The Return of the Population
Propagandists
This Day (Lagos)
OPINION
July 31, 2002
Posted to the web July 31, 2002
Sonnie Ekwowusi
Lagos
The Honourable Minister of Health, professor A.B.C Nwosu
was recently quoted as expressing the concern that over population was
responsible for the poor quality of life and standard of living in Nigeria
(See THISDAY, July 12, 2002 P.4). First, anybody who is conversant with the
complex population propaganda in Africa and the Third World which reached its
crescendo in the 80s will understand that Nwosu is neither speaking for
himself nor for the federal government. Certainly, he is speaking for the our
"new colonial masters" and powerful international agencies like the IMF, World
Bank, United States Agency for International Development (USAID) etc which
have been ceaselessly labouring to reduce the population of Third World
countries. They have been achieving this goal through powerful advocacy and by
making population reduction a precondition for granting developmental aids to
developing countries. Their popular hype goes this way; "Nigeria is
over-populated. Consequently, quality of life in Nigeria is low. Therefore, if
Nigeria needs any loans or other assistance from the IMF or the World Bank,
the pre-condition is that she must be ready to reduce her population through
compulsory mass sterilization of men and women, infanticide, abortion
euphemistically referred to as family planning etc". Part of the strategy is
to put something in women to make them impotent, unable to bear children in
the future. Can you imagine your wife coming back from a government hospital
with her womb closed without your consent?. I heard that some of these
"do-gooders" carrying out immunization programme do mix the vaccines they
administer to kids with other concoctions capable of making the kids impotent
for life. So, parents beware! You can see how desperate these people are in
reducing our population.
There are many sinister motives behind the well-funded
advocacy for the reduction of the population of Africa. Some argue that
because Europe and America are becoming extinct they are bent on perpetually
keeping the African population under control for fear that Africa might rise
one day to become a world power. You may dismiss this as a simplistic and
illogical reasoning but you might change your mind after the excursion into
the history of Margaret Sanger, birth control and her Magazine called the
Woman rebel, Marie Stopes, Charles Darwin and the superior race theory, Rev.
Thomas Malthus theory, International Planned Parenthood Federation of London
which begot Planned Parenthood Federation of Nigeria. I think that after the
scramble for Africa by the turn of the 19th century, another insidious and
pernicious scramble has persistent in the continent. Whereas the first
scramble was largely motivated by commercial interest, the second scramble
hinges on distorting the social economic and political reality of Africa or
what Tunji Bello has dubbed as the American doctoring system. One of these
major distorting or doctoring is that Africa is suffering from hunger and
disease due to over population. Consequently, the African soil has remained a
testing and re- cycling ground for all sorts of strange ideas and propaganda.
The American connection in this game plan through the USAID is evident. This
body has spent scores of years supplying contraceptives and funding population
control in Africa and Nigeria.
The population propaganda has been successfully sold to
successive Health Ministers in Nigeria. In 1987, USAID and the federal
government under the wooing-hands of Professor Ransome-Kuti, the then Health
Minister, spent a staggering sum of N288 million on the government population
policy of one-woman-four children. Of course that policy, being the most
fragrant abuse of human and family right, failed woefully. Today, Nwosu is the
latest victim of Western conspiracy. He is again following their written
script from the same re-cycled erroneous idea of yesteryears. In the 80s they
used all kinds of adjectives and coined such frightening terms as population
"explosion" "bomb" etc to illustrate the demographic catastrophe that will
befall Nigeria if she failed to heed the call and reduce her population. Even
journalists, writers, artists, TV presenters, musicians were recruited to
forecast a false demographic Armageddon. Remember Sunny Ade and Onyeka
Onwenu's album entitled "Wait for me'?
By the mid 90s it seemed as if the noise on the
population hoax was drowned. No. The propagandists and doomsayers had only
changed tactics. Impelled by the HIV/AIDS scourge, they shifted from
population explosion to the marketing of condoms. One of them said that AIDS
is good for Africa because it will reduce her high population. Now that the
population doomsayers are staging a dramatic come back, lets ask this old same
question: Is Nigeria truly or really over populated. The answer is emphatic
No. Granted that Nigeria demographic position is highly politicized, our
population could be somewhere around 140 million, if I am not wrong. It is
wrong for one to calculate the population of Nigeria by just looking at the
large concentration of people in one's locality. For example, after being
shocked by the countless sea of human heads at Oshodi, Lagos one cannot
conclude that Nigeria is over populated. Everybody is in Lagos. My village is
depleted because most village folks have fled in search of elusive jobs in
Lagos. The same thing, I guess, applies to your village folks. Lagos is over
populated but Nigeria is certainly not over populated.
But let's close our eyes for one moment and assume that
Nigeria is over populated. Is over population a curse ?. Can population growth
lead to falling standard of living? The answers are double No. The anti-
population argument is that if there are many people sharing the same cake, it
will get smaller and smaller. They forget that the same people will not
continue to eat one cake because they can bake more cake to satisfy everybody.
Besides, extremely densely populated countries like Monaco, Singapore, Hong
Kong even Japan that recently co-hosted the World Cup enjoy higher standard of
living. In fact high population is inversely related to the Gross National
Product (GNP). The higher a country's population, the higher its GNP.
Conversely, the lower the population the lower the GNP. Most renowned
economists affirm that rapid population density is not an obstacle to economic
development. What may be an obstacle is the rate of growth but not the growth
itself.
High population remains the key indicator of industrial
growth. The causes of unemployment, poverty, street begging in Nigeria are
mismanagement of the economy, inefficiency of government, monumental
corruption, plundering of national treasury, government over spending and over
subsidy, executive robbery either by the stroke of the pen or barrel of the
gun. Not over population. Think of the monies stolen by our past leaders?. If
all those stolen monies were recovered and directly spent on things that could
improve the lot of the people, Nigeria would have been a better place. As
Mahatma Ghandi rightly said, there is enough for every man's need but not for
every man's greed. We are a greedy lot. This is why we are plagued by genteel
poverty amidst our natural/and human resources. Was it not Tafawa Balewa who
said that our political independence was nothing if not matched with economic
independence?. Today, everybody talks oil, dreams oil. Recently, the Niger
Delta women rose for oil. Nobody is interested in agriculture or subsistence
farming any longer. There is a food crisis in land. But it has nothing to do
with over population. It is caused primarily by sheer neglect for others
sectors and lack of productivity. All our National Development Plans from that
of 1962 downward failed due to lack of implementation. For example, our Third
Development Plan harped on food production. The then Obasanjo/Murtala military
regime fashioned a slogan for food production called the Operation Feed the
Nation (OFN). Shehu Shagari coined the Green Revolution. We even had the Umaru
Dikko rice, the integrated rural agricultural program. National accelerated
food production programme etc. But they all failed principally due to
corruption and mismanagement. Perhaps, if they had worked we will not be
complaining about our population. The food crisis worsens every day. The oil
boom is becoming our doom. The Naira currency has continued to noose-dive and
depreciate in value. And now Nwosu reminds us that the cause of these woes is
over population. Let us thank Nwosu for this kind reminder. One ingredient of
responsible leadership is the humility to accept failure. Finding fault with
our population may not help matters.