Tag: Peace

  • Communities agree on peace

    The Erin-Ile community in Oyun Local Government Area of Kwara State has said it will live in peace with neighbouring towns, especially, Offa.

    About two weeks ago, there was crisis between Offa and Erin-Ile, following alleged demolition of two buildings belonging to Offa indigenes.

    Spokesperson of Erin-Ile Progressive Union (EPU) Mr. James Awowole noted that development can only be attracted in an atmosphere of peace and tranquility.

    According to him, both communities have a tradition of cordial relationship, inter-marriage and cultural celebration.

    Awowole maintained that the crisis between them was a fabrication, as there is no reason for any attack.

    His words: “We are law-abiding citizens, incapable of taking any action or make statements that can foment trouble to either of the communities. We are happy with existing peace and harmony among us, and we are determined to sustain it.”

    The House of Assembly has hailed the government, stakeholders and traditional rulers of Offa and Erin-Ile communities, for the amicable resolution of the Erin-Ile/Offa crisis.

    This followed a motion, “Preventing boundary dispute between Offa and Erin Ile communities”, sponsored by Adamu Usman (Okuta/Yashikiri).

    Speaker Ali Ahmad said harmony was synonymous with the wealth of the state. He urged other communities to emulate Erin-Ile and Offa by living in peace, to allow for accelerated socio-economic transformation of the state.

     

  • Ohanaeze should partner govt for peace, says Presidency

    Ohanaeze should partner govt for peace, says Presidency

    The Presidency has urged leaders of Igbo socio-cultural body Ohanaeze to see themselves as partners with the Federal Government towards promoting peace and stability in the country.

    Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, made the call yesterday while reacting to criticisms of the president’s Independence Day speech by the Ohanaeze leadership.

    In a statement, he described as unfair for the group to blame the recent unrest in the Southeast region on the federal government.

    Throwing light on the import of the Presidential broadcast, the spokesman said President Muhammadu Buhari’s message to community leaders, and that includes the Ohanaeze, is that they had a huge role to play in what happens in their communities and in how their youth behave.

    He said: “President Buhari was not abdicating his responsibilities. He didn’t request any political leader to do anything seminal or out of the box. All he said is, talk to your out-of-the-line-youth so that we have some peace.

    “Igbo leaders need not to be on the defensive for the misbehaviour of the IPOB which they rightly condemned.

    “The President was simply saying that the regional leaders also have a role to play in keeping their hot-headed youth in check.” he said

    This admonition, the SSA Media pointed out, applied equally to leaders of every other region of the country, not only the Ohanaeze from the southeast.

    According to him, elders from every region must step out and speak up whenever their youth go out of line, such as when the IPOB launched unspeakable diatribes against other groups of people in other parts of the country and then began to threaten violence.

    “President Buhari was simply calling out the regional leaders to their responsibilities, making them aware of the crucial role they can play. This should not be seen as an attack on the Ohaneze or on any other regional leaders,” he said.

    Responding to other criticisms of the President’s speech, particularly the declaration that all matters of restructuring or constitutional amendment are the business of the National Assembly , Malam Garba reiterated the President’s line that the Parliament  as a key institution in democratic governance is the proper venue for the ventilation of, and resolution of all contentious issues.

    “It beats our imagination that men claiming to be democrats or having democratic credentials are asking the government to ignore an elected parliament in preference to a committee made up of presidential appointees to debate and resolve constitutional issues.

    “You are either for democracy or for its opposite. For us in this government, democracy is the country’s chosen system of government and we are determined to deepen and uphold it.

    “Democracy may be slow and chaotic, but it remains the best system of government the world has got so far.

    Democracy in Nigeria has come to stay and the administration will deepen it, not kill it.”

    Shehu referred Nigerians questioning the success of administration so far to look at the mirror and see themselves.

    “We inherited a country in tatters- its economy, its security and in its social relations. President Buhari deserves credit for rebuilding what has been destroyed. If anyone thinks this a failure, let them talk to those millions of farmers we have empowered to create riches for themselves and the nation, for whom fertilizer is available everywhere at the regulated price of N5,500 instead of N13,800 a year ago; let them ask the manufacturers and importers of goods who bought the dollar at N525:00 and are happy that it is down to N360:00 and still improving; let them go back and read the accomplishments highlighted in the speech, to see the advancements in security, agriculture, the ease of doing business and anti-corruption, to mention a few.

    “As for those critics who are used to being settled by successive governments, with false claims to being so-called conscience of society popping out from the cupboard on and off to drive the country towards religious and ethnic polarisation, they have no other motive but to rock the boat of good governance. What they yearn for is to be picked out to be paid to keep quiet. The Buhari government has abolished “settlement.”

    “Polarising speeches that aggravate brother Nigerian against a brother Nigerian are causing damage to our democracy, rocking at the very foundation of our unity and they better not cross those red lines as warned by the President.”

     

  • PDP urges unity, peace

    PDP urges unity, peace

    The national leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has called for unity, peace and progress of Nigeria as the nation celebrates its independence.

    A statement yesterday by the party’s National Publicity Secretary, Prince Dayo Adeyeye, called for recognition for the sacrifices made for the country by its past heroes.

    The party called on Nigerians to use the occasion of the 57th independence anniversary to reflect deeply on the pillars that brought the diverse groups together and to work for the growth, unity and stability of the country.

    “Finally, we want to use this opportunity to call on governments at all level to engage citizens in peaceful and progressive national issues because there is no country we can call our own except the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    “So, let us protect and sustain her to grow from glory to glory. This is the clarion call that we must obey – to continue to foist our flag of unity, peace and progress,” the PDP added.

  • Governors preach love, peace at independence

    Governors across the country yesterday felicitated with the citizenry on the nation’s 57 independence anniversary with messages urging unity, peaceful co-existence, hope, patience, religious tolerance and love.

    Ambode: we must remain united

     In his message, Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode emphasised the need for Nigeria to remain united, saying there was more to gain in being together as one nation than dissolving as different independent entities.

    He spoke yesterday at a special thanksgiving service to commemorate the anniversary at Lagos House Chapel in Alausa, Ikeja.

    The governor said it was important for Nigerians to realise the fact that the country’s diversity is a strength in itself, which makes the country a truly special place.

    He said a moment of reflection and retrospection would reveal the need for Nigerians to be thankful to God for His grace, blessings and mercy over the country.

    Ambode said: “That we still have a country we can call Nigeria today is a proof of the divine hands of God in our being together as one.

    “We must, therefore, reflect on our journey so far and come to the inevitable realisation that we have much more to gain as one nation than as different independent entities.

    Ahmed: Nigeria is poised for greatness

    Kwara State Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed called on Nigerians to work for and believe in Nigeria’s unity and peaceful coexistence as means for attaining and sustaining growth.

    The governor, who congratulated Nigerians, said with the efforts of the Federal Government at economic recovery, the nation is poised for greatness.

    We must protect our unity, says Amosun

    Ogun Governor Ibikunle Amosun declared that Nigeria still has a “huge potential to flourish and be great again”.

    But, he called for eternal vigilance to safeguard the country from “ethnic jingoists and religious fundamentalists” working to dismember it.

    Amosun said the continued unity of Nigeria is germane to the realisation of its full strength and called on well-meaning Nigerians to lend their “voices and ideas to the cause of Nigeria’s unity by drowning out the voices of the few divisive elements whose stock-in-trade is belligerent posturing.”

    Ayade preaches hope, patience

    Cross River State Governor Ben Ayade enjoined Cross Riverians and Nigerians to be patient and hopeful. According to Ayade, the country would surely surmount its challenges.

    The governor noted that despite the myriads of challenges that have confronted Nigeria in recent times, the country has, however, made some giant strides in its march towards greatness .

    Ayade said with the kind of leadership, as presently headed by President Muhammadu Buhari, the country would definitely bounce back to reclaim its status as a true giant of Africa.

    The governor used the occasion to reiterate the commitment of his administration to deliver on all his campaign promises to the people.

    Let’s appreciate our diversities, says Bello

    Niger State Governor Abubakar Sani Bello said after 57 years of being independent, the nation needs to start appreciating its diversities and work towards one united entity.

    He stated this in a state broadcast to mark the anniversary in Minna.

    According to the governor, he said the time has come to fire up the spirit of patriotism that propelled the founding fathers in their quest to build a united, indivisible and prosperous nation.

    Ganduje cautions against hate speech

    Kano State Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje, during activities to mark event at Sani Abacha Stadium, Kano yesterday, cautioned against hate speeches. He insisted that the unity of the country is sacrosanct.

    He condemned violent agitations and hate speeches, masterminded by some few disgruntled elements for selfish reasons, which results  in unnecessary carnage, coupled with loss of lives.

    The governor, therefore, cautioned against such unpatriotic conduct and reminded Nigerians to remember the immense sacrifices made by the country’s founding fore-fathers to ensure Nigeria’s stability and unity.

    Kogi governor to       youth: demonstrate competence

    Kogi State Governor Yahaya Bello called on the youth to take the gauntlet by proving that they are capable in the different leadership roles that might be entrusted upon them.

    The governor, during a statewide address to mark the anniversary yesterday, urged Nigerians to continue to focus on those things that unite them and to shun tribalism or ethnicity.

    He enjoined Kogi workers to partner with the administration and be ready to make sacrifices for the greater good of the state.

    Obaseki urges peaceful co-existence

    Edo State Governor Godwin Obaseki congratulated the citizenry with a call on them to co-exist peacefully.

    Obaseki said the joy of being independent people cannot be qualified as it brings limitless freedom and a high sense of self-worth.

    He urged Edo people and Nigerians in general to remain broad-minded, accommodating and living with one another peacefully, irrespective of their diversity.

    Nigerians have every reason to celebrate, says Wike

    To Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike, after 57 years, “Nigerians have every reason to celebrate this day because independence was the culmination of the dreams and struggles of our founding fathers for us to forever be in complete control of our affairs as a free, unfettered people”.

    Wike said: “These are extraordinary times for our country made worse by our failure to successfully redefine and restructure the country towards a progressive path since independence. We know that the ashes from the old fires that threatened the stability of our country continue to smoulder unabated.

    “We must, therefore, all unite behind the national flag by setting aside the narrative of division, violence and hate and replace them with the narrative of peace and unity as aptly captured by our founding fathers on our coat of arms, be proud of our diversity and build a fairer and just nation for the present and future generations.”

    Akeredolu seeks prosperous nation

    Ondo State Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu (SAN) stressed the need for the people to cast aside divisive tendencies with the sole aim of building a nation with shared destiny.

    Akeredolu spoke during a special thanksgiving service organised by the state Christians Association of Nigeria (CAN) to mark the anniversary at the Saint David’s Anglican Church, Ijomu, Akure.

    He asked Nigerians to shun pervasive sentiment to enable the country to achieve its desirous meaningful growth.

    Ugwuanyi promises more projects

    Enugu State Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi reassured his people of a visible increase in essential infrastructure across the state “now that the rain is fast receding”.

    He said more contractors would return to old sites and work would commence on new sites.

    Ugwuanyi spoke at the holy mass/march past held at the Michael Okpara Square, Enugu to commemorate the independence anniversary celebration.

     Nigeria’ll implode without restructuring, says Dickson

    Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson yesterday warned that without restructuring, agitations against injustices and imbalances were capable of driving the country to the point of implosion.

    Dickson, therefore, described persons and groups calling for the change in the present structure of the country as the true patriots.

    The governor insisted that without sitting down to re-examine the present structure, the country would continue to deal with eruptions of agitations from different ethnic nationalities.

    Dickson spoke after a special prayer and thanksgiving to mark the independence anniversary and 21st birthday of Bayelsa at the King of Glory Chapel, Government House, Yenagoa.

  • Wike to Nigerians: build bridges of peace

    Wike to Nigerians: build bridges of peace

    Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike has urged Nigerians to commit to building bridges of peace and development.

    He congratulated Nigerians on the 57th Independence Anniversary, noting that despite the challenges of nationhood, the nation will continue to make progress.

    Wike assured Rivers will continue to work for a united Nigeria, declaring it is not part of any agitation for secession.

    The governor restated his call for dialogue to resolve all developmental, economic and political challenges facing the country.

    He called for better security and justice for all federating units  to  give all Nigerians a sense  of belonging and de-escalate tension across the land.

     

  • Let’s live in peace, Lagos, Ogun Speakers  urge Nigerians

    Let’s live in peace, Lagos, Ogun Speakers urge Nigerians

    Speaker of the Lagos State House of Assembly, Mudashiru Obasa, and his Ogun counterpart Suraj Adekunbi, have called on Nigerians to always live in peace with one another. Besides, they urged them to   continue to strive for the unity of the country despite the prevailing challenges. The speakers made the calls in their separate goodwill messages to celebrate the nation’s 57th independence anniversary.

    Obasa assured Nigerians that the All Progressives Congress (APC) administration at both national and state levels is committed to the welfare and improvement in the standard of living of the people of the country. He said, “there is need for us not to relent in striving for the unity of this country. We’ve to share love among ourselves and be our brothers” keepers at all time. This is what’s called patriotism and what we need to sustain the continued growth and development of our dear country.

    “We should remain vigilant at all time and avoid taking laws into our hands. We should remain law abiding at all time and cooperate as well as support government at all levels in their efforts to bring about improvement in their standard of living and enhance their welfare. Our government at all levels is committed to putting in place measures and programmes that will enhance development and growth of the country,” he said.

    In his own message, Adekunbi hailed what he described as the resilient spirit of Nigerians and urged them to shun the activities of people who are bent on causing confusion in the country. The Ogun Speaker said it is only when Nigerians live in love that the country can surmount the current challenges posed by people he called ‘trouble makers.’

    “It is to the glory of God and the resilience of the good people of this country that we have been able to defeat the sinister intentions of some people and groups who are bent on causing confusion in the country. We must continue to love one another, irrespective of tribe, religion or political affiliation. It is this love amongst us that has sustained this country and we must uphold it,” Adekunbi added.

     

  • Ndigbo in North for peace

    Ndigbo in North for peace

    Barely a week after northern state governors toured Southeast and Southsouth states calming nerves in the wake of unrest, Igbo leaders have returned the gesture, VINCENT OHONBAMU reports from Gombe

    After members of Independent People of Biafra (IPOB) clashed with the military in Abia State, and with some northern residents of Rivers State, northern state governors did their best to head off reprisals and save the country a possible second civil war. In Jos, Plateau State, where a clash reportedly claimed two lives, Governor Simon Lalong declared a curfew. His counterparts in other states of the region also mounted a spirited peace campaign. Not done, they headed southwards where they addressed northern residents of Abia and Rivers states, stressing that they were safe where they were and that no war was afoot.

    It worked. Tension eased, helped in part by the proscription of the secessionist group, and the Southeast governors’ constant appeal to their people.

    To bolster what the northern governors did, Ohaneze Ndigbo, the apex socio-cultural organisation of the Igbo, headed north with peace on their mind.

    In Gombe, the Gombe State capital, President-General of Ohaneze, Chief John Nnia Nwodo went down memory lane to remind everyone of the ugliness of war.

    He said, “I have come here because we are in unusual times in our country. The times we are in remind those of us who were old enough of 1966. In 1966, when our military leaders were unable to resolve [issues] on governance in Nigeria, there were frayed passions; the coup had happened, the counter-coup had happened, both characterised by the press as sectional.

    “And the Army which was supposed to make a unifying call for the defence of our country became divided along ethnic lines. Rhetoric became so heated and war broke out.

    “Where I come from in the Southeast, we lost over three million people during the war – 1.5million died in combat or air raids, one million people died of starvation and one million children who were sick of kwashiorkor and were flown out to neighbouring African countries without documentation never returned. Nigeria lost one million children she cannot reclaim anymore.

    “Statesmen of our age who had witnessed such catastrophe will have questions to answer before God if at this point in time we allow differences of opinion as to how Nigeria will be governed to arouse tempers to the point where we become so uncivilised as to plunge ourselves into another catastrophe.”

    The former Minister of Information and his team who had been on tour of northern Nigeria said the organisation conceived the idea of the visit before Operation Python Dance II and the visit of the Nigerian Northern Governors’ Forum to the Southeast.

    But the fact that the northern governors were in the East before Ohaneze’s visit indicates that both parties were “two people sleeping in the same bed, dreaming the same dream,” said Nwodo who flew into Gombe from Kano on Friday to see the governor and residents of the state, including the Igbo community.

    His mission was simple: to deliver a message of assurance from the chief executives, traditional rulers and leaders of Southeast states that “all non-Igbos who live in the Southeast of Nigeria will be protected with every available protective tool” and that “the South-easterners will be their brothers’ keeper.”

    The mission was also to seek the same assurances from the governor and people of the state as well as cooperation in dousing tempers across the country and achieving a more united and indivisible country.

    The elder statesmen in pursuance of their peace mission are visiting one state in each of the three geopolitical zones of the North. They were in Sokoto and Kano in the northwest because of the high density of Igbo population in Kano, and would be proceeding to Jos from Gombe

    He said they chose Gombe because it is the hub of the Northeast, the understanding and national exposure of its leadership and the belief that he has the ability, the sagacity and the patriotism to carry the peace message throughout the Northeast Nigeria.

    He said, “As long as this political impasse lasts, which we think will not be long; we (South-easterners) will emulate what the Sultan of Sokoto said a few weeks ago, that, any northerner who wants to kill an Igbo man should first kill the Sultan.

    “Our governors have told me say the same to the North that any Igbo man who wants to kill a northerner in Igbo land should first kill them as governors of the Southeast and I may well add as the leader of Igbo cultural organisation that they should also kill me first.”

    The President-General of the Ohaneze Ndigbo’s visit is not just about dousing tensions but also spreading the message of an ideal Nigeria which projects unity, such as he witnessed as a youth.

    Speaking further, Chief Nwodo said, “I am an example of what Nigeria could make in an individual. I grew up as a child seeing national unity dramatised in Enugu where I grew up. My father was a legislator in the Eastern House of Assembly, he was Minister under Dr. Azikiwe and Dr. Okpara with portfolios of commerce and industry and of local government. His party was the NCNC.

    “At that time, Enugu Municipality was governed by a Mayor who was elected in Adult Suffrage by the residents of Enugu City. My father’s party, the NCNC, sponsored a Katsina man, Alhaji Umaru Altini to vie for the Mayor of Enugu. We sang NCNC song for Umaru Altini, he beat other contestants flat and became Mayor of Enugu.

    “The Accountant-General then was a Yoruba man; the Private Secretary to the Government of Eastern Nigeria was Mr. John Umolu from Agenebode in what is now Edo State.

    “People really didn’t care where you came from. That is the Nigeria that I was brought up in. We could still go back there.”

    The Igbo leader also appreciated the northern governors for soaking up the tension so far, saying: “Your Excellency, I have come to thank your government because we’ve had flashpoints on the basis of hate speeches, on the basis of stories that are either truthful or very, very untruthful and exaggerated of lynches here and there.

    People have taken the law into their hands and attempted to retaliate and kill innocent people, who had no relationship to whatever conflagration. The military’s abuse of their position that happened in various parts of Nigeria, innocent Nigerians are being shot – no godly person will take up arms against someone that has done nothing to you and the rest.

    “Quite often, these situations have degenerated to chaos when elder statesmen have not had the courage to say enough is enough. We have come here Your Excellency to say enough is enough.

    He said, “We (Nigerians) are the envy of West Africa, we are the envy of Africa, we are a shining star for Africa to the rest of the world.

    “This country is gifted with diversity of so many cultures, so many gifts, so many enterprising characteristics, so much population; it is the envy of our adversaries that perhaps if we get our acts together, we could indeed be a pride to the whole world and there can be no question that no nation can grow without peace, without unity, without cohesion, without fear of God.

    “We bring this plea at Gombe state government to help us to attain this perfection and in the meantime, to arrest this boiling temper all over the country, so that we do not degenerate into a catastrophe.

    Governor Ibrahim Dankwambo was not around to receive the entourage. His deputy, Dr. Charles Iliya who did, said his principal, a few days earlier, called a meeting of traditional rulers, all security operatives in Gombe State, all religious bodies and gave them a message similar to Chief Nwodo’s

    He appreciated the former Minister of Information for broadening the understanding of the younger people around by going historical “because it is only when you know history that you will avoid it if it is not a good one or if it is a bad one.”

    “When people sometimes speak about the reasons why it seems Nigeria is not progressing, they do not include the devastating effects of the civil war.

    “Quite a number of people feel that a repeat of [the civil war] will destroy Nigeria.”

    Iliya said Governor Dankwambo was busy with other national assignments during the visit, but conveyed the governor’s message.

    “The governor has told me to tell you in clear terms that he would do his best to make sure that Gombe State stay peacefully, and we will make sure that we will continue to do what we have been doing to make the state peaceful.

    “In the history of Gombe State, we have never had a situation where a binding remark and a binding relationship has taken place as we are witnessing this afternoon

    “He said in Gombe state, you are safe. If anything is to touch any non-indigene of Gombe state, let it start with the indigenes of Gombe state because we are together.

    You have helped the economy of this state, you have helped the growth of this state, you have been a part and parcel of this state, we will never abandon you now. We are together with you

    After listening to responses from Sokoto, Kano and Gombe Chief Nwodo quoted Shakespeare: There is no art to finding the mind’s construction in the face.

    “But my interaction this time disputes Shakespeare because the mind’s construction on the faces of those I have visited have been so convincing, so persuasive and I would want to believe them rather than disbelieve them,” he said.

  • No alternative to peace in Niger Delta, says Boroh

    The Coordinator of  Presidential Amnesty Programme and Presidential Adviser on Niger Delta, Brig.-Gen. Paul Boroh (retd.), has said only peace will enhance Niger Delta’s development.

    He implored agitators in the creeks to embrace peace, clear vestiges of violence and sustain developmental efforts of the government.

    Boroh, represented by his Special Adviser, Maj. Martins Abdul (retd.), spoke in Yenagoa yesterday at the fourth edition of Miss Peace Bayelsa Beauty Pageant 2017 and Bayelsa Peace Awards, organised by PGR Entertainment.

    The amnesty boss, who received a Distinguished Advocate of Peace Award, praised the pageant organisers for holding the event at a time the country and world needed peace.

    He said: ”The pageant is  timely because now, the country and entire world need peace. For a young man to have this idea to organise a peace pageant, it is a laudable project.

    ”Without peace, there is no development. Now, we have problems in Niger Delta because investors are still afraid of coming. They are afraid because of threat posed by those in the creeks.

    ”As long as this happens,  development will be elusive. The government is poised to develop parts of the country, including Niger Delta, but violence remains the bane.  Without peace, there will not be development.

    ”So far, so good, in the last two years, the Presidential Amnesty Programme in Niger Delta has guaranteed peace. At the time the programme began, crisis was very high. Until August 2016 we still had problems.

    “Fortunately, we have  doused tension. We have  stabilised the region.

    ”We can boast of pilots, engineers and specialists  in professions. I urge parents, guardians and stakeholders to take this home to our children, our brothers and sisters that there is no alternative to peace.

    ”They (agitators) in the creeks should  embrace peace so that we can develop the region.”

    The Director, Miss Peace Bayelsa Organisation, Mr. Seleipre Tonbie, said the show began in 2011 to promote peace.

    He said the pageant was a reminder of the proclamation of amnesty by the late President Umaru Yar’Adua, adding that agitation led to the proclamation.

    Tonbie said: ”The Miss Peace Bayelsa Beauty Pageant is aimed at creating role models, who will serve as an ambassador of peace and enhance a new strength synergy and spirit of the advancement of peace in Bayelsa and Niger Delta.

    ”We have the ideology that peace is not a mere absence of war, but a virtue that springs from the force of character.

    “Promotion of peace through emulation of acceptable character representation becomes pertinent via pageantry, which showcases young, intelligent, confident, talented and creative women, who believe in their contributions to social awakening and growth. The quest for peace should be a conscious and collective effort to embrace change.”

    The highlight of the event, which ended about 3a.m.,  was the conferment of Distinguished Advocate of Peace Awards on two ex-militant leaders, Ebikabowei Ben aka Boyloaf and Chief Reuben Wilson aka General Pastor.

    Miss Samanta Davidson, representing Nembe Local Government, won this year’s Miss Peace Bayelsa. Miss Gbarian Ekpetiama and Miss Gbomo West emerged first and second runners-up.

  • Peace above all

    The clampdown on members of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) a fortnight ago has no doubt generated a controversy in the country. Tension in the country resulting from the activities of the group had reached an alarming rate.

    Members of the group were reported to have started violent attacks on northerners residing in the Southeast.

    They were reported to have been stopping vehicles in the Southeast and specifically searching for northerners, among other accusations.

    Their actions resulted in reprisal attacks in Plateau State while it took great efforts to stop such reprisal attacks in other parts of the country.

    Apart from the military operation codenamed ‘Python Dance II’ and other security forces drafted to the Southeast to maintain law and order, the government wasted no time to declare IPOB a terrorist group. Drafting the military to the Southeast also triggered various interpretations and debate.

    While some Nigerians felt that the government was too harsh on the group led by Nnamdi Kanu, others felt that the group shouldn’t have been allowed to spread its tentacles and operate at the level it did two weeks ago.

    Still, other Nigerians felt that the government should have ignored Kanu and his group from the outset, while some of them at the same time believed that the government made a mistake by allowing Kanu to be released on bail in the first instance.

    Some of those against the move by the Federal Government believed that the Python shouldn’t have been allowed to dance in the Southeast.

    Among those who did not support deployment of soldiers in quelling internal crises included former President Goodluck Jonathan.

    He said, “However, we want to advise the Buhari administration, which has announced plans to extend the military show of force to the South-South and the South-West through Operation Crocodile Smile, to tread with caution.

    “Nigeria is no longer under military rule. In a democracy, you separate the military from the police. The military is not meant to fight criminality within a nation because they are trained to fight a nation’s external enemies.

    “It is the police that are trained to fight crime internally. When the military starts doing the job of the police and starts fighting or doing what they call a ‘show of force’, the effect will not be to reduce crime. The effect will be to intimidate people.”

    Specifically on IPOB, he said, “The insinuations in the press conference given by Minister of Information, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, on Sunday, accusing the opposition of sponsoring the IPOB and the fact that he mentioned that Nnamdi Kanu preached Nigerian unity during the administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan is another clear indication that the present administration has not left propaganda mode for proper agenda mode two and a half year into their tenure.

    “If the government, in which Lai Mohammed serves, knows which opposition members are sponsoring IPOB, then they should identify them, arrest them and then prosecute them.” he said

    He added, “It is our suspicion that Lai Mohammed is talking from history seeing as he criticized the Jonathan government for banning Boko Haram in a statement he released on June 10, 2013, even though the Jonathan government had gone through due process before proscribing that murderous sect.

    The Senate President, Senator Bukola Saraki, had also faulted the military and said it was illegal for it to declare IPOB a terrorists group.

    But IPOB, to many Nigerians, had however played the grooves that necessitated the Python dance in the South East.

    Speaking on the issues last Wednesday, the Minister of Information, Lai Mohammed said: “I think anybody who has watched Nnamdi Kanu’s videos anywhere he goes to he openly solicits for arms and for funds, I have a lot of quotations from him as to the violence intention of IPOB, in one of his videos he said if he is arrested his boys should burn down the country, the same Kanu went on television a few days ago saying he was sleeping at about 4:30pm in his house in Umuahia and then some solders were making noises they were disturbing his sleep and his boys stopped them.

    “I ask him which country in the world would tolerate this. Unfortunately Nigerians, we have short memories at times, or we tend to be very mischievous because this thing is being turned into oh the North is persecuting the south east or muslims persecuting christians we have forgotten that in 1983 there was a group called Maitasini in Kano, they were crushed by Shagari government, they were muslims and northerners.

    “When they relocated to Burukutu they were again crushed by Shagari,l. When Buhari became Head of State, the same Maitasini raised their head, he chased them far into the Chad Republic as then the Head of State, I remember that time he was accused by America of trying to expand Ghadafi’s agenda.

    “Abacha in his own time dealt also with Maitasini and he was a muslim, President Yar Adua in 2010 was on his way to the airport when he got a report about Boko Haram, he sent army to go and destroy them, these were muslims from the north dealing with essentially islamic muslim insurgencies.

    “Anything about insurgence or terrorists act, you don’t think about religion, you don’t think about ethnicity, you think about the unity of the country.

    “Honestly Nigeria has been very very lucky, last week there would have been massive bloodshed if reprisals had taken place outside the south east and it didn’t take place because our traditional rulers, our governors and other leaders went out to pacify people and the kind of stories that has been trending on the social media has not helped things, as a matter of fact there was one stating that a major general had been killed, not knowing that it was a retired major that was killed in Benue state over land matters, that would have set the entire country ablaze.” He said

    He went on “And they think its a joke, you can imagine what would have happened if the people of Kano or Kaduna started retaliation, so we are in a very dangerous situation and actually we are sitting on a keg of gun powder. The peace that you are seeing is deceptive we must continue to work on it and we must continue to counter this very untrue narrative.

    “On the basis of that we have heard some funny bones saying that Nigeria should be expelled from the United Nations because they are perpetuating genocide, this government will not stifle anybody’s freedom of expression, but when you cross the line for the sake of national unity we won’t allow you.”

    “We have the records, we know IPOB collects money from many people from diaspora, they collect money from many people in Nigeria they collect money from some foreign countries, this is clear.

    Stressing that it was the rights of individuals or groups to seek self-determination, he had maintained that it should be pursued in a non-violent manner.

    “Where any group crosses the line by engaging in violence, it risks being cut to size and that’s exactly what has happened to IPOB.

    “I am not interested in the semantics or legality of troops deployment or the proscription of IPOB. All I know is that IPOB has engaged in terrorist activities, viz: Setting up parallel military and paramilitary organizations, clashing with the national army and attempting to seize rifles from soldiers, using weapons such as machetes, molotov cocktails and sticks and mounting roadblocks to extort money from people, among others.

    “To those who have engaged in semantics or legality, I ask: Which country in the world will tolerate those activities I have listed above? Which national army will look the other way when it is being attacked by a band of thugs?” he queried.

    While dialogue should be explored fully to resolve all agitations in the country, it will definitely not augur well for peace and unity of the nation to be slaughtered on the altar of religion and ethnic sentiments.

     

  • Commandant urge Rivers youths to shun violence, embrace peace

    Commandant urge Rivers youths to shun violence, embrace peace

    The Rivers State Commandant of the Peace Corps of Nigeria, Dr. Oyemike Oyemike, has urged youths to shun violence and embrace peace.

    He spoke in Port Harcourt, Rivers State capital, at a public lecture to mark the United Nations International Day of Peace.

    Oyemike noted that the international day of peace was an opportunity for individuals, organisations and nations to create practical acts of peace.

    He said: “It is necessary for Nigerians from different religions and ethnic backgrounds to do away with sentimental beliefs and pursue the virtue of peace, law and social order.

    “The act of conflict prevention, peace building, peace making and post-conflict transformation, the cornerstone of thriving democracy and sustainable development, involve all, especially the government, individuals and the larger society.”

    The commandant also stated that it is in preparing youths towards embracing the culture of peace and the act of non-violence that the founding fathers of the Peace Corps of Nigeria, in their wisdom, initiated the scheme, tailored at redirecting the productive energy of youths, to make them useful to their families and nation.

    The guest speaker, Dr. Raimi Lasisi, who spoke on “Together for Peace, Respect, Safety and Dignity for all,” insisted that efforts must be made to ensure peace to have development and make progress.

    Lasisi said: “While the United Nations, which acts as the global watchdog, is doing everything possible to ensure global peace, the actions or even inactions of individuals and select groups continue to provide incentives for violence, conflicts and war in many parts of the country and the world in general.

    “Anti-peace drums are being sounded across Nigeria, as the old evil of Boko Haram struggles to maintain its deadly status in the North, in addition to the migratory character of the herdsmen violence. The Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) is corroborating their efforts in the East. This is in addition to widespread discontent and in most cases social antagonism among Nigerian citizens concerning the economic hardship in the country.

    “In Nigeria, the threat to our collective conscience (togetherness), sustainable peace, respect, safety and dignity emerged as a result of structural historical circumstances that were not humanely addressed and now, they have festered to the extent that it is almost difficult to exorcise their ghosts.

    “While economic conditions, notably poverty, are the major drivers of violence and crime around the world, especially in developing societies, cultural and religious indicators are by far the most devastating, with regard to living together for sustainable peace, respect, safety and dignity around the world.”

    The guest speaker also stated that coming together to ensure sustainable peace, respect, safety and dignity for all in any society would require mutual respect for diversity, especially in a multi-ethnic society like Nigeria, stressing that sustainable peace and respect would provide the necessary pathway to safety and dignity for all.

    He pointed out that the importance of good governance in cementing relationships among citizens in any society could never be overemphasised, stressing that good governance would create an enabling environment for citizens of any country to feel the positive impact of governance, have respect for the institutions and succumb to the rule of law.

    Lasisi noted that government must ensure that youths were empowered through healthy employment opportunities, stating that the absence of sustainable jobs, especially for the youths, would make them a ready army for all kinds of illicit socio-economic activities that would undermine sustainable peace, respect, safety and dignity for all.