Showing posts with label tourism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tourism. Show all posts

Wednesday, 19 September 2012

KANO IS RUNNING TO THE SANDS


Kano Durbar; an annual Eid festival of pageantry and loyalty
Riding behind a commercial motorcycle in the ancient north-central city of Kano, Nigeria is a two-pronged experience. While it gives you an easy and faster escape from the terrible traffic congestion and its antecedent effects, it also provides the chance to be refreshed with air – freshness determined by what location of the city you are in – which brings reprieve from the scorching heat in a city, fast transiting in to the desert region, in the agro-ecological classification of Nigeria. Kano is a beautiful city, carved out of the clayey material remains of the alluvial plains of central Nigeria, with a very rich history and conservative society, after Islamic norms. And as much as the vegetative metamorphosis is ongoing, the vagaries of globalisation seem to be fast on its heels. 

With the mammoth Kasuwan Kwari – a haven for textile, dates, rubber and plastic merchants to name a few – nestled almost at the centre of the metropolis, little wonder the tag, “centre of commerce” has come to stay, much to the despair of other cities like Onitsha, and Potiskum, barring Lagos, which in its own right, is indeed, the “centre of excellence”.  The city of Kano, written in the annals of time is today an agglomeration of nine local governments of the total forty-four which make up Kano State. Characterised by thick traditional clay defense walls and gates, the original plan of the old city, brings repute to the ancient planners, who had made the city impregnable, a commercial bliss and a tourist’s destination.

Kano boasts of astute business men, ranging from Alhassan Datata who had surpassed Umaru Sharubutu Koki and Maikano Agogo by 1922, to become the city’s richest man. He is the great grandfather to Africa’s richest billionaire today, conglomerate magnate Aliko Dangote, who amongst business interests in flour, sugar, cement, oil and confectioneries, is currently developing a tomato processing plant by the expressway before you enter the city. The Sharada, Challawa and Bwopai Industrial Estates are situated in the city, which has an Export Promotion Zone.
Aliko Dangote - Chairman, Dangote Group

Notorious for its tye and dye, the Maitatsine uprising, the Durbar and the groundnut pyramids, Kano is a ‘wonder’ in Nigerian history and mythology. In January, 2012, it was a scene of deadly bombings carried out by the terrorist group Boko Haram, targeted at government installations in the city. This they claimed was a retribution for the city’s support for the federal government’s effort in ending their activities. Also, in as much as two-hundred years, the traditional Eid Durbar – a festival of class, pageantry, royal show-off and affirmation of loyalty of the polity to the ruler – was called off in August, due to a variation in reasons from security challenges, to the Emir, His Royal Highness, Dr. Ado Bayero – San Kano, taking ill.

Before the bombings, it staked its acclaim during the #OccupyNigeria protests organized by the Save Nigeria group, then seeking the reversal of the Presidency’s decision to remove fuel subsidies, when protesters took to the silver jubilee square, and renamed it “Subsidy Square” though the naming didn’t stand the test of time. A British Broadcasting Service reporter approximated the number of protesters who camped there – a la Egypt’s Tahrir Square during the Arab spring, at two thousands. Protesters followed going-ons across the country, via their mobile phones and transistor radios as they made a name for themselves. The Murtala Mohammed ICT Park, a gigantic structure built by the state government to be the information technology hub, towered behind them. Even a twitter account, @Kano emerged from the event, highlighting the growing influence of information technology in a highly conservative and perceived illiterate society. Albeit, only 35 percent of the population are litereate.

Goron Dutse and Dalla Hills overlook the city, with the Gidan Makama museum housed in a 15th century monument and the Kurmi Market where you can get the best of handcrafts, nestled in the old city. The Aminu Kano International Airport, the country’s largest cargo airport is situated outside the old city, where the first recorded flight to the city landed at the polo field, in 1925. And while the railway system is getting a facelift, a bus or a tricycle ride around, is another experience of its own.

However, a phenomenon scarring the beauty that is Kano is the mass of waste produced which is improperly disposed and managed. This has not only polluted the air and land, but also the ground water system, which traditionally supplies the bulk of residents who are still waiting for government pipes to reach them. Combined with poor housing planning and hygiene, a contamination of the water system would result in a quick fire cholera epidemic. In 2001, well over seven hundred people died and thousands more hospitalised. The World Socialist Web Site reports that up till 2001, the only year in which Kano had not suffered a disease epidemic, was 1997, but the year before, there was a triple epidemic, with almost fifteen thousand people suffering from cerebrospinal meningitis.

Most worrisome, is the flecks of sand that settle between the lips, eyelids and eyebrows, when you ride the motorcycle around Kano. While you might have to wait for the harmattan winds to bring you any evidence of the fast encroaching desert in the middle belt and southern parts of the country; fine loess filter in from the desert daily, as turbulent winds erode the Sahara desert. And with the desert encroaching at an alarming rate of 0.6 kilometres per annum, the efforts of the women employed by the government to sweep the roads of daily stockpile of loess might not be enough; and take frontline local governments in the North-Western and North-Eastern parts of the state are already feeling the impact of the desert. Soon enough, some loess landform might appear in the Kano horizon.

The state government is stepping in, planning to plant one million trees this year, with nurseries already established in Danbatta, Bichi, Gaya, Karaye, Bunkure, Dawakin Kudu and Takai local governments as well as at the monitoring unit in Kano city, according to Alhaji Maitama Danbatta, manager of the project. To confirm the severity of the situation, the federal government is also set to launch the Great Green Wall Sahara Initiative in October, a project which is expected to run across Africa, from Mauritania in the North-West to Djibouti in the North-East, which might just help rehabilitate the existing fifty kilometre shelter belt in the state.

Floods are among disasters that frequent the city of Kano, with yearly records of lives and property lost in the throes. As at Friday, 14 September, 2012 there were calls for volunteers to help evacuate neighbourhoods close to the Warawa Dam. On Sunday, it was reported; eleven thousand, five hundred people were displaced in Kano and Jigawa States. On this occasion, a motorcycle would be handy in saving lives and property.

Word goes around that if you can ride a motorcycle in Kano, then you can anywhere in the country. Enjoying a motorcycle ride around Kano has its downside afterall. Exposure to ghastly mishaps as cyclists meander through traffic is second only to Lagos. You might also be prepared to have your heart in your mouth sometimes, but always have some water in the bathroom for a bath afterwards.

Tuesday, 21 August 2012

SLIDING GURARA

Little wonder, Nigeria's largest state by land mass, Niger is christened, the "Power State". It not only account for around 40% of  total power production output to the national grid, but hosts two past Heads of State - Gen. Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida, and Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar. It is also the birthplace of Nigeria's only indigenous Governor-General, Nnamdi Azikiwe, and secessionist leader, Col. Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu who were both born in the sleepy town of Zungeru.

It is a well drained area, with countless tributaries, emptying in to the Niger river at various points, or first entering the Kaduna river, which is itself, a major tributary of the Niger. Thus, it is hard to say Niger State is not the geotourist's haven. But when the topic of tourism is associated with the state, just the magnificent Zuma rock and the Bida blacksmith district come to mind. However, the discovery of a beau, and the subsequent interest in developing it in to a tourist delight, urged me to pay a recco visit, but not without company.

Thus, in line with taking a tour of Tswata Mukun -  the blacksmith district at Bida, even though we were not allowed to take pictures, I took four Chinese and one Vietnamese tourists to visit the Gurara waterfalls. Characterized by features which still make African rivers unnavigable - rapids, the waterfall is a gigantic stampede of water, slaloming over granitic rocks cut in beautiful formations to form a collection of small falls, and a colossal waterfall which plunges off a cliff, and then proceed through Gurara Local Government to empty in to river Kaduna.

We spent about 45 minutes at the site, taking pictures, and playing at the bank, where I was able to engage with the only local tour guide, who briefed me about the vision of turning the place in to a truly pro-poor tourist destination in Nigeria. While he talked, I kept dreaming, drawing up imaginary structures of how the place could be transformed, but now, I pictured myself as a holder of a 99year BOT tenure.

We got to the site around the time the sun was about to descend beyond the horizon, so, we were able to avoid the heat of the day, but we couldn't help folding up our pants, and feeling the coldness of the water with out feet. The tourists were delighted, and wanted to stay much longer, but we had not bought enough time on the day. We thus, left for the capital, Minna, where I plot my return in grand style, to Gurara Waterfalls.