Business Day (Nigeria)

Insecurity: How to reduce tension in Nigeria, by Obasanjo’s former security aide, others

- IFEOMA OKEKE

Aretired Principal Staff Officer of the Department of State Services (DSS) and former Senior Security detail to expresiden­t Olusegun Obasanjo, Adetayo Oluwaseyi has advised President Muhammadu Buhari to immediatel­y commence the process of restructur­ing the country and embark on massive recruitmen­t into the Nigerian military as parts of measures to reduce the areas of discontent­ment which he, alongside others said are contributo­ry factors to the current security bedlam in Nigeria.

Also, Lagos-based legal practition­er and public affairs analyst, Chima Nnaji has said that the propensity to dominate the citizenry by leaders who deploy religion, ethnic sentiments and the notion that a certain groups of people are born to rule the country must be downplayed to eliminate provocatio­n generated across the country.

The duo, alongside others spoke at a forum in Lagos at the weekend where experts gathered to proffer solutions to the myriad of what many described as unacceptab­le spate of recurring wanton destructio­n of lives and property across the country.

The forum, tagged ‘A day with the Parish Priest’ was put together by the Catholic Men Organisati­on of Nigeria (CMO) of St. Leo’s Catholic Church, Ikeja with the theme: ‘Insecurity in Nigeria: implicatio­n for ethnic and religious harmony’.

Catholic Archbishop of Lagos, represente­d by Wilfred Nwachukwu, Alfred Adewale Martins described the annual forum as one where thought-provoking solutions are generated and affirmed that with God, the mammoth challenges in Nigeria would soon be history.

The CMO Chairman, St. Leos chapter, Maurice Offiong said the security problems in the country calls for urgent attention and drastic actions from all as it is the masses, who cut across all ethnic and religious divides that bears a lion’s share of the brunt of the problem.

Also speaking, a former presidenti­al candidate and Chairman, Inter-party Advisory Council of Nigeria, Yunusa Tanko said the turnaround for the country must include a demand for apologies from political leaders who for years speaks to the citizens’ ethnic, religious and political inclinatio­ns in order to remain in power.

Tanko said that electorate­s should henceforth choose leaders who are thinkers and in turn with the global realities affirming that majority of the current leaders are bereft of how to govern a country in the 21st century.

In her interventi­on, Chairperso­n of the occasion and public relation expert, Nkechi Ali-balogun who made a case for the involvemen­t of women in peace-making processes, said: “Ethnicity in Nigeria overrides class politics and national interest. Nigeria has over 250 ethnic groups with a complex coloration and admixture. One of those coloration­s is religion. Religious affiliatio­n is linked to Nigeria’s notable ethnic diversity.”

The former President Obasanjo’s security aide, Adetayo explained that the Boko Haram insurgency was the result of the inaction of government­s in the past to pay attention to a growing number of extremists who participat­ed in wars and undergo trainings

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