|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Principal
rivers |
Niger
and Benue |
|
| National
day |
October
1 |
|
| Remembrance
Day |
January
15 |
|
| Currency |
Naira |
|
| Time |
GMT
+ 1 hour |
|
| Climate |
Sub-tropical
humid |
|
| Weights
and Measures |
Metric |
|
| Structure |
Federal |
|
| System
of Government |
Presidential |
|
| Major
Languages |
Igbo,
Yoruba and Hausa |
|
| Official
Language |
English |
|
| Main
religions |
Christianity,
Islam and Traditional |
|
| Major
export Earner |
Crude
Oil |
|
| Major
Agricultural Products |
Cocoa,
Groundnut, Rubber, Palm produce. |
|
States
(36 states and 1
territory*) |
Abuja
Federal Capital Territory*, |
Abuja
|
| States |
Abia |
Umuahia |
| Adamawa |
Yola |
| Akwa
Ibom |
Uyo |
| Anambra |
Awka |
| Bauchi |
Bauchi |
| Bayelsa |
Yenagoa |
| Benue |
Makurdi |
| Borno |
Maiduguri |
| Cross
River |
Calabar |
| Delta |
Asaba |
| Ebonyi |
Abakaliki |
| Edo |
Benin
City |
| Ekiti |
Ado
Ekiti |
| Enugu |
Enugu |
| Gombe |
Gombe |
| Imo |
Owerri |
| Jigawa |
Dutse |
| Kaduna |
Kaduna |
| Kano |
Kano |
| Katsina |
Katsina |
| Kebbi |
Birnin
Kebbi |
| Kogi |
Lokoja |
| Kwara |
Ilorin |
| Lagos |
Ikeja |
| Nassarawa |
Lafia |
| Niger |
Minna |
| Ogun |
Abeokuta |
| Ondo |
Akure |
| Osun |
Osogbo |
| Oyo |
Ibadan |
| Plateau |
Jos |
| Rivers |
Port
Harcourt |
| Sokoto |
Sokoto |
| Taraba |
Jalingo |
| Yobe |
Damaturu |
| Zamfara |
Gusau |
Nigeria
National Symbols
The National flag
The National flag is divided
into three equal parts. The central part is
white, symbolizing peace and unity, and the two outer
parts which are green,
symbolize the nation's vast
agricultural wealth.
Armorial Bearings
The Nigerian coat-of-arms
features an eagle mounted on a black shield which is
tri-sected by two silver wavy bands. Two white
chargers support the shield,
and at its base is a wreath of
coctus spectabilis flowers, cast in the national
colours of white and green.
The black shield represents
the fertile soil while the silvery bands denote the
Niger and Benue Rivers which form the main inland
waterways in the country.
The coctue spectabilis is
colourful flower which grows wildly in Nigeria.
the eagle stands for strength and the chargers
symbolize dignity.
The national motto is
"Unity and Faith, Peace and Progress".
| Federal
Capital |
Abuja |
| Area |
923,768.64
Sq. Kilometres |
| Population |
About 103
million (by 1991 Census) |
| Principal
Rivers |
Niger and
Benue |
| National
Day |
October 1 |
| Remembrance
day |
January 15 |
| Currency |
Naira |
The story of Nigeria is a
selfless history of leadership in many areas.
Nigeria's citizens are serving as the epitome of this
leadership globally in the sciences, arts, humanities,
sports, diplomacy etc.
Nigeria is a massive country
of over 100 million people comprising 250 ethnic
groups speaking 4000 dialects. In size, it is more
than two and half times the size of California. The
diversity of Nigeria is reflected in its rainbow of
creeds and complexions, views and counterviews,
stretching from the fringes of the desert in the North
to the Atlantic waters in the South.
With one of the highest
literacy rates in Africa, Nigerians are their own
harshest critics, loudly establishing organs to make
sure they are heard. The country has the largest and
most vocal press in Africa, publishing views and
opinions freely expressed. However, while debates are
impassioned and views varied, Nigerians largely remain
united in a single, unswerving thread: ONE NIGERIA. It
is this oneness that has been the guiding posts of
Nigeria since independence.
Nigerians have often lost
their patience, but not their way, or faith, the one
that reminds them that clouds may often overrun the
skies; they cannot control it; that beyond the
eclipse, light awaits.
Nigeria's Leadership in
Global Peacekeeping
Since joining the United Nations
in 1960, Nigeria has consistently committed itself to
the cause of peacekeeping and peacemaking. She sent
her first troops to participate in the UN peace
mission in the Congo, only days after its
independence. In World Citizen, a former
advisor to Presidents Kennedy, Johnson and Carter,
Prof. Ruth Morgenthau says of Nigeria "is among
the most committed countries to maintaining the degree
of international order that the present UN decision
making process permits."
Today, Nigeria leads the
world in international peacekeeping. Of the 80
countries contributing troops to over 20 global
operations, Nigeria has more than 6,500 men keeping
the peace outside its borders in places such as Bosnia
Herzgovena, Iraq, Kuwait, Western Sahara, Liberia,
Sierra Leone, Angola, Rwanda. Nigerian troops have
also served in Somalia, Mozambique and Cambodia, The
Congo, Chad, Lebanon, India, Pakistan (Kashmir). The
key thing in global peacekeeping are the men and women
risking their lives in the interest of peace. Nigeria
has more of those people than any other country in the
world.
Nigeria:
Leadership in Education
There are more than 18 million
students in Nigerian schools at all levels. That is
more than the total human population of South
Africa, Ghana, Kenya, Egypt, Morocco, Tanzania and the
school population of France, Britain and Spain.
The country adopted a 6-3-3-4
educational policy in 1982. The policy requires six
years primary education, a two-tier (3-year junior,
3-year senior) secondary education and four years of
University education. There are 31 universities in
Nigeria today.
Apart from fully funding
primary education all around the country, the
government also runs secondary schools, and funds
technical colleges, polytechnics and universities in
all 30 states of Nigeria. In addition, there are
hundreds of privately-owned schools duly approved by
government for the benefit of those who prefer to send
their children to private schools.
While literacy rate stands at
about 50 per cent, the highest in Africa, the goal of
Nigeria is to eradicate illiteracy in the shortest
time possible.
A
Leader in Global Sports
Nigeria has made its mark in
global sports competition. Its national soccer team,
the Super Eagles, is adjudged the best in Africa and
one of the best ten in the world. Nigeria won the
first World Cup in the under-16 category in China in
1985 and came second in the same category two years
later in Canada. For the first time, it won the
olympic gold medal in soccer in 1996 at the Atlanta
Olympics.
Its Under-20 soccer team won
the bronze medal in the Junior World Cup competition
in the Soviet Union in 1985 and the silver medal in
Saudi Arabia in 1989. In the 1994 World Cup
competition, Nigeria led its group to qualify for the
second round.
In professional boxing,
Nigeria has produced three world champions (Hogan
"Kid" Bassey (featherweight, 1957-1959);
Dick Tiger, (middleweight, 1962-1963) and
Massachusetts resident, Bash Ali (cruiserweight,
1987).
Nigeria's athletes have also
won Olympic medals in long jump, 400 x 4 relay and
several other track and field events. In 1996, the
Nigerian team won gold medal in women's long jump.
Dozens of Nigerians are today
professional athletes in Europe and America. A
Nigerian based in the US, Hakeem Olajuwon, is today
roundly adjudged the best basketballer in the world.
Petroleum:
Nigeria's Economic Bedrock
Since 1908, when German
engineers first drilled the first oil well in Nigeria,
a buoyant, viable industry has sprung up. Oil is today
the bedrock of Nigeria's economic development,
accounting for more than 80 per cent of its foreign
exchange earnings.
Nigeria's oil reserves are
the ninth largest in the world. In 1987, crude oil
reserves totalled 16 billion barrels. Nigeria is a
member of OPEC (the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries. Dr Rilwan Lukman, a Nigerian, was
elected Secretary General of OPEC for a record sixth
term.
Nigeria also has vast largely
unexplored natural gas reserves, the world's fifth
largest. Dozens of European and American businesses
are currently exploring joint venture businesses in
gas production. But Nigerians themselves now realize
the danger of over-dependence on the oil sector. In
the past few years, deliberate attempts have been made
to concentrate on agriculture and encourage
manufacturing. Various schemes have been established
to assist farmers at every level, resulting in
impressive cutbacks in Nigeria's food import bills
while changes in Nigeria's industrial policy are
encouraging foreign participation in manufacturing. |