L-R
Governors Abiola Ajimobi of Oyo State, Mallam Nasir el-Rufai of Kaduna State,
Acting President Yemi Osinbajo (C), Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State, Kashim
Shettima of Borno State
|
Acting President Yemi
Osinbajo yesterday met with governors of the 36 states of the federation for
over four hours in furtherance of his consultations on the three-month
ultimatum handed the Igbos by Northern youths to relocate from the region.
Leadership
report continues:
The
ultimatum was issued by the youth groups in response to the agitation for a Biafran
state by the Nnamdi Kanu-led indigenous people of Biafra (IPOB).
The
acting president had met separately with leaders of thought and traditional
rulers from both the North and the South East.
Before
yesterday’s meeting entered into a closed door session at the State House
conference centre, Osinbajo told the state chief executives that they have a
huge role to play in ensuring peace and security in their respective domains.
Declaring
that leaders in the country should show greater unity of purpose, he warned
them against playing politics with issues of security.
He
said, “We must resist the temptation to play politics especially with matters
of security, but to reach for simplistic narratives that might be originally
expedient and satisfying but false, deceiving and sometimes unhealthy to proper
understanding of the issues.
“Sometimes
intensions are perceived on the account of the fact that they have wrong
perception about a particular thing. I think it is in our place to ensure that
we dig down the fact and ensure that people are given the fact and ensure that
we don’t colour them with politics”.
He
said the federal government is committed to working with the states to ensure
peace and security and to continuously assure Nigerians of their safety in all
parts of the country.
He
noted that the issues facing the country currently are centred on unity in
diversity, adding that “we need to handle the issues carefully”, even as he
pointed out that they have been occasionally exploited by politicians for
selfish reasons.
Osinbajo
emphasized the need for use of moderate language in expressing agitations and
grievances, saying that freedom of expression is not tantamount to call to
anarchy through careless utterances.
The
acting president noted that the consultative meetings earlier held agreed that
Nigeria’s unity should not be taken for granted.
He
said there was also a unanimous agreement by stakeholders that the leadership
of the country should do everything possible to avoid bloodshed and violence
arising from the current agitations.
Osinbajo
equally noted that there was consensus among participants that the
constitutionally guaranteed freedom and equality of all citizens should be
upheld and respected.
He
warned that any attempt to dislocate any Nigerian from any part of the country
will not be tolerated, adding that the country’s sovereignty and insolubility
is not negotiable.
Accordingly,
he advised that leaders should not condone hateful or divisive speeches, even
as he said government will do everything possible to productively engage
the youths in the country to prevent them from being used as tools for
perpetrating violence.
He
urged them to also speak out forcefully and promptly against any kind of
divisive speech without waiting to be prompted.
Osinbajo
said, “We must not allow the careless use of words, careless expressions that
may degenerate into crisis. We are a people that like to talk and we express
ourselves loudly but it is expected for us to recognize that it is those same
words that can cause conflagration that can unfortunately lead to calamity.
“We
must be careful of how we express ourselves. What we have seen in recent times
is that some of the languages used have tended to degenerate badly and I think
that we must begin to speak up against some of these things and ensure that we
protect our democracy and our nation from the hands of rhetoric that may just
divide us.
“From
all of the consultations, we have all agreed on certain issues. We agreed that
Nigeria’s unity should not be taken for granted. No one wants to see us go down
the path of bloodshed or war. We also agreed on the permanency of the Nigerian
constitution, that the1999 constitution is the basis for our unity. It is the
basis for the legal contract that exists between all of us.
“Our
meetings were frank and open as I hope this will be, we were able to agree on
most of the critical issues that were discussed and in most cases changed
perceptions that may have been long embedded in their minds”.
The
acting president continued: “We also agreed that under no circumstances should
we condone hateful speeches and that government should take all steps necessary
to bring to book all those who preach violence, in particular the kind of
expressions of dissent that can cause violence.
“We
also agreed that we need to do more to engage our youth productively, create
some jobs, and multiply the economic opportunities available. More importantly
we agreed on the need for leaders to speak out forcefully to counter divisive
speech or any kind of woe mongering.
“We
agreed that leaders at all levels speak out forcefully against any kind of
divisiveness or divisive speech. And we expect that our political leaders will
do so without waiting to be prompted”.
According
to Osinbajo, all of those who spoke felt that sometimes when leaders do not
speak up promptly it always results in degeneration, no matter what the problem
may be.
He
said, “This applies to both the statement made by the young people in the
Southeast as well as the youths in the Northern states. We discovered there was
a need for much greater resonance in the way that these things are done and for
the leaders to speak up more forcefully.
“We
believe that if the leaders do not speak up forcefully enough and if for any
reason matters are allowed to degenerate, not only does leadership lose their
legitimacy, they run the risk of things going completely out control”.
Osinbajo
commended the leaders from the North and South for their openness at the
consultations, stating that they were extremely responsible even in their
criticisms of what they felt were issues that should have been better handled.
He
said, “I think that their criticisms were fair and balanced. I must commend
them for their sense of responsibility and their leadership.
“Going
back to what was said, some of the issues that came up and I hope that we will
discuss in greater details are the issues around the herdsmen and farmers crisis,
especially the way that some of these have resulted in flashpoint across the
country. We started those discussions during the consultations we had and I
believe that we will be able to deepen those discussions in our meeting and
possibly hold a more expanded meeting where we will be able to take a closer
look at it.
“It
is absolutely important that we are able to make lasting and satisfactory
solutions to these problems. Of course the problems are multidimensional but
the states have a very important role to play, especially because they are in
control of land in their territories. I must say that I trust that all of us
appreciate the need to show greater unity of purpose and the determination to
work together to resolve various challenges that arise on a constant basis for
the benefit of all Nigerians regardless of party affiliations”.
Dialogue
With Northern Youths Best Option – Kwankwaso
Meanwhile,
former Kano State governor, Senator Rabiu Kwankwaso, has called for caution
over the call for the arrest of members of a youth group asking the Igbos
resident in the Northern part of the country to vacate the area before 1
October, this year.
While
describing such call as unpatriotic and capable of causing national insecurity,
he also urged the governors and other leaders in the Northern part of the
country that have called for their arrest to rather dialogue with the youths.
The
politician, who currently represents the people of Kano central Senatorial
district in the National Assembly made this disclosure yesterday in Abuja
during a media parley with some journalists.
He
further noted that arresting the young men would rather aggravate the already
tensed atmosphere, even as he described the people of Igbo extraction as bona
fide citizens of the country who are free to live in any part of the country
just like every other Nigerian.
“The
general belief in the North is that we are better together as a country”, he
said, noting that the unity and development of the country should be of
paramount concern of every Nigerian.
He
attributed the tension that the pronouncement of the youths as well as the
counter call made by another group in the South had generated to the weakness
in the nation’s political order, as well as the silence of the elders who ought
to call the youths to order.
His
words, “Many people are afraid to call the youths to order; if they are wrong,
they are wrong”.
He,
however, commended the steps taken so far by the federal government and
particularly Acting President Yemi Osinbajo who has been holding series of
meetings with leaders of thoughts from various parts of the country as well
security chiefs in a bid to ensure there is peace in the country.
He also stated that the agitation of the Igbos which borders on the need for better representation at the centre and the need for even development of their zone could be addressed without resulting to threat of secession.
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