ACF RADIO Online

ACF RADIO Online Introducing ACF Radio Online - the new platform that aims to promote the rich ideals and cultures of Northern Nigeria, while providing a voice for its people.

15/01/2026

Chairman ACF BoT Alh Bashir Dalhatu.

29/08/2025

Sako Na Musamman Daga Kungiyar Tuntuba Ta Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF)

29/08/2025

This Message is From The Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF)

03/08/2025

Tattaunawa da ACF BOT Chairman Alhaji Bashir Dalhatu Wazirin Dutse, akan batun haƙo Mai da Iskar Gas a jihohin Bauchi da Gombe.

SPEECH DELIVERED BY ALHAJI BASHIR M DALHATU, WAZIRIN DUTSE, CHAIRMAN ACF BOT AT INTERACTIVE SESSION ON THE NORTH, AREWA ...
31/07/2025

SPEECH DELIVERED BY ALHAJI BASHIR M DALHATU, WAZIRIN DUTSE, CHAIRMAN ACF BOT AT INTERACTIVE SESSION ON THE NORTH, AREWA HOUSE, KADUNA JULY, 2025

Mr. Chairman, please allow me to join you in extending a warm welcome to our distinguished guests from the federal government. As the title of this programme indicates, it is an interactive session between the delegation of senior leaders of the Bola Tinubu administration and ourselves; representatives of the key civil society organisations of the people of Northern Nigeria.

I recall that it was on the 17th of October, 2022 that this same group in this same hall held an interactive session with the then presidential candidate, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, among other candidates. In that meeting, we presented to Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, a written address containing details of the issues of urgent concern to the people of Northern Nigeria. In turn, he gave us his own written document containing details of the issues he believed were of concern to the North and how he intended to address them.

But we did not stop there. The ACF, as is its tradition, prepared an extended memorandum giving further details of the critical issues of concern to Northern Nigeria. We then sought and obtained an appointment to visit with the President. At the meeting, which was held on the 30th of May, 2024, the ACF submitted the Memorandum in the presence of many of the leaders who are with us here today.

It has to be stated, and I hope this is self-evident, that Northern Nigeria has related to Asiwaju Bola Tinubu with enthusiasm, accommodation and good will. Northerners went out en masse on the 25th of February, 2023, and cast their ballots for Bola Tinubu. In the event, 5.6 million out of the total 8.8 million votes he got (or 64%), came from the North.
And yet, two years into the four-year tenure of President Tinubu, the feeling among the people of the North is, to put it mildly, completely mixed. To our surprise, those who did not support him, did not vote for him and hardly wished him well, have emerged from nowhere and are trying to push a wedge between him and the North.
Whether or not they are succeeding, we do not know. But we can not pretend not to observe that President Tinubu’s budget priorities, his infrastructural projects, his appointments and other executive actions, have, over the last two years, largely sidelined Northern Nigeria.
As far as we can see, nothing or little is being done to address the major issues of concern to the North, details of which were presented to him in writing by various groups over the years.
Mr. Chairman, due to the critical importance of this subject matter and for the benefit of our distinguished guests from Abuja, I wish to seek your indulgence to take a few moments in order to mention a few of these issues we have raised repeatedly with Mr. President over the course of our interactions.

8.1 Insecurity
As to be expected, our biggest concern was and remains insecurity in Northern Nigeria. We stressed the fact that over the last decade, widespread violence, characterised by massacres, bombings, cattle rustling, kidnapping and other manifestations of conflict and insecurity has swept across Northern Nigeria, crippling almost all productive economic activities, to say nothing of social progress.
Even as we speak, this crisis shows no signs of abating. The insurgent groups continue to multiply, their attacks becoming more deadly. With the possible exception of Kaduna and Bauchi states, the terror level everywhere in the North has continued to rise with each passing day.
Unless the government takes decisive, strong, audacious and sustained measures, including the ones that address its root causes, particularly joblessness among the youth and deepening poverty, the insecurity crisis in Northern Nigeria can hardly ever be contained.
By all means, the President needs to demonstrate to the Northern public that he is truly concerned with the raging conflict and is determined to bring it to an end.

8.2 Agriculture
Agriculture constitutes the backbone of Nigeria’s economy as it contributes some 40% of the GDP.
The Northern states provide over 75% of Nigeria’s landmass and own 95% of the livestock industry. When agriculture remains one of the more neglected sectors in the economy, it is a cause for great concern to the North. Despite the apparent good intentions of the Tinubu administration, the federal government’s allocation to agriculture in the last two years remains below 5% of the total budget. The target set by the FAO is at least 25%.

Federal budgetary allocation to agriculture and food security should be scaled up to at least 20% of total.
That way, the government could expand its support to farmers. Providing tractors and other mechanical equipment to farmers at subsidised prices, being done at the moment, is an example of a good and helpful policy. But one support urgently needed by many farmers is for the government to offer them guaranteed minimum prices for a select number of key crops including maize, rice, etc.
The need for this policy should be seen in the context of sustaining the critical policy of food security which comes from self sufficiency in food production. Reports are showing that the decision of the federal government last year to approve duty free importation of rice, maize, sorghum, beans and other food stuff, although well intended, is already taking a heavy toll on the agro-industrial sector. Because the imported rice has already resulted in a glut in the market, most of the mega rice mills set up in the wake of Nigeria’s policy of self sufficiency in rice are shutting down and workers are being retrenched. Trailer owners, drivers and manual labourers are also becoming jobless.
This policy stands in an urgent need for review.
8.3 Integrated Transport Infrastructure:
Highways
&
Water Ways

Due to its huge landmass and distance from seaports, Northern Nigeria suffers disproportionately from the lack of access to efficient, integrated transportation infrastructure in the country.
In addition to its natural disadvantages, Northern Nigeria also suffers from age-old neglect by the federal government in relation to the development of transportation infrastructure in the country. Unlike the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway and the Second Niger Bridge, not one single road of strategic importance to the North has been completed or even properly maintained in the last twenty years.
For example, this year's federal budget on roads is N1.013 trillion. But of that, a mere N24 billion (or less than 1%) was allocated to projects in the Northeast, for example. ⁸It is important to invite the attention of the President to start, re-start, expedite or complete the construction of some of the major roads that are of great strategic importance to Northern Nigeria. They include:
Abuja- Kaduna- Zaria- Kano
Ilorin- Jebba- Tegina- B/Gwari- Kaduna
Abuja- Lokoja- Okene- Auchi
Zaria- Funtua- Gusau- Sokoto- Ilela
Keffi- Akwanga- Jos- Bauchi- Gombe- Yola
Calabar- Ogoja- Wukari- Numan- Biu- Maiduguri
Wudil- Kafin Hausa- Katagum-Potiskum
Kano-Katsina
Enugu- Otukpo- Makurdi
Gombe- Biu- Damaturu- Gashua- Gusau
Lambatta- Lapai- Agaie- Bida- Mokwa
Birnin Kebbi- Yauri- Kontogora- Makera- Tegina.

8.4 WaterWays
Approximately 3,800 of Nigeria’s 10,000 KMs of navigable waterways are open for use in certain times of the year. The waterways provides access to 28 of Nigeria’s 36 states and fosters vital connections with 5 neighboring countries. We should not forget that these river channels were the only means of transporting goods and services across the country during the early colonial period.
The federal government should be urged to treat the development of Nigeria's inland waterways with the importance it deserves. For a start, we should make navigation possible from the port of Warri up to Baro in Kogi state. A fully functioning inland port of Baro will be a game-changer for the economy of Northern Nigeria.

8.5 Electricity Power Supply
It is hard to overstate the enormity of the Electricity Power Supply problems facing Nigeria but especially Northern Nigeria. Development of the electricity power infrastructure stalled over the last 20 years throwing the country into chronic electricity shortages as well as unreliable supplies. Despite the massive injection of billions of dollars to address the problem, it has actually only got worse.
Mr. The President should be persuaded to declare a state of emergency in the electric power sector. He should review the Power Sector Master Plan and implement the hydroelectric projects on the Upper and Lower Benue Rivers.
The Construction of the Mambilla Hydroelectric Dam should begin without further delay.
The construction of the Gas Transmission Pipelines including the Abuja-Kaduna-Kano (AKK), designed to deliver gas to thermal plants and industries in this part of the North should be completed by the end of this year as originally planned. The North does not stand a dog's chance of economic development without adequate electricity power infrastructure.

8.6 Education
Much has been said and written about the deep crisis of education in Northern Nigeria. Indeed, the most recent World Bank estimates put the number of out-of-school children at 20 million, 80% of whom are in the North.
There is no question that education stands in great need of special, ambitious and bold initiatives.
For one, it is grossly underfunded. And this should be corrected. And there is also a need to take other strong measures:

We must upscale the training of teachers and improve their welfare in order to recruit and retain the best brains available.
We must make the implementation of the UBE scheme more efficient and ensure that all children of school-going-age do actually go to school including the children of nomadic herdsmen, fishermen and other itinerant tradesmen.
As a matter of fact, the President should be advised to RELAUNCH THE UBE SCHEME and commit the country to a Comprehensive, Free and Compulsory Basic Education in Nigeria.

8.7 Functional Healthcare System

In general, health interventions have become progressively poorer, inadequate and ineffective. Some 70-75% of the disease burden in Nigeria is still dominated by long standing and preventable infectious diseases such as measles, meningitis, typhoid, whooping cough, cholera, HIV/AIDS ets. In some cases, there is an increasing re-emergence of diseases like tuberculosis and leprosy. Drug abuse has also become increasingly a major problem in the North. In all:

Government must tackle more vigorously the root causes of the disease burden; chiefly through the supply of safe drinking water, especially to the rural dwellers and the urban poor.
The war against fake and expired drugs should be intensified. This includes the war against drug peddling and abuse.
In the light of the withdrawal of American aids, all current programmes of addressing HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, leprosy and malaria should be reviewed.

8.8 Ajaokuta Iron & Steel Project
Since Nigeria’s independence in 1960, the Ajaokuta Iron & Steel Mill has been one of the largest industrial projects it has undertaken. Begun in 1979, the Ajaokuta steel project sits on 24,000 hectares of land and is expected to give 10,00 direct and 500,000 indirect jobs when operational.
We recall that President Bola Tinubu pledged to continue with this vital project from where President Buhari had stopped. In line with this, the President established a Ministry of Steel Development with a mandate to resuscitate and complete the project during his first tenure.
Sadly, however, there is little evidence that actual actions of the President are matching his earlier pledges.
We note that budgetary provisions, to say nothing of releases to this project, have so far been meagre. Indeed, these days, the talk is about concessioning the various units to private investors and of raising all sorts of loans to complete even the smallest units, like the rod-producing Light Section. Then there are more discussions about converting Ajaokuta’s 24,000 hectares land area into a Free Trade Zone. Even the 110MGW power plant remains comatose. Increasingly, the new attitude of the Tinubu administration appears to favor a Private-Public-Partnership model rather than government financing of the project.
Experts have estimated that some two billion dollars is all that is needed to get the Ajaokuta project up and running. This is entirely within the capacity of the federal government if there is a political will!

8.9 Oil & HydroCarbon Exploration in Northern Nigeria
After many years of exploration and prospecting, it has become abundantly clear that oil and gas deposits exist in large, commercial quantities in many parts of Northern Nigeria including in the Chad and Sokoto Basins as well as the Benue and Bida troughs. Studies have confirmed that Northern Nigeria is sitting atop a vast ocean of gas, some 206 trillion cubic feet, making Nigeria capable of becoming the 8th biggest producer of this commodity in the world.
Recent efforts at actual drilling for oil in parts of the North, especially along the Kolmani River in Gombe and Bauchi states as well as in the Kuzari and Keana arrears of Nasarawa state have produced considerable gas.
Political will is a precondition for sustaining the exploration of oil and gas in Northern Nigeria. In the circumstances, we are pleading with Mr. President to follow through with the oil and gas programme in the North as he had promised.

8.10 Federal Budgets And Economic Development Plans

From early into our independence, successive governments in Nigeria prepared budgets with a clear focus on national interests and an avowed sensitivity to the needs of the various parts of the country. Unfortunately, since 1999, this fine principle seems to have been totally abandoned. In recent years, the federal government’s budget priorities, infrastructural projects, investments and even social services have been openly skewed against Northern Nigeria. Sadly, these days, this discriminatory practice is not done secretly; no, it is splashed directly into our face - openly and frankly and without the need for apology!
Evidence of this regrettable situation abound everywhere but I will cite as an example the, the press statement published by the Federal Ministry of Works on the 5th of May, 2025:
“PRESIDENT TINUBU HAS APPROVED THE ALLOCATION OF N787.14 BILLION AND $651.7 MILLION FOR ROAD PROJECTS . . “

ALLOCATIONS BY REGION ARE:
Southwest - N1.394 trillion
Southeast - N205 billion
Northwest - N105 billion
Northeast - N30 billion
This should be read together with the figures
the federal government had earlier allocated as follows:
Lagos - Calabar Highway - N15 trillion
Lagos-Ibadan Expressway - N195 B
Lekki Corridor ($651.7m) - N978B
Outer Marina Shoreline - N176.5 B
Second Niger Bridge - N148 B
Delta State Section - N470.9 B
Enugu-Onitsha - N150 B
Benin - Lokoja - N305B

Maiduguri- Monguno - N21 billion
Abuja-Kaduna-Kano - N242 billion
Sokto-Zmfara-Katsina-Kd - N105 billion
Wusasa - Jos - N18 billion
Cham- Numan - N9.3B

8.11 President Bola Tinubu’s Insensitivity

Details of the skewed budget allocations and the one sided selection of infrastructure projects being executed by the Tinubu administration, as shown in the paragraph above, leaves all fair minded people puzzled. It's out there in the open.
An unhealthy mixture of sectionalism, partisanship and cronyism follows most of President Tinubu's actions and policies. It is true in policy decisions as it is true in appointment and deployment of personnel in the departments of the federal government.
Over the last two years, since President Tinubu has been in power, the ACF has released a number of press statements criticising some of his actions or lack of them. But we have also acknowledged and commended some decisions we felt would serve Nigeria well. Clearly, our criticisms are not borne out of mischief. The Hausa say that: “Gyara kayanka bai yi sauke mu raba ba”.
Indeed, we can go further to say that many of the issues arising between President Tinubu and the North, can be attributed to inadequate communications. This is why we welcome and commend today's interactive conference.
As you can see, many of the issues we raised here and in many of our press statements were raised with the President when we paid him a visit on the 30th of May 2024. We recall that at the end of that meeting, he suggested the creation of an
ACF - FGN Contact Committee. Regrettably, that Committee failed to take off. Perhaps this interactive conference could and should transition such a Standing Committee considering its obvious benefits.
Thank you.

29/07/2025

Speech by the Chairman BOT Arewa Consultative Forum at Arewa House Kaduna, Nigeria.

12/05/2025

Za'a cigaba da Haƙo Man Fetur a Kolmani.

09/05/2025

Tarihin Marigayi Premier Arewa na Farko kuma na ƙarshe Sir Ahmadu Bello Sardaunan Sokoto.

OPENING REMARKS BY ALHAJI BASHIR M. DALHATU, WAZIRIN DUTSE, CHAIRMAN, ACF BOT AT ITS MEETING HELD AT ACF HQTRS, KADUNA, ...
08/05/2025

OPENING REMARKS BY ALHAJI BASHIR M. DALHATU, WAZIRIN DUTSE, CHAIRMAN, ACF BOT AT ITS MEETING HELD AT ACF HQTRS, KADUNA, 30TH APRIL 2025.

Ladies and gentlemen, I extend to you a very warm welcome to this meeting of the ACF Board of Trustees. I feel very pleased to see such a large turnout for the meeting. It is without a doubt the evidence that we are committed and are ready to make the personal sacrifices associated with attendance at these meetings, with most members having to travel long distances.

I wish to particularly acknowledge and appreciate the presence of many here who are members of specialist northern organisations, including the Northern Elders Forum, the Sir Ahmadu Bello Memorial Foundation, League of Northern Democrats, Arewa Movement for Good Governance, Jam’iyan Matan Arewa, the Arewa Research and Development Project and others. Notably, members of these associate groups, are also members of the Arewa Consultative Forum in their individual capacities.

Our last meeting focused on four issues of urgent concern to the people of Northern Nigeria among many. They include the raging security crisis, the task of sustaining the unity and peace amongst and between the people of the North, and the tax administration bills which Mr. President sent to the National Assembly. Arising from our discussions, we proceeded to appoint committees of elders and experts to study these issues more closely and advise the Forum accordingly. These committees will brief us in the course of this meeting and members will have a chance to ask questions, make comments, or seek clarifications.

As you will recall, Lt. Gen Abdulrahman Dambazau chaires the Special Committee on Security with the retired Inspector General of Police, Alhaji Mohammed D. Abubakar as deputy. On the other hand, the committee on Unity, Peace and Reconciliation is led by the Ajiyan Katagum, Alhaji Mahmud Yayale Ahmed with Engineer Babachir D. Lawan, a former Secretary to the Federal Government, as deputy chairman. The report of the Committee on the Tax Reform Bills, chaired by the former Governor of Kaduna State, Alhaji Ahmed Muhammed Makarfi, was, much to their credit, well received by the Northern caucus at the National Assembly as well as the wider public.

While we remain extremely grateful for the work done by these eminent members, we regret to observe that the situation, particularly that of insecurity in Northern Nigeria, has not improved; as a matter of fact, and despite the best efforts of our increasingly overstretched security forces, it has gotten worse and keeps deteriorating by the day. Senseless killings have persisted in parts of Plateau, Borno, Benue, Niger, Zamfara, Sokoto, Katsina , Zamfara, and other parts of the North. In spite of this, we wish to assure all the people of the North of our determination to take all necessary measures in consultation and collaboration with our political, traditional, religious and other leaders to bring this crisis to an end in the shortest time possible.

While on the subject of violence and killings, we must review and condemn in the strongest possible terms, the growing hostility and attacks against Northerners that choose to live or pursue livelihoods in the southern states of Nigeria. Even innocent Northerners on journeys through southern states get killed or subjected to inhumane treatment, a tragedy which unfortunately successive administrations in this country have failed to stop.

The maltreatment and attacks on Northerners in the South is especially ironic and painful given the fact that, for centuries, the North has kept its doors wide open and welcomed people from all parts of Nigeria, courtesy of our unlimited hospitality and brotherhood. It is deeply regrettable therefore that Southerners have refused to reciprocate this noble gesture by the North. In fact, in many parts of the South, especially in the Southeast, a Northerner cannot expect to acquire one square foot of land not to speak of owning any significant landed property.

The time has come for governors and legislators in the Northern states to carry through a comprehensive reform of the system of land ownership and control. The need for this reform is self-evident, especially given the current mad scramble for land in the North by foreigners. Authorities in the North must ensure that Northerners do not become landless in their own territory.

As you all might have noticed, the growing hostility and hate mongering against Northerners in the South, appears to be exacerbated by the current unequal and discriminatory policies of the federal government toward the North. These negative developments have prompted a growing disenchantment and disillusionment amongst Northerners against the Federation of Nigeria. Some in the North now openly question the rationale or justification for remaining in the union.

The law creating the FCT Abuja in 1976 specified a number of actions to be taken by the federal government as preconditions for the area to become the federal capital territory. One important condition was that the indigenous population within the area demarcated as FCT would be paid adequate compensation and relocated to the neighboring states that currently include present day Nasarawa, Niger, Plateau, Kogi and Kaduna. It has been about 50 years since that law was passed but the federal government has failed to adequately implement its provisions. As a matter of fact and much to the regret of fair-minded Nigerians, the indigenous people of the FCT, have been forcefully driven away from their ancestral land and rendered landless and homeless through no fault of theirs.

This injustice and maltreatment of the indigenous people of the FCT Abuja call for an urgent review. The time has come for Nigeria to fulfil its obligations towards the indigenous people of Abuja, including the creation of their own state within the federation of Nigeria.

The view has been expressed and it bears repeating here, that current preoccupation with the 2027 national elections is premature and a disservice to the principle of the 4-year-term-limit given to elected officials. For the moment, it will suffice to say that Northern Nigeria is watching and auditing the actions of the elected and appointed officials; especially at the federal level. As a matter of fact, we have received a number of proposals from some of our elders that this body appoints a special committee that will conduct a detailed study and a review of the policies, projects and programs embarked upon by the current government and determine how they have impacted the various parts of the country, particularly Northern Nigeria. This is perhaps the best way to determine whether or not our interests are being sufficiently accommodated. For the avoidance of doubt, we must reiterate our faith in the principle that says all politics is local. In other words, Northern Nigeria will remain faithful not to particular politicians or political parties but to those who care about our regional interests and are willing to promote and protect them.

It is clear that Northern Nigeria is today bedevilled by numerous existential problems, some of which I have tried to highlight above. What is not in doubt is the fact that the North has in abundance what it takes to compete and prevail in any fair competition within the federation of Nigeria and even within the larger African continent. The North has 19 out of the 36 states. We also have the FCT as a varitable component. We have a majority in the Senate, the House of Representatives, the National Economic Council as well as the Council of States. The North occupies close to 75% of Nigeria’s land area and about 60% of the population. An area this big and this strong can never be subdued by any opponent provided we remain united and place our region above all other considerations. No questions about it; united we stand, divided we fall!

Finally, as we approach the momentous occasion of the 25th Anniversary Celebration of the ACF, the Secretary General will give you further briefing on the state of its preparations. I beseech you to place your best endeavors towards achieving a very successful outcome.

I thank you all very much.

God bless the Arewa Consultative Forum,
God bless Northern Nigeria,
And God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

The New Face of the Arewa Consultative Forum: A Renewed Push for Northern Unity and National Equity
05/05/2025

The New Face of the Arewa Consultative Forum: A Renewed Push for Northern Unity and National Equity

    By Haruna Abubakar Bebeji & Bello Umar   In a display of remarkable unity and urgency, the Arewa Consultative […]

21/01/2025

Sardaunan Sokoto Sir Ahmadu Bello Cikin wata tattaunawa da akayi dashi, kan zuwan sa ƙasar Amurka.

Address

Kaduna

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