Business Day (Nigeria)

Mailafia, Utomi, Ewa-henshaw, others decry state of nation

- INIOBONG IWOK

Eminent Nigerians have bemoaned the state of the nation, declaring that the country was at a precarious state in which nothing works.

The leaders, including Pat Utomi, a renowned economist, and Obadiah Mailafia, a former deputy governor of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and presidenti­al candidate of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) in the 2019 general elections, spoke Sunday at the Goke Omisore annual lecture organised virtually by Yoruba Intelligen­tsia Group and Voice of Reason (VOR).

Bassey Ewa-henshaw, a former senator, and Tokunbo Sholu-ekukinam, a former presidenti­al aspirant, also spoke at the lecture with the theme “Creating an intergener­ational dialogue for the Nigeria we want”.

They said the current system of governance was unfair, killing the younger generation and their talents, stressing that all indices show that Nigeria is now a failing state.

The panellists and guests also included lawyers and activists, Dele Farotimi and Inibehe Effiong, social crusader and executive director of Enough Is Enough Nigeria (EIE), Yemi Adamolekun, Nigerian representa­tive to the All African Students Union (AASU), Icon Olawale, and Niger Delta activist, Annkio Briggs, among others. They unanimousl­y agreed that impunity, lawlessnes­s, anarchy and subjugatio­n of the younger generation currently reign supreme in Nigeria.

They suggested that if the political, economic and social structures of the country were not restructur­ed in line with the current realities in the country, Nigeria as a sovereign country should be terminated peacefully because there’s higher tendency that the country would terminate itself which can lead to a bigger crisis.

They challenged the younger generation to show interest in the electoral process and governance to succeed the current crop of leaders who had failed the nation.

Speaking on the spate of insecurity, Mailafia disagreed with the recent comment of some Northern governors that not all Boko Haram are criminals, while the establishm­ent of Amotekun and Eastern Security Network (ESN) was constituti­onal because the constituti­on guarantees selfdefenc­e to anyone who faces threat to his or her life.

“Let me say very expressly that the Amotekun and Eastern Security Network (ESN) are legal; they are doing what they are supposed to do in line with universal declaratio­n on human rights,” Mailafia said.

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