A life-size sculpture of the image of the Director-General, National Council for Arts and Culture (NCAC), Segun Runsewe, was unveiled recently in Etiti village, Igboukwu, the ancestral home of the Igbo nation in Anambra state, as the key agenda to herald the new yam festival across the south-east of Nigeria.
The historical project and first in perpetual remembrance of any Nigerian in Public sector tourism administration in Nigeria was inaugurated by MBIDO Igbo Association, an interagency Committee on Culture, Arts and Tourism in the south East of Nigeria. A tribute penned by the Igbo cultural body noted that Segun Runsewe, will forever be remembered for constructing the biggest Yam House in Igbo land nay Nigeria, and for listing the yam festival on national and global cultural festival calendars during his time at Nigeria Tourism Development Corporation (NTDC) in 2007.
Words on marble at the site of six feet effigy of Runsewe in Igboukwu reads “this statue of Otunba Segun Runsewe OON, the indefatigable icon of Culture in Nigeria and tourism dynamo of our time, stands as testimony of a detribalized Nigerian who gave the igbo race the deserved voice in cultural tourism world.”
National chairman, MBIDO Igbo Association, Chief Okafouzu Ugochuchukwu disclosed that Segun Runsewe is so honoured for his enduring practical statement in the erection of the first national Yam House in Nigeria in 2007, and for enlisting the celebration of the Igbo Yam Festival in national and international cultural calendar.
“Otunba Segun Runsewe stood with the Igbo cultural tourism history and tradition as an Iroko tree and Zuma rock in a dogged effort, not only putting a national structure in recognition of the Igbo traditional hold as producers of Yam but also in ensuring that the Yam festival is listed in the national cultural calendar which has helped the Yam Festival celebrated in eastern Nigeria, gain international influence and sustainable prominence,” Chief Ugochuchukwu explained at the unveiling of the statue in Igboukwu, witnessed by top government officials, traditional rulers and Igbo cultural stakeholders.
Chief Ugochuchukwu reiterated the urgent need for Igboukwu as the ancestral home of the Igbo nation to be enlisted as a United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) site, in order to preserve and promote the socioeconomic and Cultural tourism value chain in Igbo history, tradition and socioeconomic endeavours.
“We appeal to all relevant Federal Government Culture, Arts and Tourism agencies to help us enlist Igboukwu as a World heritage site as strategic global attention to encourage more research and to attract tourism visits to other numerous Igbo ecological tourism sites in the south-east of Nigeria. Sadly, none of the sites in Igbo land is so enlisted on the UNESCO heritage map in Nigeria nay the world today,” the MBIDO Igbo Cultural leader further explained.
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