•Our unity
not subject of debate
•Obi of Onitsha says secession futile
•Obi of Onitsha says secession futile
Pro-Biafra protesters got
a reply on their efforts yesterday from President Muhammadu Buhari: no
compromise on Nigeria’s unity. Buhari who broke his silence on the agitation
triggered by the recent arrest and detention of the Director of Radio Biafra,
Nnamdi Kalu, declared that he was not in office to preside over the balkanization
of the country.
He
had the backing of a leading traditional ruler in the Southeast and Obi of
Onitsha, Nnaemeka Alfred Ugochukwu Achebe who asked the protesters to shelve
the idea of secession from the rest of Nigeria.
The Nation report continues:
“The
corporate existence of Nigeria as a single entity is not a subject of debate
and will not be compromised,” Buhari affirmed in a message to the investiture
of Achebe as the 7th Chancellor of the Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria.
The
message was delivered by the Minister of State for Education, Professor Anthony
Onwuka, who himself is from the Southeast.
He
said: “The country is currently facing challenges of insurgency and other forms
of insecurity that has become a threat to Nigerians to live their country and
be educated in their country.
“The
security situation in the country entails that every Nigerian must discharge
his responsibility in bringing about peaceful coexistence.
“The
menace of insurgency and actions of some people agitating for dismemberment of
this country will be surmounted.
“I
therefore sound a note of serious warning that the corporate existence of
Nigeria as a single entity is not a subject of debate and will not be
compromised.”
On
the state of education in the country, Buhari pledged to “put our education
system back on sound track.”
Universities,
according to him, “should on their own part key into the wave of change
across the country. As pacesetters, the universities must avoid any corrupt
practices.”
Although
Obi was cautious in his prepared speech on the unrest in the Southeast and
other parts of the country, he later said in an interview with reporters that
pro-Biafra agitators should have a rethink.
He
said the agitation violates Nigeria’s constitution of the country and the
principles of democracy.
The
traditional ruler drew their attention to the inherent dangers involved in
their action, emphasizing that Nigeria remains a united and indivisible country
irrespective of the numerous challenges.
He
urged them to channel all their grievances through their elected
representatives in the National Assembly for consideration, rather than
embarking on violent protests that could result in breakdown of law and order
in the region.
He
said the renewed agitation for a Biafran state would not solve the various
economic and social problems confronting the Southeast zone or add any value to
the development and progress of the entire country.
The
geo-political zone, he said, remains an integral part of Nigeria and the
leaders from the area so much believe in the unity of the country and would
always work towards sustaining such bond.
In
his prepared speech, he said: “We may have lost our bearing as a nation with
the discovery of petroleum in the 50s. A false sense of national wealth has
turned us into a nation of frolickers and hustlers, who are fighting one
another for a greater share of the proverbial national cake, and spending it
extravagantly, rather than leveraging the God given windfall to build a stable,
diversified, and more prosperous nation.
“As
the volume of production and market value of petroleum have fallen, that is, as
the national cake has shrunk in size, the competition and struggle for a stake
in that cake has become more intense.
“Thus,
today, there is tension everywhere – Niger Delta, Boko Haram, MASSOB,
industrial strikes, armed robbery, kidnapping, ethnic rivalries, tension
between and within the political parties, etc. The sum total is that, our
national mindset, particularly amongst the upper and middle classes, which
includes most of us in this audience, has been focused on the consumption,
rather than the creation, of our national wealth.”
He
added: “We spend unbelievable amounts importing petrol and subsidizing
its retail price whilst our three refineries with adequate capacity to meet our
national requirement are literarily moribund, despite huge sums spent on
endless Turn Around Maintenance; smaller and less endowed countries
successfully operate their own refineries optimally and do not suffer scarcity.
“Nigeria
is probably the largest importer of electric generators in the world despite
our endowment with natural sources of energy, such as petroleum, coal, hydro
and solar energies, and the huge sums spent by successive governments on the
power sector. On the other hand, a smaller country, Ghana, takes gas from
Nigeria and generates most of its electricity requirements.
“Our
food import bill, spent mostly on rice and wheat, is about US$22 billion
annually, yet our country is blessed with vast arable land and a large
population of young jobless people that can be usefully deployed to
agriculture.
“Road
construction in Nigeria is more expensive than most parts of the world, yet our
roads are breaking down faster than we build them because the traditional mode
for heavy haulage, namely, railways, pipelines and waterways, are comatose; a
trailer load of petrol from Mosimi to Maiduguri causes more damage to our roads
than the value of the product being transported.
“A majority of our state
governments have recently taken the so-called “bailout loans” for recurrent
expenditure, meaning that future generations are being inflicted with the
burden of the profligacy of the current generation.”
No comments:
Post a Comment