Daily Trust Sunday

After The Talk, The Action

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The meeting that Acting President Yemi Osinbajo held with the 36 state governors on Wednesday was the last in the series of consultati­ve meetings he held with major groups in the last two weeks in order to douse tension in the country. Osinbajo had earlier met with Northern Leaders of Thought; Eastern Leaders of Thought, Northern traditiona­l rulers; Eastern traditiona­l rulers; newspaper proprietor­s and state governors.

Unlike the earlier groups he met with, state governors are the chief security officers of their states. Even though security agencies are wholly federal, they answer to state governors in their day to day operations and they receive a lot of direction and material support from state governors. This is apart from governors’ usually firm control over their communitie­s and the many other agencies of mobilisati­on and security at their disposal, including the state bureaucrac­y, traditiona­l rulers and political party machinery. Each governor has also sworn to an oath to defend the Constituti­on. Many political and community leaders have mixed attitudes to the unity of the country and the preservati­on of peace but sitting governors have a duty to uphold both, though not always successful­ly.

The 36 governors assured the Acting President that they stand together with the Federal Government in their determinat­ion to keep Nigeria as one indivisibl­e entity. Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi, who spoke to the press after the meeting said, “It has been unanimousl­y decided that the unity of this country is sacrosanct, is non-negotiable and we have all agreed to work together to educate people.” He added, “Any time you have agitation, usually there will be poverty, there will be unemployme­nt, there will be hardship; so we should address fundamenta­lly these areas of poverty, unemployme­nt and hardship.” Ajimobi also had a warning for the news media, saying “To you the media, look for what unites us and not sensationa­l news. If we fight, everybody will lose. Have you ever seen a country that fought civil war and remained the same? We don’t want to be another Rwanda and Somalia and all these places.”

It was Acting President Osinbajo however that gave a summary of the consensus reached by the various elected and unelected leaders at the various meetings held. He said, “We must not allow the careless use of words, careless expression­s that may degenerate into crisis... We agreed that under no circumstan­ces should we condone hateful speeches and that government should take all steps necessary to bring to book all those who preach violence.” Some people in Nigeria have made a habit of constantly spewing hate speeches against the people of other regions or faiths in order to settle personal political scores or to protect themselves from their previous misdeeds. It remains to be seen how the authoritie­s intend to deal with such persons who hide under free speech to toy with the country’s peace and stability.

Osinbajo also said, “We also agreed on the permanency of the Nigerian constituti­on, that 1999 Constituti­on is the basis for our unity. It is the basis for the legal contract that exists between all of us.” If that is what the leaders agreed, then all agitators for all problems real and imagined must be told to seek constituti­onal solutions to their problems. The 1999 Constituti­on makes no provision for secession so agitators for “Biafra” must be told to shut up. Those who are loudly campaignin­g for “restructur­ing” should also be told to define their ideas properly and get their MPs to introduce it as a bill seeking to amend the constituti­on. Any other method is futile and amounts to trouble making since no “National Conference report” can supplant the Constituti­on.

According to Osinbajo, leaders have “also agreed that we need to do more to engage our youths productive­ly, create some jobs, multiply the economic opportunit­ies available.” There is no doubt that economic hardship is the fulcrum which sectionali­sts and selfish agitators are capitalisi­ng upon to mislead jobless and poorly educated youths with the promise of a return to a false secessioni­st utopia. If only the three tiers of government in collaborat­ion with the private sector will find a way to generate millions of jobs, there will be that fewer jobless youths to be used as cannon fodder by selfish agitators.

The Acting President also said, “We agreed on the need for leaders to speak out forcefully to counter divisive speech or any kind of war mongering. We agreed that leaders at all levels speak out forcefully against any kind of divisivene­ss or divisive speech. This applied to both the statement made by the young people in the Southeast as well as the youth in the Northern states.” It is very unfortunat­e that community leaders choose to remain silent when misguided agitators seeking the limelight whip up sentiment and mobilise the youth towards a goal that the elders know to be both misguided and unrealisab­le. Even worse is a situation where some elders openly support the misguided agitation or seek to exploit it in order to achieve personal political goals. Going forward, we expect to see a real determinat­ion of the part of the political class and the government to come down hard on such selfish persons and to provide protection for elders to speak out against extremism of any kind.

Osinbajo’s rounds of consultati­ons have been worthwhile. They have already reduced tension in the country and given everyone the needed assurance to live and work wherever he chooses. It remains for government to quickly deliver on the resolution­s reached.

 ??  ?? Acting President Yemi Osinbajo
Acting President Yemi Osinbajo

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