grand building; we did an assessment on it and saw that the building is still very solid. We saw that there was some deterioration. Right now, the occupants are staff of a branch of the Ministry of Justice. So, the museum directorship said they were interested, that they were keen, that we should work with them. We also approached the Goethe Institute. The institute was very keen. They said they would love to partner with some other agencies in Nigeria and possibly even have their headquarters there. The institute was very keen at that time. There was quite a lot of impetus, we had meetings and everybody was expressing keenness, but unfortunately as we speak, nothing has come out of that apart from Goethe Institute now being able to use what was the old printing press for different functions. Nothing has come out of that. we are getting quite concerned in Legacy now. This is iactually a very significant building. Whether we agree with it or not, no country will be happy to know that there was an occupation in its history, but it is a fact and a reality of history. Till today, you can go to Britain and see ancient Roman relics which are kept in perfect condition. Nobody in Britain was happy that in those days Britain was conquered by the Roman Empire, but it is a fact of their history and the names of the people that came there are part of their history. The name of the colonialists that came here are also part of our history. Lord Lugard, whether we like it or not, was the one who actually called our name Nigeria. So, this is where he was running his administrative headquarters from and right up until independence, Nigeria’s administrative headquarters was run from that building. At independence, it now changed and we have our different building. So, it is part of our history and it deserves to be preserved. Not only because of that, if you look at that from environmental perspective, it is a low energy consumption building because of the way it was designed. Those days they did not have air conditioner, so they design their buildings in the tropics in such a way as to deal with the heat So, you have very sloppy roof, very wide verandah, a lot of windows, the building is angled in the right way to catch the breeze, and so many things. These days we are now beginning to thing green more and more, people have started looking at that type of architecture again. This is an architecture that blends in. very well with our environment and doesn’t require air conditioner all over the place to keep it cool. So, for various reasons that building deserves to be protected, that building should be protected and right now it is not being protected. As I said there is an occupant there which is a branch of the ministry of Justice, unfortunately they are just doing a little bit of cosmetic work on the building and not nearly enough.”

    Asked if proper maintenance that would protect the integrity of the building is being carried out by the current occupiers, Majekodunmi said: “It is just the basic patching the roof if it is leaking, replacing a rotten floor board, it is not really preserving the integrity of the building. If you look at it right now, if you look at the top towers, two round green domes, one of the them has weather vein on it, and that weather vein is leaning more and more and there is going to be a certain angle that the weather vein would lean and if there was a big storm, it could just come crashing down and collapse and cause a lot of damage. It is a very sad testimony for all of us.”

    However, speaking on the current state of the building, the director general of the national Commision for Museums and Monuments (NCMM), Mallam Yusuf Abdallah Usman said even though Nigerian is currently marking its centenary, there was no budgetary provision made for the celebration. He said restoring and maintaining old buildings such as the Olaiya House, the old secretariat and the such places is something requires a concerted efforts by all the tiers of the government and also the host communities. He said the old secretariat has not been completely neglected both that his parastatal was carrying out the maintenance of the structure based on the fund available.

    Abdallah said for other old buildings such the Olaiya House, NCMM was seeking a collaboration with the state, the council area, the host community, the family and corporate wall to restore them. He said arrangements have all been completed and that NCMM in collaboration with the Lagos State government would agree on a date for the launching of the rehabilitation work on the place and others.”

    While the it might be difficult for the NCMM to commit all or a huge its budgetary allocation in one place seeing that its monuments scattered all over the country, it is also very important that by virtue of the significant role that the building played in the history of Nigeria, it should not be lost to posterity hence the need for it to be restored.

    Many hope that a little of the money being raised by the Centenary celebration committee would be channeled towards restoring the old secretariat. Also, a national monument such as the old secretariat has no business being used as an office complex but ought to preserved as a part of the nation’s heritage where colonial artifacts and other relics of colonial rule ought to be kept opened to visitors, foreign and locals, to visit for educational purpose.

  • Amalgamation: When  will Lugard rest in peace?

    Amalgamation: When will Lugard rest in peace?

    Amalgamation was a contingency of history. Nigeria was, and still is, a contraption of the incompatibles. Frederick Lugard was the lord of the confusion. The likes of Prof. Richard Olaniyan and Dr. Kayode Fayemi who are theorizing on amalgamation and the national question, are constructionists engineering a change that may appear complex.

    Aside from his major crime-converging or amalgamating ‘the strange assorted’ into the Nigerian state, Lord Lugard’s other offence was to commit a historical sin, the kind of sin that will be difficult to forgive and forget. Nay, his sin was to fall into the trap of history and historians whose major preoccupation is the persecution and over-reporting of historical offenders. Men of evil and errors like Hitler and Lugard can hardly rest in peace because historians like Profs Olaniyan and Akin Alao will keep reminding them in their graves, of their past evil and blunders. What blunder did Lord Lugard commit? Let’s hear Olaniyan and Alao in their re-packaged book: The Amalgamation and Its Enemies: “As the first governor of Northern protectorate of Nigeria, Sir Frederick Lugard failed in the development of the economic potentials of the North. He became too excited, fascinated and obsessed with the means (indirect rule and power) at the expense of the end (an economically viable Northern Nigeria). When he therefore proposed the amalgamation of the two protectorates, he probably wanted to conceal his failure and inadequacies…”

    Olaniyan and Alao’s imperial judgement must have been influenced by what Antrobus wrote about Lugard: “Sir F. Lugard has many good qualities. He has plenty of goals, he is full of ideas and he is not afraid of taking responsibility. But he is not a prudent or farseeing administrator, his schemes are not well thought out and he has more than once involved us in heavier expenditure than contemplated.”

    I know that the historian’s main responsibility is to commence his investigation from reasons for an action and causes of an event, I submit humbly that Olaniyan’s generalist approach to the Lugardian blunder was conceptually inappropriate. Accusing a man, a dead man for that matter, of covering up his “failure and inadequacies” with an idea he thought was in the best interest of his colonial office, and the people of Nigeria, without taking into cognizance some “vast impersonal forces” that might have compelled his action, was incorrect.

    This is why I am inclined to agree with Prof. Segun Gbadegesin’s argument when he wrote that “there are three possible approaches to the evaluation of the act of amalgamation.” He submits: “First, it is not self-contradictory for one person to hold both verdicts. One may renounce the act of colonization and amalgamation as a morally reprehensible deed because it violates the principle of justice. On the other hand, one may look at the outcome of the amalgamation in terms of the overall good it supposedly produces, from a utilitarian perspective, and consider it an act of GOD.”

    Second, one may see amalgamation as well as its outcome as an act of GOD. From a fatalistic point of view (what will be will be), if GOD did not want it, Lugard and his British constabulary would not overpower the forces of resistance in the north and south. Whatever GOD allows to happen is good, no matter our human understanding. Therefore, the amalgamation was not only an act of GOD, it was also good. This is the spirit of theodicy. But it may also be argued that the outcome of the amalgamation was good for the peoples of the north and south. And since GOD is the author of whatever is good, it was an act of GOD.

    This is his third approach. One may see first, the amalgamation in itself as a morally heinous deed for the reason stated above, and second, its consequences for the people of the north and the south as terribly bad. In this case, the motivation for and the outcome of amalgamation is morally obnoxious, whatever small mercies proceed therefrom.

    I maintain that the issue of amalgamation transcends what history alone can explain except it is willing to extend the frontiers of its search and discourse to the philosophical realm. Agreed Lugard was the actor of the amalgamation and should be made to carry the responsibility of its “unworkability”, what role do we assign the “vast impersonal forces” that possibly influenced Lugard’s action? It must be understood that important as the role of the great man is in the historical process, this role is just one of the several factors facilitating historical process. And any attempt to interprete the historical process exclusively on the basis of the declared motives or intentions of the principal historical actors or on the basis of options made by these actors, or from the actors, deriving from these actions, is doomed to futility.

    Again, Lugard is morally permitted to justify or defend his action by blaming it on “determinism” which imposes limitations on man and his actions. If we assume, rightly or wrongly, that actors’ choices and therefore, actions, are pre-determined and therefore such actors are exonerated from their actions, why do we still haunt Lugard in his grave for a mistake that was “pre-determined”? Trying to look at determinism and other possibilities that compelled Lugard’s action is not to automatically exclude him, as a historical actor, from the consequences of his action, but to explain that, with determinism, events that happened as they have happened could not have happened differently unless something in the cause or causes have also been different. This is why some writers believe that amalgamation was a contingency of history that has placed a moral and patriotic burden on us all in ensuring that we do not negate it. The challenge we have as a nation and as a people, is to accept our present predicament as a condition deserving of a clinical resolution.

    The discourse on national question which is one of the burdens imposed on us by amalgamation is one way of creating the energy and mental capacity for an enduring resolution. The beautiful thing about Olaniyan’s book is that it attempts a comprehensive recording of the debate on national question, capturing both the sensible and the ridiculous, with a view to reflecting the totality of the arguments from north to south. This forms the concluding chapter of this must-have book which contains a heavy dose of intellectual capsules.

    If Olaniyan’s narratives and investigation of amalgamation are tangentially theoretical, Kayode Fayemi’s treatment of the National Question in his book, Regaining the Legacy, is understandably technical. Exhibiting his expertise in theoretical constructs, Fayemi called for a collective reflection on the future of the nation and how we can evolve the institutional mechanisms to manage our diversity and difference. He posits: “Since the dawn of independence, Nigeria has been driven by numerous dissensions and crises that have exacerbated the fault-lines of our plural, multi-ethnic society where diverse groups were yoked together by our erstwhile colonial warlords, the British, for their own administrative and pecuniary interests.”

    This is the big difference between the historian and the political scientist. While Olaniyan was talking about “Lugard’s failure and inadequacies” and how the mistake was made, Fayemi was talking about “reflecting on the future”. But Fayemi’s reflection on the future was made easy because the historian, Olaniyan, was able to provide him the “historical cause(s)” for our diversity and difference. To reinforce this, Fayemi explains: “…the status of the National Question and which troubles the national consciousness is traceable to the structural deficits and imbalances evolving from the amalgamation of the Northern and Southern protectorates of Nigeria to from a unified colony by colonial Governor-general, Lord Lugard in 1914.”

    Another historian Prof. Siyan Oyeweso, the ubiquitous intellectual of histo-politico vocation, is contemplating using his birthday to do a “reflection” on the illusions and the realities of the amalgamation. The intervention, which is his own contribution to nation-building, is to generate additional materials for the literature on amalgamation and raise the bar of national discourse especially on the national question.

    Oyeweso’s intervention captivates me for certain reasons. First, it will be stimulating to know the interpretive context in which “illusions” and “realities” will be enclosured. Is the discourse going to adopt a traditional approach to interpreting illusion as “a historical mishap or a failed vision,” in which case, Lord Lugard will be persecuted as usual? Or is it going to look at “illusion” as a philosophical concept which becomes paralysed after a head-on collision with geographical and political realities? Then what are these realities? Fayemi attempts a political description: “These imbalances have deepened and become entrenched to the point of enabling certain groups within the emergent state to persistently thrive and hoard benefits to the exclusion of others from what ought to be a national communion. This has transpired, even when the privileged groups did not necessarily possess the material base or the merit to justify the privileged advantage.”

    I have deliberately labeled Fayemi’s description “political” because his articulation of “realities” seems at variance with another reality; which is that the phrase “certain groups” contains some ambiguities. Is he talking about the political class and its subsidiaries or is he talking about ethnic nationalities and their militias or is he talking about the social stratification whereby the decadent discontents feel excluded from the nation’s Commonwealth by the privileged groups? Whatever it is, the reality of our political situation is that every group, every ethnic nationality and every social group can justify abandonment, exclusion, marginalization and neglect. The way our political system is structured provides justification for perpetual complaint, acrimony and agitation. This position is also supported by Fayemi when he attributes the reasons for the national question to the “faulty political architecture of the country passed down from colonial rule and deepened by a self-serving and rapacious postcolonial elite, which not only privatized the state for personal gains, perpetrated bad governance and played up divisions to sustain its base, but promoted an authoritarian ethos that enabled poverty, violence and crime.”

    I am not too sure if this paper was written before or after Fayemi had regained the ‘Ekiti’ legacy, but I want to believe that now that he too has joined the league of “postcolonial elite” or “postcolonial ruling class”, he may have a rethink on this statement which looks more like an indictment of the elite and the ruling class which he belongs.

    Though Prof. Olaniyan has never held any political office nor has he ever been the governor of any State like Fayemi, this does not exclude him from sharing in the blame for the failure of the elite to rectify “the mistake of 1914”. I agree that he is playing his role in nation-building by his active participation in the development of the human mind as a university teacher and judging by the quality of books he churns out. But he may reduce the level of his frustration about the nonchalance of the political class to nation-building if he considers active political involvement especially in the backroom where he can operationalise what he has been theorizing. The political space no longer condones intellectual enterprise that lacks palpable practicality.

    My final appeal to our egg-heads is that in the course of showing ourselves as thorough professionals, we must refrain from judgements that tend to excoriate the dead, for the simple reason that they are handicapped by eternal silence which prevents them from justifying their actions or explaining their inaction. The advantage the living have over the dead should not be abused to the point of “flogging a dead man” who has no right of reply. Nothing could be more wicked than this. As a historian myself, I know history deals with the past actions of historical actors but must we lose our sense of decency and morality because we want to report the past? We can avoid judgements in reporting the past especially when there is no evidence to vilify the dead. Unlike Hitler whose actions led to the deaths of millions of people, Lugard was a man whose “mistake” led to the birth of a great nation with potential for global prominence. The elite, or the political class, should be held responsible for failing to rectify this “mistake” because it was, and still is, convenient for them to keep exploiting it to achieve both political and economic expediency.

    Nigerians should allow Lugard to rest in peace. The mistake he made was rectifiable and correctable. If our leaders lack the political will to correct “the mistake of 1914” we the people can force them to come up with “the correction of 2014” if we are not comfortable co-existing together as a nation and as a people. This can be the national answer to the national question. Why keep blaming the dead for what the living can correct?

  • Behold, Lugard’s foot-bridge

    Behold, Lugard’s foot-bridge

    Nigeria used to be known as Southern and Northern protectorates, which existed differently under the supervision of the British colonialists. As the years went by, the need to merge these protectorates to form one colony was imminent due to factors such as railway construction and harmonised administration for effective governance.

    Zungeru was the former Capital of the Northern protectorate as well as the first national political capital of Nigeria between 1902 and 1916. It was at Zungeru that the amalgamation of Northern and Southern protectorates took place in 1914, under the High Commissioner and later first Governor-General of Nigeria, Lord Frederick Lugard.

    During his era as Governor of the protectorate, apart from being instrumental to the successful amalgamation of Nigeria, his other achievements remain indelible in the annals of Nigeria history and development. In 1904 Lugard constructed a foot bridge, which was named after him (Lugard FootBridge). The bridge served as a link between his residence and other quarters of colonial Zungeru over river Kaduna. Shortly after amalgamation of Northern and Southern protectorates Kaduna was made Northern Headquarters in preference over Jebba or Lokoja in 1920 by Lord Lugard. The Zungeru Foot bridge was moved to Gamji Gate Kaduna in 1954 and declared Historic Monument On 16th February, 1956 by Federal Department of Antiquities now National Commission For Museums and Monument under Antiquity Ordinance of 1953.

    The bridge currently serves as a tourist attraction to teaming populace and a reminder of infrastructure laid by the colonial administrators.

    The bridge is currently located in General Hassan Usman Katsina Park (formally Government Garden) which was established shortly after amalgamation of Nigeria in 1914 by Lord Lugard and lies at N 100 30.311 E 0070 27.206 with an elevation of 586M Above Sea Level.

    Lugard Foot Bridge is mounted over a tributary of river Kaduna which flows through Gamji Park.

    The Foot Bridge is an example of colonial engineering and construction before the advent of motorable roads and railway lines in Nigeria and a masterpiece which still maintains a solid shape, considering its age and exposure to harsh weather even though occasional maintenance is carried out.

    The bridge’s main body/deck is made up of strong iron, lattice design and other complementing features for safety and aesthetic purposes such as handrails, wire gauze while beams, girders, concrete are basically for structural strength and balancing of the bridge. It is made up of 42 wooden steps with its deck and pillar painted green white green like our national flag. The bridge is supported by two pillars on both sides which is further attached to a beam and abutments which as mentioned earlier are for structural strength. The bridge is 14.2m long and has a width of 1.75m.

    The century old bridge is understandably in need of maintenance, as it ages the quality, and strength declines. The bridge’s colour is fading gradually due to complete exposure to direct sunlight and rainfall. Therefore steps are being taken to preserve this monument from total decay which is of paramount importance and all hands must be on deck to uphold one of our national pride.

     

    •Hambolu is Heritage Officer II, National Museum, Kaduna.