AS Nigeria marks 53 years of independence next week, one question that has defied answer is what the actually number of Nigerians is.This question, as simple as it appears, has been difficult to answer in the last 150 years.Few weeks to the country’s 53rd independence anniversary, five months to 100 years of the amalgamation of the southern and northern protectorates to create Nigeria and three years to the 2016 scheduled population census, the issue of how many we are was flung to the front burner of raging issues, recently. National Chairman of the National Population Commission (NPC), Chief Festus Odimegwu stirred the hornet’s nest when he said, in an interview with journalists in Abuja late August that the country had not had any credible census since 1816. Blaming the irregularity on distortion and falsification of figures for selfish and political reasons by politicians, he said: “No census has been credible in Nigeria since 1863. 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. ”Odimegwu’s comments raised a quantum of dust in the polity with the presidency firing him a query. He also received an avalanche of attacks from many northerners especially, Kano State Governor, Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, who during a visit to President Goodluck Jonathan at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, called for Odimegwu’s sack over his denigration of the 2006 Nigeria census.
150 years of controversial headcounts
The question of how many Nigerians are there has been popping up
long before the people evolved into a nation through amalgamation in 1914. The first recorded headcount was at the Colony of Lagos in 1863.
Another one was held at the then colony in 1871. It was, thereafter, conducted
every 10 years.
The first national census was in 1911. Of the 16.054 million
persons counted, the Northern Protectorate had 8.12 million, about 50.1 per
cent of the total population. After the amalgamation of the Northern and Southern
Protectorates in 1914, another exercise was held in 1921. The population was
put at 18.7 million with the South having 48 per cent of it. Other exercises were conducted in 1931, 1953, 1962/63, 1973,
1991 and 2006. Except in the 1962 exercise, the North has always maintained an
edge over the South, thus affirming the 1911 projections. The 1952-53 exercises put the nation’s population figure at 31.6
million. This census was considered an undercount for a number of reasons:
apprehension that the headcount was related to tax collection; political
tension at the time in eastern Nigeria; inability to reach many remote areas;
and inadequate training of enumerators in some areas. The undercounting was
estimated at 10 percent or less. The 1962 and 1973 censuses were most controversial and were
subsequently cancelled by the governments in power. The mid-1962 exercise was
canceled after much controversy and allegations of over-counting in many areas.
Of the 45 million Nigerians counted in 1962, the South had 24 million, thereby
“overtaking” the North, which was allegedly favoured in past exercises. A second attempt in 1963, which was officially accepted, was
also encumbered with charges of inaccuracy and manipulation for regional and
local political purposes. Indeed, the official 1963 figure of 55.6 million was
inconsistent with the census of a decade earlier because it implied a virtually
impossible annual growth rate of 5.8 percent. The equally controversial 1991 census posted a figure of 88.9
million people with a projected growth rate of 2.9 per cent Before the 2006 headcount, intense bickering arose regarding the
proposal to include ethnicity and religion in the questionnaires to generate
the statistics of the various ethnic and religious groups in the country given
claims and counter-claims regarding their relative strengths. The North
threatened to mobilize its people to work against the exercise should these two
indices appear in the questionnaire. There was equally a counter threat from
the South-east to boycott the exercise if they were not included. In the long
run, the North had the upper hand and religion and ethnic group was excluded to
the chagrin of Southeasterners.
Consequently, population figures had always been a subject of
mudslinging between Southern and Northern politicians. For Southerners, the
belief is that the population of the North had been “over-counted”. They argue that going by simple demographic distribution pattern
across the globe, population increases as one move from the hinterland (desert
or Savannah regions) to the coast. They wondered why in the case of Nigeria,
the North which lies in the arid zone, is more populous than the coastal South. For Northerners, their extensive landmass and population must
not be taken for granted, facts that several head counts had confirmed. And the
controversy continues.
Odumegwu’s comments belie Nigeria’s topsy-turvy experience with
population census. Acclaimed as the most populous nation in Africa, the true
number of Nigerians has always remained a matter of estimates. Currently,
Nigeria’s population is between 160 – 167 million based on projections from the
2006 census that put the nation’s population at 140 million with the North
accounting for 73.6 million and the South having 64.9 million.
Lagos complaints
One state that strongly disputed the 2006 census was Lagos,
which promptly filed a petition at the Census Tribunal and got a favourable
judgment. At the 1991 headcount, Lagos had 5.686 million inhabitants while Kano
had 5.632. However, in 2006, Lagos recorded 9.014 million people compared to
Kano’s 9.384 million. The state government, whose parallel headcount recorded
17,553,924 people, described the NPC’s figure as too low. It prayed the
tribunal to order a repeat headcount in 14 Local Councils, namely, Alimosho,
Ojo, Ajeromi-Ifelodun, Apapa, Lagos-Island, Lagos Mainland, Ikeja, Ikorodu,
Kosofe, Mushin, Badagry, Oshodi-Isolo, Shomolu and Surulere and the prayer was
answered.
The Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Ade Ipaye,
said: “In the final analysis, the official national census results for
the 14 old Local Government Councils (now 40 LGAs and LCDAs) in LagosState have
been nullified. This vindicates the resolve of the government to base its
physical and economic plans on a projected population of 17,553,924 in 2006 and
over 21,000,000 currently. We now expect that the National Population
Commission will urgently announce plans for a recount as ordered by the
tribunal,” he said. However, Lagos may not have a repeat headcount in the affected
areas until 2016 when another nationwide census would be carried out.
Feelers from the NPC indicate that the commission lacked the basic
benchmark and requirements to conduct a census now.
Paucity of funds has always hindered scheduled censuses. That
was one of the major reasons it took 15 years to hold the 2006 census after the
1991 exercise.
N600 billion budget
Last year, President Goodluck Jonathan approved a budget of N600
billion to the NPC for the 2016 census exercise. The amount is to take care of
the activities of the commission for the period of five years at the rate of
N120 billion per year. Population is a major asset; as resource for development, and is
also the prime beneficiary of development in society. It constitutes the bulk
of the producers and consumers of goods and services. Having a fair estimate of
the population of a country enables the government to plan effectively for the
betterment of the citizenry. Otherwise, economy planners will be groping in the
dark. In Nigeria, population has been a rather sensitive and controversial issue
because of its implications for shaping geopolitical regions, state and ethnic
relations and balance of power. It is the attitude towards the population
question, in terms of its absolute size, as it concerns election, the states
and the sub-regions that constitute the background to census controversies.
Given the controversies stoked by Odimegwu’s comments, his
assurances and the hefty budget approved by the government, it is to be seen if
the 2016 census will live to expectation.
Source: http://www.vanguardngr.com
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