Tag: Peace

  • Agege Durbar: Organisers call for unity, peace

    Agege Durbar: Organisers call for unity, peace

    The Seriki Hausawa Agege, Lagos State, Alhaji Musa Muhammed Dogon Kadai, has appealed to Nigerians to let the unity of the country be uppermost in their hearts.

    He said those agitating for secession should be careful, saying nobody should call for another civil war in the country.

    He made the plea at the Durbar cultural celebration held in Agege. He said Nigerians irrespective of tribes, religious leanings or ethnicity should promote those things that bind us together instead of those that separate us.

    The Seriki said Nigeria cannot afford to break up because the nation’s progress and advancement are tied to its unity, adding that as a nation, ‘we really need unity to advance our potential for growth and greatness.’ He appealed to Nigerians to work assiduously for the unity of the country.

    He advised Nigerians to shun discrimination, tribalism, ethnic and religious sentiment that are causing crisis within the country, put all hands on deck and think on how criminality and other social vices increasing daily can be eradicated.

    The monarch prayed for the quick recovery of President Muhammadu Buhari, while he canvassed support for his government.

    Senior Executive Assistant, Dangote Industries Limited, Alhaji Abdulkadir Musa Sidi, appealed to agitators to sheathe their swords and allow peace to reign in the country.

    He said “What we are doing here today is to further strengthen the unity of this country. Many have died in their bid to unite the country, we should not allow their death to be in vain.’’

    He said the nation should support the good government of President Muhammadu Buhari, who he described as a messiah that Allah sent to redeem the country from doom.

    Sidi thanked the monarch for strengthening the unity of the country through the establishment of Durbar celebration in Lagos State. He enjoined other traditional rulers in the state and the country to go beyond maintaining peace in their domains to enhancing national cohesion

    All Hausawa emirate Councils in Agege and other parts of the state converged to celebrate the historical event with the monarch.

    The event began with a procession of all the district heads and title holders on their horses from Seriki’s Palace at Isokoko through many quarters in Agege community and back to  Jibrin Martins Memorial School in Agege where guests were entertained.

    The event was attended by thousands of Arewas’ and other ethnic groups across the country. It brought out the rich culture of Hausas.

    The celebration, according to organisers, was the first of its kind in Agege and it shall be a continuous, which would be observed a day after the Eid el Fitr of every year.

  • Lawmaker, community leaders seek peace in Kwara

    Lawmaker, community leaders seek peace in Kwara

    The need for peaceful coexistence and unity among Kwara State residents has resonated in Igbaja, Ifelodun Local Government Area of the state.

    Politicians, community leaders and traditional rulers took turns to preach unity among the three ethnic groups in Kwara South senatorial district. They said peace is the antidote for growth and development in the area. The three ethnic groups are Igbominas, Ibolos and Ekitis of Kwara State.

    The event was the distribution of sets of computer to Muslim Community Primary School and ECWA Demonstration School all in Igbaja.

    The event was organised to coincide with the birthday anniversary of the former All Progressives Congress (APC) Kwara state House of Assembly aspirant, Kayode Oyin-Zubair.

    Member of the Kwara state House of Assembly, Prince Saheed Popoola attended the occasion.

    Prince Popoola said, “There is need for peace and unity among the three prominent ethnic groups in Kwara South. They are the Igbominas, Ibolos and Ekitis. In unity and harmonious coexistence there will be growth and development. It is the best for the three ethnic groups.

    “What he has done today is a signal to the well-heeled in the society to always spare a thought for the masses and less privileged in the society. I want to assure that we will not relent in our struggle for the betterment of our society.

    Today’s occasion is eventful and I congratulate our friend for good outing. I am here to felicitate with him. I want pray for God to continue to raise him up. It is a very nice occasion.”

    In his remark, founder, Al-Hikmah University, Ilorin, Alhaji Abdulraheem Oladimeji said the people stand to gain in peace and unity.

    Alhaji Oladimeji, who is also the Jagunmolu of Igbomina land urged well-to-do and philanthropic minded people to emulate the kind gesture of Kayode Oyin-Zubair be assisting the needy in the society.

    “But not many of us can do what this our son is doing today as many of us are self-centred and tight-fisted,” he said.

    Represented by Dean Faculty of Education, Al-Hikmah University, Igbaja campus, Prof Julius Lawal, said that “we have a lot to gain in unity.

    If there is unity development will not elude us and no government will take us for a ride.”

    Also speaking, Oludopo of Oke-Iya Ipo, Alhaji Saheed Obadoye aligned with other speakers in praying for harmonious relationship between the communities in the entire Igbomina land and Kwara south in general.

    Earlier, the donor of the sets of computer, Kayode Oyin-Zubair said gesture is aimed at encouraging pupils to be interested in education.

    He said, “This will encourage them to be interested in acquiring education. I still hope to extend same to other three schools in the community. I urge the well-meaning sons and daughters of Igbaja to borrow a leaf from us as government alone cannot do everything.”

  • UN seeks more investment in women, peace in Nigeria 

    UN seeks more investment in women, peace in Nigeria 

    The United Nations (UN) on Wednesday called on the Federal Government of Nigeria to double its investment on the development of women and promotion of peace in the country.

    Deputy Secretary General of the UN, Amina Mohammed made the call after closed doors meeting with Acting President Yemi Osinbajo at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    According to her, the UN team led by herself was at the Villa to discuss the implementation of the agenda 2030 and 2063 and see how Nigeria could be supported especially in regards to development of women.

    The UN deputy scribe who served as minister of Environment before her current position t the world organization explained that in achieving the desire of promoting women development, the Federal Government needs to begin to put women at the center of it affairs.

    She said “I am honoured to be leading a delegation with the focus on peace and development of women.

    “With me we the chief executive of the UN women, we also have our special representative on women and conflict, we also have with us, our partner the AU, the special adviser also on peace, women and development.

    “All our regional heads partnering together with the ministry of women affairs and the support of the minister of for national planning,” Amina said.

    “It’s an exciting time to be here because really we are talking about the implementation of the agenda 2030 but also 2063 and for us, it’s about how do we support Nigeria and it’s a very difficult context to do more and to do scale so everybody feels it.

    “We know that there many lessons that have learnt and there challenges that we have but we have some successes from the North East all the way to the South.

    “We want to make sure that we do more so that we can see the scale of this, particularly from the women at the center.

    “In our discussion with the acting President, it’s been about how to increase investments in women, peace and development to ensure that women are a central part of what we do.

    “And we will see the difference, as he said, it’s not just the question of the morals or rights but it’s an economic one as well,” the UN deputy scribe added.

     

  • ‘Peace ‘ll return to PDP’

    Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chieftain in Delta State Fred Oghenesivbe has commended the judiciary for saving democracy from extinction through its verdict which gave Senator Ahmed Markafi’s Caretaker Committee victory.

    Oghenesivbe, in a goodwill message to Makarfi and Delta State PDP Chairman Kingsley Esiso said the judgment will restore the hope of the common man in their quest for justice. He said it would have been a major setback for democracy, if the judgment went the way of Senator Modu Sheriff and his group.

    He said: “It is a victory well deserved for the entire Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) political family. It is a good development for the consolidation of representative government, sustenance and advancement of constitutional democracy in our country.

    “The sound and reassuring verdict of the Supreme Court has restored our hope that the judiciary has truly been rebranded and doing the needful to dispense quality justice without fear or favour.

    “It is indeed, heart warming that at last justice prevailed making it possible to pave the way for full reconciliation within the party. The judgment will no doubt further deepen our democracy, promote the principles of equity, good conscience and the rule of law.”

    Oghenesivbe said the international community would have given up on the nation’s democracy, if the scheming by the All Progressives Congress (APC) to destroy the PDP came to fruiton.

    He added: “Some cabals worked so hard to destroy the PDP so as to make Nigeria a one party system and had relied extensively on the judiciary to achieve their crafty and retrogressive objective of weakening the already vibrant democracy in the country. Thanks to my Lords the Justices of the Supreme Court for sustaining their cherished integrity and the uniqueness of the bench.

    “Its time to rebuild and rebrand our great party, the PDP. There are no winners and no loosers within the party, which is why all stakeholders must of a necessity forget the past, come back to the conference table to work out solid strategic political modalities on how to effortlessly return PDP to Aso Rock Villa come 2019.

    “Our party leaders, especially Senator Modu Sheriff, Cairo Ojougbo, and their group must now work harmoniously with Senator Ahmed Makarfi and the national structure to conduct a peaceful, free and fair congress in the near future.”

    The APC national government complete failures in virtually all aspects of our national life has provided a big crack in APC foundation which makes it possible for PDP to reclaim her national political supremacy and to take over national government on May 29, 2019.

    “I respectfully congratulate all party faithfuls, Senator Ahmed Makarfi, His Excellency Senator Dr Ifeanyi Arthur Okowa the Executive Governor of Delta State, Delta State PDP Chairman, Olorogun Kingsley Esiso and party supporters at home and in Diaspora for the hard earned but sweet victory.

    “Let’s now join hands together to reclaim Aso Rock Villa and all PDP fraudulently won states in 2015 via the deceitful CHANGE propaganda of the APC party,” Oghenesivbe added.

     

  • Peace, at last, in Oko?

    Peace, at last, in Oko?

    For years, Oko a community in Orumba North Local Government Area of Anambra State, was at war with itself. For its pride, the only polytechnic in its land, was at daggers drawn with the monarch of the community. Established by former Vice President Dr Alex Ekwueme, the Federal Polytechnic Oko was torn apart by the acrimony between its leadership and the community’s traditional institution headed by Igwe Laz Ekwueme, brother of the former vice president. The monarch accused the Rector, Prof. Godwin Onu of marginalising the host community, while the rector charged the ruler with seeking to suppress the institution by demanding that every appointment and contract pass through him as the traditional head of the community.

    At a time, it led to killings and destruction of property in the kingdom by the two camps which involved security operatives from both the state and federal levels.

    The battle ground later shifted to Abuja with both parties boasting of highly connected people.

    Today, the story has changed with the new governing council of the institution, Hon Lasbry Amadi leading others including the Rector of the school to the traditional ruler of the kingdom, Igwe Prof Laz Ekwueme to talk the way forward.

    The longstanding misunderstanding between both camps had indeed denied both the polytechnic and the host community a lot of good things from outside the state.

    The 10th new governing council of the institution was inaugurated recently by the minister of Education, Mallam Adamu Adamu in Abuja.

    Speaking at the palace of Igwe Ekwueme, the chairman of the council, Hon. Lasbry Amadi said the Polytechnic and the council hold the monarch in high esteem and would do everything possible to seek a wholesome synergy from the wealth of experience of the monarch and his people.

    He said, “We have gone to the institution and have seen the developments on ground and we have equally seen the challenges. And we think we will achieve more by the esteem cooperation of the Igwe and his entire subjects”

    “There is no alternative to peace and we cannot work without the inputs and contributions of the community. The council will do its best to achieve greater developments and peace is a panacea to attaining such goals”

    “We are hopeful that with peace, the cooperation of the Igwe and the entire polytechnic community, coupled with the experiences of all the Council, the polytechnic will be placed in a first position among its peers”

    “The polytechnic is what the nation needs for technological advancements in this country”

    “Therefore the Council is here to tap from your fatherly disposition and we hope to rely on your wise counsel to achieve greater results,” Amadi emphasised.

    However, he commended the president, Mohammaadu Buhari and his team for finding the new council worthy to serve in the federal institution.

    The member, representing Orumba North and south at the National Assembly, Hon Ben Nwankwo, advocated for peace and progress, while charging the council to restore the confidence of the community.

    He said he was already working on a bill to make the institution a university of technology, adding that the Rector of the school had done well, stressing that the school should work closely with the host community.

    On his part, the traditional ruler of the community, though visibly angry over the alleged treatment he received from the institution in the past, commended the new council for toeing the line of peace and solidarity, which he said had been lacking before now.

    He maintained that Oko community is a peaceful place that has coexisted with the polytechnic since its inception, while accepting to work with the new council.

    He revealed that Federal Polytechnic Oko under his watch as the past Chairman of the Board of the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE) was rated high in academic and physical developments and charged the present council to work harder to achieve the aim of making Oko a Federal University of Technology to serve the Southeast.

    He bemoaned the strained relationship with the institution’s management adding that Oko continue to create open hands for peace to reign stressing that it is still not late to renew a positive and resourceful relationship which will be rewarding to both the school and the host town, Oko.

    He called on the council to restore the lost glory of symbiotic relationship between the school and the host community adding that the town is well disposed to accept peace at all times.

    The Rector, Prof Godwin Onu revealed that his initial intention which is conspicuously present in his maiden address is to make Oko look like Massachusetts Institute of Technology in development and innovations.

    He quickly appealed for forgiveness for the past misunderstandings between his administration and Oko community stressing that detractors may be feeding fat from the feud.

    He regretted situations where some people were sending wrong signals to the either parties in the struggle adding that there is no alternative to peace.

    According to Onu, “war has never been an alternative to peace and the scares of war does nobody any good.

    “I came with passion to transform Federal Polytechnic, Oko, and even with the massive progress we have put in place, we could have done more if not for the negative turn out of the strained relationship.

    Onu, therefore pleaded with the traditional ruler Igwe, Prof Laz Ekwueme to forgive and forget as he sued for a more cordial relationship that he believes is what is the only option for progress of the school and the Oko town.

    “Initially I was so afraid of this visit occasioned by wrong signals, but I was so encouraged by the Council Chairman with other members to join in the visit. And I thought it wise to use this opportunity to amend the wrongs and chart a course for a more positive relationship”

    “I will also want to use this same opportunity to ask Dame Beatrice Ekwueme who represented the former Vice President of Nigeria, His Excellency, Dr Alex Ekwueme at this occasion to send my candid apologies to him”

    “I respect him a lot and would never do anything to despise him”

    Also, the council paid a visit to His Royal Highness, Igwe Chika Uchime of Ufuma, another host community housing Ufuma Campus of the institution.

    The monarch, Igwe Uchime, stressed that Ufuma Community has remained the most patient town for not seeing any development on the Ufuma Campus, since over three decades the town handed over the Community School to the polytechnic.

    He said that the institution has not make judicious use of the campus and have not erected any structure on it until the emergence of the present management that renovated all the existing buildings and is also erecting two structures.

    He thanked the management for their initiatives and called on the council to do more with the large expanse of empty lands begging to be developed.

    The council on their part pledged to transform the place through mechanised agriculture and other academic activities.

    Highlights of the visit included inspection of over 15 modern structures and 10 others at various levels of completion by Onu’s administration.

    Other facilities inspected included construction of roads within the campus, beautification, modern community radio and television stations.

     

  • ‘The challenge of security, peace, in times of economic recession’

    ‘The challenge of security, peace, in times of economic recession’

    To Prof John A. Ayoade of the BOWEN University in Iwo, Osun State, political power can be reconfigured, though not without resistance, but it is not as easy to reconfigure the economy. The professor Emeritus, in this article, entitled:  “The challenge of peace and security in times of economic recession: The Nigerian experience”, says Nigeria must adopt a mission to drive a renewed vision and elect visionary leaders to truly evolve as a nation.

    Nigeria has been a political enigma from its colonial origin. It is not an organic whole and it has failed all efforts at integration, although the colonial founding fathers never intended it to be integrated. Unfortunately, their Nigerian successors invested more in the division for sectional political advantage. This was because shortly before political independence, politics as a process of allocation of powers and national resources has been appropriated as an allocation enterprise for sectional interests.

    With time, the gap between national and sectional interests widened to a point that national interest tended towards zero. This was worsened by the fratricidal internecine conflicts between and among the various sections of the country. What was the hope of Africa at independence became the sick man of Africa which suffered a military coup within six years of independence and became a subject of international mediation, first at Aburi, Ghana and later, in Kampala, Uganda. The likes of such countries as Gabon and Ivory Coast were availed diplomatic opportunities to meddle in the domestic affairs of Nigeria. A country which had hitherto prided itself as an expert in brinkmanship was at the verge of ‘sinkmanship’. The hope to join the higher League of Nations at independence vanished.  Succour came only after three years of civil war which was followed by a hurried post-conflict peace that did not address the causes of war.

    The conflict which has been simmering since then only awaits a trigger that is not too remote in the Nigerian political firmament. The drums of conflict are beating louder, publicly daring the authorities of the Nigerian State. As if the issues will go away, the Federal Government is carefully avoiding addressing the issue directly.

    The on-going political altercations arise from the fact that Nigeria has not evolved into a nation and neither has it attained a stage of integration that can drive development. As far back as 1947, the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo said that Nigeria was a mere geographical expression. It was, in fact, a country of diverse nations.

    Much later, he advised that the Nigerian Constitution should be constructed along the lines of the nationalities comprising Nigeria. Nigerians agreed with the country’s diversity. They however optimistically played it down by extolling the aspiration of unity in diversity when in reality it is a progressively diversifying diversity. As it turned out, the adversarial nature of the country continues to manifest in the continual incessant demand for the creation of new states from the old sates based on cultural differences and incompatibility. The language of demand on all occasions was so antagonistic that it is strange that resultant sates remain components of the same federation professing unity in diversity.

    The country of three regions at independence now stands at thirty six states with a recommendation by the 2014 Constitutional Conference that it should be increased to 54 states. Nigeria therefore operates a curious political arrangement of unity by division or, more appropriately, division in unity. It will appear that secession itself is an extension of the demand for the creation of separate states. Secession is only a difference of scale and not type because both are rooted in incompatibility. The multiplication of states in a country with a fixed boundary is an indication of a fissiparous relationship which is the root of national poverty and recession.

    By 2015, about two-thirds of the thirty six states could no longer meet the salary needs of the state civil service. The situation proved the point that most of the states were mere civil service states as petty traders and food sellers suffered shrinkage in their sales and income. The situation also proved the fragile nature of the economy because governments in Nigeria are the single largest employers of labour with a weak private sector. The prominent visibility of the public sector in employment is a result of the high profile and privileges of the colonial civil service. The post-independence successive governments in Nigeria did not help matters because they often vaunted the omnipotence of government without encouraging the diversification of skills, entrepreneurship, and public-private partnership. In the past, communities established secondary schools, constructed roads, and awarded local and overseas scholarships.

    Of recent, the governments arrogantly asked communities to hands-off such developments. It suddenly became an offence for parents/teachers associations to be involved in the development of the schools.

    The demand for the creation of states is both an indication of diversity as well as the conception of the state as a milk-cow. Most of the demands are based on the propensity to have a share of the ‘national cake’. The lexicon of the demand for new states shows very clearly the consumerist goals of the protagonists. Little or no attention is paid to social and economic viability of states but the income derivable form the federal purse.

    Occasionally, one hears such pious phrases and clichés like bringing government close to the people; equity; ethnic geo-political balance and federal presence among others which sidestep economic realities. All such demands are based on ethnic or geographic competition for siphoning federal resources. The end result is the mushrooming of unviable mini-states that serve only the needs of the political elite of such states. It is no surprise, then, that Nigeria has one of the highest per capita costs of governance with very high overhead cost, high recurrent cost and little capital cost. There is therefore relatively little national infrastructural investment resulting in mere subsistence governments.

    The different constitutional efforts for political integration have not yielded positive results because the benefactors devised the measures. These measures include the zoning of political offices, federal character, rotational presidency and other equalisation measures. Let us look at the zoning of political offices first. Zoning is neither a constitutional, nor statutory requirement. It was a device introduced by the defunct National Party of Nigeria (NPN) in the Second Republic. It is therefore more of a conventional advisory to political parties. It could enhance electoral appeal of a political party in contrast to another party that does not adopt the zoning formula. Being voluntary and advisory, the implementation has been haphazard. The lack of clarity of its implementation was one of the political shibboleths of Dr. Goodluck Jonathan’s bid for a second presidential term.

    First, there was the definitional problem of a second term. Second, there was the problem of observance of an agreement duly entered into. Finally, there was the problem of which was the legitimate zone to present the presidential candidate. Apart from the particular problem arising from the Jonathan presidency, zoning is also not necessarily clear-cut in a multi-party situation since each political party could decide its order of zoning.

    Thus in 2015, the All Progressives Congress (APC)  selected Mohammadu Buhari from the Northwest while the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)  selected Dr. Jonathan from the Southsouth. Each party’s zoning arrangement may therefore contradict, which means, in effect, that zoning may be mutually neutralised by the parties.

    The much celebrated constitutional federal character requirement for appointments was meant to serve as mortar for the various nationalities. The constitutional clause was to the effect all executive bodies should mirror the diversity of the country by ensuring that appointments are made from all geographical parts of the country. The executive bodies must be representatively reflective of the plural nature of the country, such that no part of the country dominates the government while other parts are excluded or under-represented. At the drafting stages, this was conceived as the non-exclusion principle. The aim is to create a sense of belonging and a sense of collective ownership through participation.

    The clause therefore became an employment bill for the political class and a rationale for bloated executives. Nigeria therefore has a very high ratio of executive to the population that gulps funds for development. It has therefore contributed to national poverty and recession.

    Apart from that, it has not worked as the expected political adhesive or coagulant of diverse nationalities. It would have been strange if social homogenisation resulted from such ethnic polarisation. In fact, it could not have served that purpose because the ethnic groups or the geopolitical groups which are proxies of the ethnic groups form the basis of allocation. The application of federal character, therefore, inadvertently prioritises ethnicity and consequently, a source of acrimonious disagreement among the nationalities who complain about the computation and weighting of the federal character requirement.

    A major consequential source of complaint is that quantity is not synonymous with quality, such that arithmetical equality does not translate to qualitative equality. Neither is federal character interpreted to cover less divisive factors of diversity like ideology and stages of development of the various parts of the country.

    The trend of the discussion so far, is that the root of poverty and recession lies in the structure and administration of the Nigerian state. There is an incongruity between the design of the country and the post-independence vision and mission of the country. Such a mismatch is clearly demonstrated in the relationship between the purpose of federalism and the practice of federalism in Nigeria. The practice of federalism in Nigeria is bedeviled by the boss syndrome which results in the hierarchical ordering of the governments of the federation rather than the co-equality of governmental jurisdictions.

    This is complicated by the misperception of the role of government as the dispenser of personal, ethnic and sectional advantages. The system operated as if private sector productivity was either optional or unnecessary. And worse still, the political elite divided the country into political fiefs called states to multiply salary pay-points and inadvertently reduce the capacity of the resultant states to drive development. Nigerian governments became veritable harbingers of poverty by multiplying salary pay-points. Extractive political institutions as we have depicted above, tend to produce extractive or rentier economic systems. Even if there is growth under extractive institutions, they cannot endure because growth requires innovation which ipso facto, results in creative destruction that will destabilise established power relations. The established elite will therefore resist innovation. Extractive regimes also tend to make instability inevitable because they generate fierce competition, forcing the extractive elite to defend its unmerited privileged position. The contingent outcome of instability is decline of productivity which tends to end up in poverty.

    Neither has Nigeria attained the level of clear functional statehood. The fragility of the Nigerian state as depicted above has made scholars at different times to describe it as a soft state or a failed state by others. The state is a complex entity and there is hardly an agreement on its purpose and scope.

    For the purpose of analysis, the state can be seen roughly as a dichotomy with internal and external aspects. Its internal aspect is represented by the government while the external aspect is the country. The government is the highest ruling authority and executive agent of the country. Being the highest authority, it possesses internal sovereignty and the extent quality of its rule of the domestic society is a function of its legitimacy which determines the nature of state-society relations or the relations between the decision-maker and the decision-taker.

    Jean Bodin, espousing the juridical view of the state, identified the chief mark of state sovereignty as the power to give law to all citizens, generally and singly. Thus, the state is vested with the power to create, interpret and enforce the law. In addition to the power to legislate for all, it also has the sole power of coercion or the monopoly of legitimate force such that in the view of John Austin, the state is the superior commanding the inferior. The control of force is a consequential power to strengthen legislative power. All, except the agents of the state are disarmed, private armies are prohibited and the power of constraint is domiciled in the state alone. The monopoly of force has however not prevented dissidence in Nigeria because domestic weakness arising from unresolved national question and political power configuration is exploited different elements in the country. The state monopoly of force is challenged at different times and places.

    For more than two decades, the Niger Delta militants have challenged the authority of the Nigerian state and have succeeded squeezing some concessions for laying down their arms. But, this has been temporary as the success has become an incentive for more armed challenge. Similarly, from about 2009, a group known as the Boko Haram employed Islam as an instrument to challenge the authority of the Nigerian state in the Northeast zone. At some point, they controlled about 14 local government areas and hoisted their flag with intent to create an Islamic State. It was a challenge of the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Nigeria. The power of the state to guarantee peace and security to the citizens is also regularly threatened by gangs that infested Nigeria with kidnapping for ransom.

    It started in the Niger Delta as a strategy of the militants to press their case. Oil workers were abducted and killed when ransom was not paid. Now kidnapping has become a national menace with kidnappers demanding huge ransom in foreign currency and even establishing detention camps within the city. With these threats, the Nigerian state appears to be losing claim to its raison d’etat which is the guarantee of the lives of citizens and property. The loss of empirical statehood explains the scanty inflow of foreign direct investment (fdi) and consequential heightening of poverty.

    It is not only the juridical function of the state that has been challenged. Equally so, is the physical property of the state which is the fact that the state is an area with a government, population and a means of keeping order. The citizens are part of that physical state because they live within the geographical boundary. Membership of the physical state is normally compulsory for all that live within that geographical boundary. Obedience to the laws is mandatory, disobedience is punishable, and secession attempt is treasonable.

    Of recent, even the physical extent of the Nigerian state is not sacrosanct. There are open and audible announcements of intention to secede from the Nigerian state in the finalistic language of no return. The Federal Government is handicapped in confronting the open breach by the reality of the extra- constitutional configuration of the country rather than by dereliction.

    Nigeria therefore exhibits all the signs of a sub-optimal state driven by extra-constitutional considerations and consequently unable to perform the minimal constitutional duties of statehood. It continues to muddle along because of a demonstrated unwillingness to deal with the fundamentals of building a state from the congeries of nationalities at war with themselves.

    The complex dilemma of Nigerian state is that the architecture of political power is not coterminous with the architecture of the economy. The troubling paradox is that the area that is perceived to be less economically endowed exercises political control over the economy because there is unequal distribution of power and unequal distribution of resources.

    Unfortunately, while political power can be reconfigured, although not without resistance, it is not as easy to reconfigure the economy. Although political power is required to reconfigure political power, power is hardly ever conceded or freely transferred particularly in a conflict-ridden polity where power confers immeasurable advantage. Power, by its nature, never lacks patronage because it is highly sought after, even more so in a deeply-segmented society.

    The resultant negative effect of the high pitched competition in such societies is poor and/or sub-optimal decision-making. Parties negotiate all issues and since every sectional actor wants the maximum benefit, facilities are sometimes splintered below the level of functional efficiency or located most inappropriately while crucial decisions fail the rationality test. Even the punishment of crime is seen through ethnic and regional lenses. The Nigerian governance system is a conducive environment for breeding poverty and violence. Poverty derives, in part, from maladministration just as violence could be a product of bad administration and perceived inequity

    Nigeria is a paradox. It is the seventh most populous country in the world and the sixth largest producer of petroleum in the world. One is tempted to say that it has no reason to be poor. However, the lack of good governance, general insecurity, and stupendous accountability challenges pushed her into the league of the poor. One hundred and twelve million Nigerians making 67.1 per cent of the population lived below poverty line by 2016.  Poverty has maintained a steady increase with 54.7 per cent in 2004; 60.9 per cent in 2010; 60 per cent in 2015 and a whopping 72 per cent in August 2016. Nigeria is not just one of the poorest countries; it is also one of the most unevenly developed countries of the world. The poverty prevalence in the country ranges from 46.9 per cent in the Southwest to 74.3 per cent in the Northwest and Northeast. Another source puts the national average at 46 per cent while the prevalence of the six geo-political zones is as hereunder: Southwest (19.3 per cent); Southsouth (25.2 per cent); Southeast (27.36 per cent); Northcentral (45.7 per cent); Northeast (76.8 per cent) and Northwest (80.9 per cent).

    The average for the South comes to 23.95 per cent while the average for the North is 67.8 per cent which is nearly triple the average for the South. The sharp contrast between North and South is one of the causes of political instability in Nigeria. Even when the North has been broken into nineteen states and the South into seventeen states, the threat of the North remains. Nigerians continue to complain and fear Northern political clout, Northern numerical superiority and Northern political advantage. Whenever Northern prowess is contrasted with Southern human and material resource advantage, southerners feel that they derive less than their contributions to the Nigerian state. That feeling of deprivation is a source of socio-political tension in the country. Be that as it may, there is evidence of affluent poverty throughout the country. Most houses on the major streets of Nigeria are defaced with shops for retail pure water. Able-bodied college graduates sell telephone recharge cards and commercial motorcycles called ‘okada’ or ‘Going’ have replaced taxis and buses on our streets. Nigerians now take jolly rides on ‘okada’ making telephone calls and sending text messages as the go. I believe that some can now even take a nap as the ride.

    Both structural political and economic imbalance threaten the peace of the country. It is equally important to factor into this discussion that political conduct shapes and is shaped by political context. It is more interesting to go behind the formal structures into the actual processes of politics.

    Karl Marx appears to have correctly stated that men make history although not in circumstances of their own choosing. He therefore identifies mutuality between structure and agent. Every action is therefore a product of the mix of structural and agential factors. We have taken some space to explain the structural factor which is the setting in which social, political and economic events occur and are meaningful. It is necessary to look at political conduct defined as the actor’s conscious effort to realise his goal. In commenting on the Corruption Perception Index (CPI), Transparency International (TI) confirmed that the lower – ranked countries are ‘plagued by untrustworthy and badly functioning public institutions like police and judiciary’. This is a conflation of structure and agent. Oftentimes neither structure nor agency alone can explain a phenomenon. For example, the rate of unemployment in Nigeria rose from 10.4 per cent in 2015 to 14.2 per cent (11.549 million people) in 2016 but it is not every unemployed person that engaged in crime just as some employed people also engaged in crime. This means that crime can be explained from both structural and agential perspectives. It must be emphasised, though, that work is the best route out of poverty and according to Guy Ryder, the International Labour Organisation (ILO) Director-General, ‘access to decent work opportunities for all … is the most effective way to increase participation, lift people out of poverty, reduce inequality and drive economic growth’.

    Nigeria ranked very low on Good Governance, Global Peace and Corruption. The World Bank identified six key indices of good governance as follows:

    • Voice and accountability
    • Political stability and lack of violence
    • Government effectiveness
    • Regulatory quality
    • Rule of law
    • Control of corruption.

    Good governance is simply the legitimate socio-political citizen expectation from the state and which the state has responsibility to deliver. The Ibrahim Index of African Governance in 2016 ranked Nigeria in the 33rd position among 45 countries in 2016 putting Nigeria in the last thirteen African countries. On Global Peace Index, Nigeria ranked 151 out of 163 countries in 2014; 151 in 2015; 149 in 2016; and 149 in 2017. Nigeria’s best performance was in 2016 and 2017 with a placement in the last fifteen (15) countries. It is axiomatic that a population with adequate basic needs is most unlikely to resort to violence to solve problems. We may therefore say that, to some extent, that violence is a possible sign that basic needs are not met. Nigeria has about 3.3 million internally displaced persons which is Africa’s largest ranking behind Syria and Columbia on a global scale. Nigeria’s performance on Corruption was equally poor. In fact President Muhammadu Buhari was blunt when he said that ‘Corruption will kill Nigeria unless Nigeria kills corruption’. Corruption has grown to mega heights and Nigeria is better identified by corruption than by her national flag. Even as early as the 1980’s Alhaji Shehu Shagari saw the need for suggesting an ethical revolution to combat corruption. Unfortunately, the desire was not backed by political will.

    I want at this stage to argue that our conception of violence is too narrow. We often see violence only as actions that draw blood, destroy life and limb. There are however actions that sap more blood over time from a larger population.

    I include corruption, poverty, and bad governance among such slow, soft and sure incapacitation agents. We have said a few things about soft or silent violence. We may now turn to hard violence which within a short time snuffs out lives, displace populations and disrupt economic activities. Nigeria has had quite a number of such violence in recent history. They include: the Maitatsine; the Niger Delta militants attack; the Boko Haram insurgency; kidnapping and the recent Nnamdi Kanu’s demand for Biafra. All of these are insurrections that take advantage of the domestic weakness of the state. The state has a compulsory hold on citizens and when that hold loosens by acts of commission or omission, citizens who have reasons, genuine or otherwise, resort to self-help.

    It is the natural opportunistic moment. Thucydides said in his book entitled: The Peloponnesian War “Of the gods we believe, and of men we know, that by a necessary law of nature they rule wherever they can”. The Niger Delta crisis is a product of illogical neglect resulting in on-going illogicality of demands. Curiously the ancient Nigerian Mineral Act allocates the ownership of all minerals on land and below to the government. The law is an example of the greed of the modern state. The law would perhaps have been better to also include all moving creatures on land including the people. The law almost equated the State with God as defined in Psalm 24.1 which states ‘The earth is the Lord’s, and all its fullness, the world and those who dwell therein’. Three things are wrong with this massive appropriation. First, the nationalists opposed it when the British passed the ‘obnoxious’ law in 1944 but they did not abrogate it after independence. Second, it failed the test of history because in the First Republic, the derivation formula gave 50 per cent of the proceeds of minerals to the land/state of origin. The explanation for the present 13 per cent wobbles against precedence. Third, any law that does not have a human face does not belong in the human race. Derivation is not a pocket money concession from a higher authority to a lesser authority. It is a right to restore the mining areas to a tenantable position, as it were. Finally, the law violates the ‘golden rule’ of treating others as one would like to be treated. At the Afe Babalola Committee of the National Political Reform Conference in 2005, the question was asked whether the North would have accepted 13 per cent derivation if oil were discovered in Kaduna rather than the Delta. Significant members of the Committee quibbled rather than answering the question directly. The above queries easily turn the law into an instrument of expropriation.

    The reaction of the Niger Delta militants from Isaac Boro to date threatened the survival of the Nigerian State. The reality of modern statehood is that bad laws must still be obeyed until those laws are changed. Violation of a bad law is an offence just as the violation of a good law. There are however two avenues to changing a bad law. It is either changed via persuasion and due process or by violent means outside the realm of law. Whenever the second option is adopted, the law will take its toll because it is a challenge to the sovereignty of the state.

    Maitasine and Boko Haram are different in cause, course, modus operandi and ideology. While the militants operated on principally on grounds of rights, justice and equity, Matasine and Boko Haram advanced a sectarian position. They argued for a supposedly purer Islam. It was clear in the case of Boko Haram that the goal was territorial and religion was a camouflage for territorial ambition. This was a clever choice because religion is one of the most difficult institutions to confront. Religions are meant to be divine orders beyond disputation. To dispute it is to incur divine wrath which must be avoided by all believers. Religion is therefore, the most effective agent of socio-political mobilisation. Apart from the appeal to spirituality, Boko Haram was not successful at propaganda. It argued that western education was a sin without proposing a viable alternative. Its tactics and strategy also contains elements of weakness. It bombed churches and mosques thus violating Islamic laws that make non-combatants immune from attack and protect Muslims from attacks by fellow Muslims. It employed a scatter strategy of attack in Abuja, Kano, Bauchi and Potiskum among other areas. Although it struck terror in the public, it did not advance its goal in terms of consolidation. The kidnapping of the Chibok schoolgirls was a strategic blunder that earned Boko Haram negative international attention. As long as the girls were held captive, Boko Haram remained in the international media. Boko Haram strategy was very destabilising resulting in mass movement and contributing to large camps of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs). Its activities lasted that long because of the lack of cooperation of the host communities partly because of the fear of reprisals and partly for political reasons. By December 2016, Boko Haram was declared officially degraded. This is not to say that it is gone for good. By the nature of insurgencies which have no central command, every fighter tends to become a General still fighting on. Insurgencies last long. Chinese communists fought for 28 years, Vietnamese communists for 30 years and Sandinistas for 18 years. So, it is not yet Uhuru from Boko Haram.

    Another source of insecurity in the Nigerian state is the terrorism of kidnappers. It started as a tactic of the Niger Delta militants to fund arms purchase, force the oil companies out and earn money to run the organisation.  They kidnapped expatriates and got the employers to pay ransom for their release. It eventually escalated and gangs developed in other parts of the country, including faraway Northern Nigeria. It soon became the most lucrative business that was not quoted on the stock market. The telephone became the most effective facilitator of kidnapping with a war against the middle and upper classes. The qualification for kidnapping is the ability to pay huge ransom. Information is required for a successful operation and the recent communication explosion has aided the nefarious act. Instagram, Facebook, WhatsApp and email among other means  have become sources of required information and those who are unwary expose themselves.

    The last and perhaps the most difficult of these threats confronting Nigeria is the recent Nnamdi Kanu phenomenon. Kanu established the Independent Peoples of Biafra (IPOB) to demand for the sovereign state of Biafra. He was incarcerated for that demand and he is currently on bail. He has been playing host to youths who want the actualisation of Biafra. The older and more experienced Igbo are treading softly. The experience of the civil war cannot easily go away. The Yoruba often warn in like circumstances that those who witness Sango (god of thunder) disappear underground will not insult Oba Koso. Any Igbo born after 1970 can only learn about the civil war from moonlight stories told after a good meal of pounded yam. That is different from direct experience. It is only when myths are tested against reality that they are validated. Just recently, Kanu instructed the people of Anambra to shun the November 18, 2017 governorship election as a sign that the Igbo have nothing to do with Nigeria any more.  The National Publicity Secretary of the All Progressives Grand Alliance which is the ruling party in the state, Mr. Ifeatu Obiokoye, wrote that the call was ’irresponsible, and devoid of intellectual focus’.  He went further that Kanu had no authority to speak for the Igbo of the Southeast. Obiokoye emphasized that the Biafra concept was a metaphor for the demand for equity and fair play in the Nigerian state and not a separate movement. He continued: “We are concerned about the continued existence of Nigeria under the present structural arrangement.” He finally advised Kanu to drop the ‘Emperor’ perception of himself. Biafra is not new to Nigerian political narrative.  Secession had always been used as a bargaining tool in Nigerian politics. It was Ojukwu’s blunder to go beyond threat that led to the civil war.

    Nigeria has a quantum of security challenges. The Federal Government has to be strategic in handling those challenges. Some require constitutional adjustments, others require mere legislation, while yet others require negotiation. In adopting any of these measures, political actors must place country above self and clan and place tomorrow above today and yesterday. Nigeria must adopt a mission to drive a renewed vision and elect visionary leaders.

     

  • Monarch hails Ndigbo over peace move

    For members of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, the Igbo Community in Lagos State and the various community leaders of Ndigbo in Ikorodu Division, Tuesday, July 4, will be etched in their minds interminably.

    It was the day the search for lasting peace and unity among the Igbo in Ikorodu Division began earnestly.

    Led by the leader of Ohanaeze Ndigbo in Lagos State, Dr Dom Ferguson and Eze Ndigbo of Lagos State, Dr Christian Uchechukwu Nwachuchu (JP) to resolve what could be referred to as inconsequential squabbles among the Igbo leaders in Ikorodu Division. They also visited the Paramount Ruler of Ikorodu Division, His Royal Majesty (HRM) Oba Kabiru Adewale Shotobi, the Ayangbure of Ikorodu to present one of their own, retired Colonel Reuben Nwako as Chairman of Ohanaeze Ndigbo in Ikorodu Division.

    The parley among the Igbo leaders in Ikorodu Division that included Eze Ndigbo of Ikorodu Division, Eze Paulicap C. Uhegbu, Eze Ndigbo of Ijede Kingdom, Eze John Okafor; Eze Ndigbo of Igbogbo Bayeku, Eze Enwemadu Livinus S.; Ezeudo Ikorodu West, Eze Ofordile Nwajey; Eze Nwachukwu and Dr Ferguson, among others was held behind closed doors.

    Addressing Ndigbo at the residence of Colonel Reuben Nwako, who is the new leader of Ndigbo in Ikorodu Division, Ferguson urged Ndigbo in Ikorodu to embrace peace and unity as that is the only way to achieve socio-economic, political development, noting that no tangible development takes place in a rancorous situation.

    “The Igbo have been consistent in the pursuit of national unity and inter-ethnic co-operation. The Igbo, over time, have been playing the role of bridge-builders in the fledging Nigerian state. The Igbo are adventurous and see any part of the country as home.

    “That explains why they are seen in remote villages and towns nation-wide where they help in developing their host communities,” he said.

    Later, the group moved to the palace of Oba Shotobi where the Igbo Community Lagos State under the leadership of Eze Ndigbo of Lagos State, Dr Christian Uchechukwu Nwachukwu and the leader of Ohanaeze Ndigbo Lagos State, Dr Dom Ferguson jointly presented Colonel Reuben Nwako to the Oba as the paramount leader of Ndigbo in Ikorodu Division.

    Speaking at the event, Dr Ferguson thanked Oba Shotobi for accommodating the Igbo who live and do businesses in Ikorodu.

    He added that there will be overall peace in Nigeria if the Yoruba and Igbo continue in their peaceful relationship.

    Noting that the peaceful reign of Oba Shotobi and his love for Ndigbo resident in Ikorodu Division, heartened the Igbo Community and Ohanaeze Ndigbo in Lagos State to present to Oba Shotobi one of the illustrious sons of Igbo as the apex leader of Ndigbo in Ikorodu Division.

    “Your Royal Majesty, we are here today to present Colonel Reuben Nwako (rtd) to you as the leader of Ndigbo in Ikorodu Division.

    “We present him to you as the Chairman of Ohanaeze Ndigbo in Ikorodu Division. He will coordinate the activities of Ndigbo in your domain. He is a good choice based on his experiences.  He also served as Director of Enforcement at the National Agency for Food Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) under the late Dora Akunyili and Director of Operations with the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA),” Dr Ferguson said.

    Speaking in the same manner, Eze Ndigbo of Lagos State, Dr. Christian Uchechukwu Nwachukwu corroborated Dr Ferguso’s assertion that Col. Nwako was a better choice to coordinate the activities of Ndigbo in Ikorodu, adding that his experiences are such that would help a society grow. He urged Oba Shotobi to relate with Ndigbo in Ikorodu through him.

    Eze Nwachukwu praised the Oba for his peaceful disposition towards his subjects, a situation, he said, had guaranteed peace and unity in Ikorodu.

    He recalled that “the cordial relationship that exists among the Igbo and Yoruba was amplified when former Lagos State Governor, Asiwaju Ahmed Bola Tinubu went the extra mile to solidify the mutual friendship among the Igbo and Yoruba by appointing an Igbo man as a commissioner.

    “Tinubu is a nice man and a good friend of Ndigbo; your royal majesty, thank him for us.”

    Responding, Oba Shotobi expressed his happiness over the visit by Ndigbo.

    The royal father praised the Igbo, especially those living in his domain for their hard work.

    “Your people are peaceful and hard working. Their contributions to the development of Ikorodu cannot be denied. I am happy you are presenting Col. Nwako to me because I know him as a man of honour and integrity.

    “I have accepted him as a man to work with and who will help in bringing peace among the Igbo in Ikoorodu,” he said.

    Highpoint of the event was Oba’s conferment of traditional chieftaincy title on Col. Nwako and his wife as Omobowale of Ikorodu land and Yeye Omobowale of Ikorodu land respectively.

    Reacting to the development, Col. Nwako (rtd) said: “It was a good development and a great achievement. The Igbo in Ikorodu Division are not working together towards the unity, peace and development of Ndigbo.”

    Regretting that Ikorodu  Division has five different Eze Ndigbo who represent each of the local council development areas and who do not see eye to eye, the peace move that threw him up as Chairman to Ohanaeze Ndigbo in Ikorodu and the conferment of chieftaincy title on him by the paramount ruler were good omen for Ndigbo.

    He pledged to work assiduously to bring peace and unity among the people, even as he said he would be loyal to Oba Shotobi and carry out any of his rewarding instructions.

  • A spiritual push for peace

    With prayers, biblical texts and good old common sense, a Christian group makes a case for harmonious living, GBENGA OMOKHUNU reports

    Since June 6 when a band of Arewa youths shook up the country with a quit order on Igbo in the North, many have been trying to calm frayed nerves. State governors have unanimously condemned the call. The authorities in Kaduna State where the pronouncement was made ordered that the youths be arrested. Acting President Yemi Osinbajo has been touring the country, rallying regional leaders and stakeholders to ensure peace in their domains.

    A Christian group has added its voice to the peace push. The group under the auspices of Christian Rural and Urban Development Association of Nigeria, (CRUDAN), gathered in the Federal Capital Territory, (FCT), Abuja to brainstorm the way forward.

    A retired Director of Information at the Villa, Mr. Musa Aduwak who delivered a paper titled: “Peaceful Coexistence: an imperative for national development urged Nigerians to appreciate the efforts of Acting President Yemi Osinbajo in resolving the issue of agitation from various quarters.

    Aduwak said government needs to bring everybody together and continue to preach peace adding that it should be done under the law.

    Development, Aduwak said, does not happen in isolation or in a vacuum. “Whether physical, relational, economic, social, spiritual, or educational, development is only possible in an environment where there is fairness, accountability, interdependence, transparency, peace, freedom of thought and action within the ambit of the law, respect for individual and group rights, etcetera. All these, or most of these can only occur in democracies, such as we claim to be practicing now. The reality, of course, is that we are still a long way from a democracy that meets these standards.

    “It is normal for every nation to have agitations. What may be a challenge is how to resolve agitations. People have different understanding of how they want to achieve their aim or demand. The critical thing must be for government to know how to harness and bring together these various agitations in a manner that will fulfill the laws of the land.

    “Government is not failing to curb or normalise these agitations. The way government operates is not to come out and start talking. If you recollect the Acting President Yemi Osinbajo has been speaking about this issues more recently and that must be after checking up all the issues as they affect the people. Silence sometimes can be golden because if government has spoken too early it may not go well. Remembers he has been holding consultations with various groups all over the country.

    “As Nigerians we are generally always in a hurry.  The level of our patience is limited especially when it has to do with life. Government needs to bring everyone together. There is no war that has been fought and they did not resolve the matter on the table. We are not yet at war, we still have avenue for discussion and government to take advantage of that.

    “I want to believe that the steps of the Acting President is also in that direction. He has a sense of how the feeling of people are and I am sure he would go forward to resolve the issue. The content of agitations is not too good for us. People are afraid of losing something, but the rest ruction will benefit all of us. Because we are better as one country. Generally government is doing its best to secure this country.

    “I was born in Southern Kaduna. My family tree, up to five generations before me for which there are any records, tells me that that is the land God gave me to live in, cultivate and tend. I grew up with various groups around me, the Fulani being one such group. I recall a particular Fulani lady who used to bring fresh cow milk every morning, nono, cow butter (man shanu) to our house for sale. I also recall that my father would send me, or any of my brothers, to take a live chicken, which my mother was going to cook, to our Muslim neighbour to slaughter. It was not because my father, or any of us for that matter, could not slaughter a chicken. It was because we shared our food with our Muslim neighbours, but they would not eat any meat slaughtered by us, so they slaughtered our livestock and we dressed them for the pot. Alternatively, he would invite the neighbour to come and slaughter the chicken in our house.

    “My father’s compound had several rooms unoccupied by members of our immediate family and so he rented them out to those who had need. I recall one Mal. Sule, a veterinary attendant; Mal. Sa’idu, a driver with one of the government departments; and a Kanuri man whose name I have forgotten who worked with the health department eradicating tse-tse flies. All of them, Muslims, lived in my father’s house at different times, and we lived in what may be described as “blissful peace”.

    “Fifty years later, it is a different story. That peace has more or less “evaporated”. There has been no war between us, in the sense of war like we saw in 1967-1970, or in Liberia or Sierra Leone. Yes, there have been disagreements and clashes, several bloody, with many lives lost and property destroyed. But where don’t you have these disagreements? Once Adam got the choice whether to obey God’s command about the tree of the knowledge of good and evil or not, disagreements were bound to arise.”

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • DSS breaching Niger Delta peace process, says IYC

    DSS breaching Niger Delta peace process, says IYC

    The Ijaw Youth Council (IYC), Worldwide yesterday accused the Department of State Security (DSS) of breaching the Federal Government’s peace process in the Niger Delta region by its continuous detention of some Niger Delta people without trial.

    IYC, in a statement by its factional President, Mr. Eric Omare,  said it was unlawful for the DSS to keep some persons it arrested from the region in its custody for a long time without arraignment.

    Omare added that during the fact-finding and confidence-building mission of the Acting President Yemi Osinbajo, the people of the region made a case for the release of persons in detention following renewed militancy in the Niger Delta.

    He said the government promised to look into the request and to release some of the detained Niger Delta people.

    He said: “However, the DSS has continued to detain some other Niger Deltans and in some cases even when there is a court order directing that they be released. The case of ex-militant leader, Mr. Sely Kile Torugbedi (alias Young Shall Grow) is most pathetic and unjust.

    “The Federal High Court, Abuja presided over by the Honourable Justice Nnamdi Dimgba on the 5th of August, 2016 made an order for the immediate release of Mr. Torugbedi (alias Young Shall Grow) from DSS custody.

    “However, almost a year after the order was made, the DSS is still holding Mr. Torugbedi in custody despite the fact that they were represented in court by a lawyer, O. J. Odu.

    “The DSS has extended same treatment to Ijaw activist, Mr. Daniel Ezekiel where they have bluntly refused to attend court at the Federal High Court, Warri despite several hearing notices served on them at the DSS headquarters at Abuja.

    “So many other Niger Deltans like IYC Abuja chapter Spokesman, Alex Odogu, Yenagoa based journalist, Jones Abiri and some others have been in detention for more than a year without trial”.

    Insisting that the conduct of the DSS amounted to a breach of the Niger Delta peace process, he said the persons in detention were arrested in connection with the Niger Delta agitations.

    He said that since the government had decided to adopt a negotiated settlement of the Niger Delta agitation, the detained persons should be released as part of the peace process.

    He added: “It even amounts to breach of trust for government to promise peaceful dialogue while at the same time unnecessarily keeping people in detention.

    “The leaders of the Niger Delta region have done their part by restoring relative peace in the region and now it is up to the federal government to sustain it.

    “Therefore, the IYC calls on Acting President, Yemi Osinbanjo to as a matter of urgency and in the interest of the Niger Delta peace process order the release of ex-militant leader, Mr. Sely Kile Torugbedi (alias Young Shall Grow), Ijaw activist: Daniel Ezekiel, IYC Abuja Spokesman: Alex Odogu, Jones Abiri and all other Niger Deltans in DSS custody in relation to the Niger Delta hostilities.

    “Acting President, Yemi Osinbanjo should note that his reputation is on trial in the face of these violations of human rights as a law professor and Senior Advocate of Nigeria”.

  • Ex-militants promise to back Buhari’s peace moves in N/Delta

    Ex-militants promise to back Buhari’s peace moves in N/Delta

    • Boroh carpets those maligning Buhari, Amnesty Office

    Ex-agitators in the Niger Delta have promised to support President Muhammadu Buhari’s initiatives in the Niger Delta.

    This decision was announced after a meeting between the ex-agitators of phases 2 and 3 and the Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta and Coordinator of the Presidential Amnesty Programme, Brig-Gen. Paul Boroh (rtd.) in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital.

    Gen. Boroh said it was imperative for the leaders to meet regularly with officials of the Amnesty Programme to share ideas, make observations and proffer solutions that would bring about peace, infrastructural change and human capital development of thousands of the youth captured in the Presidential Amnesty Programme.

    He emphasised that conflict and violence were no resolutions to the crisis and urged the leaders to constantly remind the ex-agitators in their camps not to breach the peace in the country and ensure that the non-violence agreement signed at Obubra that led to the declaration of Amnesty in 2009 is upheld.

    Gen. Boroh urged the leaders to use all channels of dialogue in solving problems to allow for government’s developmental projects like the rail construction, modular refineries and the community pipeline surveillance to take off as this would be of benefit to the people and create massive job employment for the youth of the region.

    Special Assistant to the President on Economic Council Donald Wokoma said the Amnesty office had the responsibility of ensuring peace and stability in the region to allow related agencies carry out their projects.

    He advised the ex-agitators to take advantage of opportunities made available by the government to develop themselves and stop excess and unfounded petitioning of appointees.

    The Amnesty Office Head of Data Management, Maj. Bernard Ochoche(Rtd) and Head Post Training and Engagement Major Abdul Mati (rtd), addressed issues of late payment of stipends to ex-agitators arising from delay in budget passage, recertification of previous qualification from trainings earlier acquired to meet standards for employment, agriculture as the new focus of training, empowerment after training, ongoing partnerships targeted at job creation for graduates and trained delegates.

    Phase 2 Leader Aso Tambo appealed for enlightenment of ex-agitators on new programmes of the office and approaches and decisions of government to move the region forward.

    He said the basis for acceptance of amnesty was to ensure the development of the Niger Delta.

    He described the Special Adviser’s human capital development plans as soft landing that should be maximised by critical stakeholders in the Niger Delta region.

    In another development, Gen. Boroh described as unfortunate comments from some quarters maligning his office and the character of President Buhari over the implementation of projects under the Amnesty Programme.

    He described those responsible as faceless and disgruntled politicians and contractors whose efforts would only strengthen his resolve to carry out the mandate given to his office by the President.

    Gen. Boroh called on the people of the Niger Delta and Nigerians to take ownership of Buhari’s peace and development initiatives for the region.