Elder statesman and leader of Northern Elements Progressive Union (NEPU) Youths Association and Assistant Publicity Secretary of the party, Alhaji Tanko Yakasai OFR, has reacted to claims by Harold Smith, who was deployed to Nigeria in 1955 and lived in Lagos, working in the Ministry of Labour headquarters under the administration of the then Governor-General James Robertson, saying the British rigged the 1959 General Elections for the North to control Nigeria.
He also said the North has more than 50 percent of Nigeria’s population since the 1911 census, which gives it an advantage during elections.
Below are excerpts of his response;
The 1953 constitutional crises brought about by Chief Enahoro’s motion for independence in 1956 forced the British colonial authorities to convene the conference.
The refusal of members of Parliament from the North to attend a further meeting of the House of Representatives in Lagos in protest against the attack by some hooligans against them after the vote in the House against Enahoro’s motion led to the convening of the Conference in London by the Colonial authorities in 1953.
We in the NEPU believed the document was the handiwork of the British colonial officials spearheaded by a British colonial information officer in Northern Nigeria called Captain Moloney.
Bogus provincial meetings were held and that paper was presented and adopted as the position of Northern Nigeria to the 1953 Constitutional Conference. Few members from opposition parties were invited to the provincial conferences just to give a semblance of public participation in the ruse organised by British officials and called Provincial Conferences.
In order to register our protest at the autocratic way those meetings were handled, the NEPU directed thousands of its supporters all over Kano Province to go to Kano International Airport and register the disapproval of the masses to the so-called 9-point Northern Agenda to be taken to the London Conference in the name of the masses of Northern Nigeria. Our supporters converged at Kano airport in their thousands. The party decided that the leaders must personally lead the protest at the airport.
Later that night police swooped on the houses of leading NEPU members and arrested 19 of us and were arraigned before the emir’s court the following day and prosecuted on trumped-up charges of unlawful assembly. All these took place in 1953, two years before Mr. Harold Smith was employed to work in Nigeria. It was at that London Conference that the modalities for Nigerian independence were first discussed.
It should be borne in mind that there were series of elections in Nigeria between 1951 and 1959; these were the 1951 Regional/Federal elections, the 1954 Federal elections, the 1956 Regional elections, and the 1959 Federal elections. All these elections, except that of 1959, were conducted when Mr. Smith was in the UK.
It is impossible with an array of such leaders and multitude of their militant lieutenants that one individual can manipulate the outcome of the elections that will pave way for the emergence of leaders who would be given the reign of power in Nigeria’s march for independence.
I invite anyone reading this presentation to have a good look at the results of series of elections that took place between 1951 and 1959 and compare the outcome and see if there was any substantial difference the so-called manipulation by Mr. Smith made to change the outcome in favour of anyone.
There is no big difference in relation to North/South dichotomy in terms of the number of members from the two areas North and South in the House of Representatives. We should consider the number of members of the three political groups in the National Assembly after the 1951 general elections and the 1959 elections in terms of the strength of the three political groupings of NCNC, AG and NPC along with their allies. It will be noticed that with the difference in terms of members of Parliament the situation gave no room for the British colonial authorities or anyone else to influence the outcome of the elections in 1959.
The 1954 Constitution increased the membership of the House of Representatives to 184 on 50:50 formula for the North (as a bloc) and the South (Eastern/Western Regions and Lagos combined). Thus, the North and South had an equal number of 92 seats each.