●South East, South West
insist on regional govt ●Middle Belt Youth Council
vows shift in 2019 vote
The North is not
intimidated by calls for restructuring of the nation and is ready to discuss
the issue if the right cards are put on the table.
The Guardian Nigeria report continues:
This
was part of submissions following a two-day retreat by the Northern Senators
Forum (NSF) in Katsina State yesterday.
According
to the Forum, the region was not afraid of any “sensible and meaningful
arrangement, provided it guarantees justice, equity, fairness and the unity of
all Nigerians”.
It
described the matter as ambiguous, even to “proponents, without clear terms and
directions on how to go about it”, adding, the North would, at a later date,
take a “well articulated, firm and common position” on restructuring, in
collaboration with other northern members of the National Assembly.
The
Forum also resolved to map out a Marshall Plan for development of the region,
saying the proposition would be carried out in partnership with critical
stakeholders, its House of Representatives counterpart and the Northern
Governors Forum.
A
communiqué signed by NSF chairman, Senator Abdullahi Adamu, said the Plan would
be all embracing.
The
retreat discussed “the huge infrastructural deficit” in the North, noting that
this challenge has weigh down socio-economic advancement, hence “the need to
design an all embracing Marshall Plan for the development of the region”.
The
NSF said: “The insecurity of lives and property and the lack of capacity of the
state to adequately guarantee the most fundamental of rights are the most
critical challenges facing the region in particular and the country in general.
“The
prevalent ethno-religious crises in the region are politically motivated and
have little or nothing to do with religion. The alarming statistics of
out-of-school children and the number of learning institutions in the region explains
why it is educationally and economically backward, in addition to poor
budgetary funding and bad governance.”
Senate
President Abubakar Bukola Saraki had declared the retreat open on Tuesday, with
the governors of Katsina, Kebbi, Borno and Sokoto in attendance, alongside
Sultan of Sokoto Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar, former Inspector-General of Police
Ibrahim Coomasie, Prof. Ango Abdullahi, Dr. Usman Bugaje and others.
Speaking
earlier, the Sultan urged politicians to improve the lives of Nigerians, berating
those who merely use the electorate to win votes. He also called on government
at all levels to implement programmes that could move the country forward.
Afenifere,
a pan-Yoruba social-cultural organisation, however insisted Nigeria needs a
devolved structure and return to a parliamentary system of government.
The
group’s national treasurer, Chief Supo Shonibare, warned that the country could
not survive as a united entity amid monumental infrastructural challenge.
In
a phone call with The Guardian, he said: “Afenifere welcomes urgent actual
actions on our prescription that we need to not only conceptualize. We have
been doing that for years, but also engage in practical actions on the
discourse on the necessary structure able to resolve the agitation for
devolution, and the need to increase our ability to reduce the costs of running
government.
“It
is good to want to increase the country’s agricultural produce and explore the
idle mineral deposits in the North, one however needs a structure able to allow
those in the North make the necessary economic decisions without a ‘quango’ at
the centre determining issues of licensing and legal framework (but) able to
assure investors of speedy resolution of contact disagreements within the
region where these activities will be carried out.”
He
described the Federal Government as an unwieldy wasteful entity, absorbing 70
per cent of the country’s expenditure with very little to meet infrastructural
deficit requirements and education.
Also,
Second Republic politician, Chief Guy Ikokwu, said each state or zone should be
given responsibility as it was during independence so that each state would
take up the responsibility of its children, workers, education, agriculture,
industry and infrastructure.
“If
the country is restructured, the economy will rise. At the moment, the economy
in the Northern and Southern states are only growing by one percent. That is
why there is a lot of criminality in the country and lots of hunger such that people
are now selling their children for a bag of rice. It is something that has
never happened in before. With a restructured Nigeria, there will not be a
do-or-die affair of who wants to become president.”
The
Middle Belt Youth Council meanwhile has said, “After extensive consultations
among the youth and with our elders, (we) have come to the conclusion that it
will be a disservice and disaster for Nigeria to elect either of these tired
old men,” referring to President Buhari and former Vice President Atiku
Abubakar.
“We,
the determined youth of the Middle Belt, hereby reject both Buhari and Atiku in
the 2019 presidential elections. We shall identify and promote a more
competent, compassionate and cosmopolitan leader who would rise above tribe and
religion to foster unity, justice and equity across the country. Nigeria needs
a new leadership free from the pride, prejudice and baggage of the past to take
the nation to the next level,” said president of the group, Comrade Emma
Zopmal, in statement yesterday.
He
added: “Both of them have nothing new to offer Nigeria to turn around our
situation. Their desperation for power is a result of past personal
frustrations and desires to settle scores. These men can only worsen the ethnic
and religious conflicts bedeviling the North and the rest of Nigeria. We need
to look beyond these two. The two men are experts in unkept promises. Atiku’s
false support for restructuring is just a vote catching bait. We must not allow
ourselves to be deceived again.”
The statement called on
Nigerians, particularly the youth, to join hands with the Middle Belt body to
rescue the nation.
No comments:
Post a Comment