The Guardian (Nigeria)

Centre urges vigilance by Nigerians in 2019 poll

- By Gbenga Salau

AS Nigeria prepares for the 2019 election, the Centre for Anti-corruption and Open Leadership (CACOL), yesterday, in Lagos, called on Nigerians to be vigilant in casting votes for preferred candidates.

The centre said nobody should be given free mandate without critical interrogat­ion of the person’s profile and manifestoe­s that can be used to hold them accountabl­e.

Chairman of CACOL, Mr. Debo Adeniran, while speaking at a press briefing on the state of the nation, noted that this year is most significan­t as a pre-election season and that citizens would be confronted with politicall­y manipulate­d events, promises of Eldorado and scheming for control of political structures.

He said, “It is a year when all Nigerians, just like crabs, must be very vigilant with all eyes open; interrogat­e all situations to discern the real truth. It is a year when we have to take stock and rearm ourselves on the developmen­tal needs and maximizati­on of the latent potentials of our great country.”

According to him, this year would test the strength of the citizens’ collective efforts in molding the country into a developmen­tal nation.

“We are at the intersecti­on of several cross-roads and we can only leap forward if we genuinely address the ailments afflicting us and take whatever bitter pill that may be necessary to get out of the present self-induced coma.”

He stated that body language, integrity and person- al example as exemplary as they may seem is never enough to deter corruption adding, “The crusade must move to the next phase, it must become popular and owned by the entire nation. This is the way to make it a national heritage.

“In the coming week, CACOL would be embarking on anti-corruption tour round some notorious locations of failed social amenities in the country to sensitise the public and ginger the relevant government institutio­ns into taking concrete actions.

“We are apt to warn that Nigerians may have to rise in waves of protests to be able to get any firm commitment on provision of social amenities and standardiz­ation of schools and health facilities because the ruling elite and the government have sold their souls to the neo-liberal policies that forbid the state from engaging in such endeavours.”

Adeniran said the country is heavily bedeviled with orgies of various forms of social violence and breach of security of lives and proper- ties with the easiest commoditie­s in the black market seem to be arms and ammunition­s.

According to him, “Armed robbers and bandits have taken over most communitie­s, from the intransige­nce of Niger-delta militants to Biafra agitators to the enclave of Boko Haram in the North East and the marauding hordes of herdsmen, Nigeria is a theatre of war where lives have lost its humane values.

“Interestin­gly, the police and other security forces are also culpable. Nigerians have to cry out against various acts of violent misdemeano­rs by the police Special Ant-robbery Squad (SARS). There are equally internatio­nal outbursts against killings of innocent civilians by armed forces drafted into trouble spots.

“The hallmark of constituti­onal and democratic rule is to maintain public order without adverse effects on the rights of law-abiding citizens. Nigerian state and its operators must embrace this modicum of civilizati­on.”

 ??  ?? INEC Chairman, Mahmoud Yakubu
INEC Chairman, Mahmoud Yakubu

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