
Lagos State lawmakers are making a much-needed move and seeking the renaming of buildings, streets and roads named in honour of colonialists who carried out great injustices.
We do have streets and roads, along Ikoyi, in Abuja, and other major cities are named after old colonial leaders like Lugard.
A few weeks ago, the killing of George Floyd led to a reckoning in the USA, and across the world. Black people were marching, declaring that their lives matter and statues in honour of deeply racist leaders are being brought down. In the UK, the 125 years old 18 feet statue of slave trader Edward Colston was brought down during the #BlackLivesMatter protest.
The Lagos State House of Assembly has called on Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu to direct the Commissioner for Tourism, Arts and Culture to liaise with the Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice to look at the Listed Sites (Prevention) Law, 2015, with a view to removing all vestiges of slave trade and colonialism.
On Tuesday, the Deputy Majority Leader, Noheem Adams, representing Eti-Osa constituency 01 moved the motion at the plenary session.
He said:
The Assembly further noted that this brutal and callous murder of Floyd triggered worldwide condemnations, demonstrations, and protests against the continue police violence and racism of blacks in US and Europe without provocation. The House is aware that these protests further drew attention to the reality of systematic racism, oppression and domination of blacks by whites in spite of abolition of vexatious slave trade and related activities since the 18th century.
This House is further aware that the demonstration brought about the pulling down of status of Edward Colston, a notable slave trader into a river in Bristol, London, while the British authorities removed from her museum status of another prominent slave master and promised a review of history pertaining to slave trade monument and sites.
Commenting on the motion, the Speaker of the House, Mudashiru Obasa, said it was not about deleting history, adding that history could not be changed. According to Obasa, the kind of treatments meted on George Floyd in the United States must be stopped and that we should support those who protest against such act.
He said:
We can change the names of some of these buildings and streets. Some of the names remind us of these people that enslaved our people. We need to change the names, but it does not affect our history. We should look at history.
We are saying that our own language is inferior to their own language. We should let our children know that we are superior. The motion is about us, about Africans. We have to tell the world about our own civilization. The resolve is not broad enough. It is not about Lagos State alone. We have to tell African Union about reparation which was started by the late Chief M.K.O Abiola.
The President can issue an Executive Order that all over Nigeria we should change the names of streets named after beneficiaries of slave trade. Those who dehumanized Africans should not be celebrated. Our people who collaborated with the colonial masters should be made to apologise to us.
Supporting the motion, Gbolahan Yishawu representing Eti-Osa constituency 02, said:
The motion was passed unanimously and the House asked the clerk to make the resolution known to the governor. Still, it’ll be interesting to see this change come to life.
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