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2 American Scholars Are Coming To Give Lecture At Atiku Centre In Yola

Alhaji Atiku Abubakar
Alhaji Atiku Abubakar

Two United States experts on African affairs, Dr. Carl LeVan and Mr. Matthew T. Page, are expected to present the seventh Atiku Center Lecture at the American University of Nigeria in Yola. They are authorities whose views on Nigeria are highly sought.

A statement from the American University of Nigeria said that the lecturers will speak on “Improving U.S. Anticorruption Policy in Nigeria,” the subject of a recent brief authored by Mr. Page, who is a former International Affairs Fellow with the Council on Foreign Relations. He is the coauthor of another seminal book, Nigeria: What Everyone Needs to Know, due to be released next year from Oxford University Press.

The statement said that Mr. Page has deployed his in-depth knowledge of African and Nigerian affairs to the benefit of the intelligence community, senior policymakers, and the U.S. Marine Corps.

Inaugurated in 2014, the Atiku Center for Leadership, Entrepreneurship and Development coordinates and drives the AUN mission as a development university. The Center, named after the University’s founder and former Nigerian Vice President, His Excellency AtikuAbubakar, is tasked with identifying and coordinating AUN’s development projects. Through the lecture series, it generates fresh ideas and perspectives and thus sets the agenda on development issues.

An Assistant Professor in the School of International Service at American University, Washington DC, Dr.LeVan has taught courses on African politics, comparative political institutions, and political theory at the undergraduate, Master’s, and doctorate levels.

In 2015, he published Dictators and Democracy in African Development: the Political Economy of Good Governance in Nigeria. In 2000, LeVan was the first director of the National Democratic Institute’s legislative training program in Abuja. Later he was a Visiting Fulbright Lecturer at the University of Ibadan, teaching a course on comparative federalism.

As the debate rages on the way forward for Nigeria, the American University of Nigeria, via the Atiku Center, is taking the lead in finding practical development solutions in the Northeast region and Nigeria.

That was even as the University’s President and members of the Adamawa Peace Initiative (API) recently met with members of the U.S. Congress and government officials to discuss the precarious situation in Nigeria’s northeast.

The delegation was in Washington, DC last week at the invitation of members of the House of Representatives Black Caucus, including Sheila Jackson Lee, Karen Bass and Frederica Wilson.  University and API officials also met with Congressman Steve Chabot.

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The University’s President Margee Ensign said that while members of Congress are well aware of the Chibok girls kidnapped by Boko Haram terrorists, there is less awareness about the immediate and long-term humanitarian and other needs of the region, especially food security.  “We came to Washington to share the story of people who have suffered a lot and will need help from the international community to rebuild their lives,” Ensign said.

“The people we met are very interested in the model and the programs we’ve developed to feed displaced people, promote food security, prevent young people from joining radical groups, and educating out of school children.”

Congresswoman Bass welcomed the group telling them one of the main reasons she serves in Congress is to help Africa, especially Nigeria, thrive. Americans, she said, tend to see a continent when they think about Africa, not individual countries that have very different needs and contributions to make.

An official representing the main U.S. development assistance agency praised the work of the University, saying that what has been accomplished is “magical.”  He said his agency is especially pleased with the support provided to a University pilot program that teaches reading and writing to more than 20,000 out-of-school children using tablet computers and radio broadcasts.

The U.S. government has so far provided more humanitarian assistance to Nigeria than any other country.

Dr. Ensign was interviewed about the visit by National Public Radio.  She was also asked to brief staff members of both U.S. presidential candidates as they prepare their positions on U.S. foreign policy.

Joining Dr. Ensign in Washington were AUN-API members Imam Dauda Muhammad Bello,TuraiAishatuAbdulkadir and Bishop Stephen Ransom—all from Yola, Adamawa state.  In addition to private meetings, the delegation made a formal public presentation, which included members of Congress and former ambassador to Nigeria John Campbell, who praised Nigerians’ energy and entrepreneurial spirit.  “Despite the current challenges,” he said, “the long-term odds are in Nigeria’s favor.” [myad]

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