Inside Nigeria

Prominent Places Should Not Be Named After Lugard, He Was Despicable— Shashore

A former attorney-general of Lagos state, Olasupo Shasore, says places of public significance should not be named after the first governor-general of the state, Frederick Lugard.

He made this statement at the culture, identity and history on Art for the People, a programme anchored by Molara Wood.

Shasore said Lugard should not be celebrated as he was a despicable person.

The Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) said that even though Lugard’s role in history cannot be discarded, he shouldn’t be given prominence.

Lugard is behind the amalgamation of the northern and southern protectorates in 1914 which led to the formation of the Nigerian nation.

“He was a despicable character. I’m a Nigerian. I feel the pain of the consequences of many things he did. He was blood thirsty, over ambitious, a racist, segregationist,” Shasore said.

“He’s not even now placed in his proper position either in British or Nigerian history. I think that needs to change. We need to see him for who he really was. So, places like Kogi state house and Kaduna… we shouldn’t be naming monuments after Lord Lugard.

“I’m not saying take his name out of the streets because we need to have his name in our history but places of public significance and democratic relevance shouldn’t be named after him. You can’t have the state house called Lugard House. I think that’s wrong.”

“There is nothing wrong with keeping records of history, effigies and statues but not in a celebratory way of people who ought not to be celebrated in history. His statue belongs in a museum where there would be a description of what he did,” he said.

The author also said instead of Nigerians to continue complaining about how the country came about, they should focus on ensuring that the country works.

“The longer we bicker about the fact that we were forced together because nobody really wanted to be together, I mean, it doesn’t go very far. We got to make it work and it’s people that make it work,” he said.

“To bicker over how Nigeria came together is to display a lack of faith in the national project. It’s to ignore the power of an idea for nation building and it’s to not know the power of the people into making nations work.

“Something happened in our communal experience that made us diminish ourselves in world history and somebody convinced us that it was okay to just be some people who sold cocoa, timber and rubber. We need to be intentional about our history, we can’t be accidental about it because it is the power of the people.”

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