THISDAY

Agbakoba Faults Osinbajo, Ohanaeze’s Position on Nigerian Sovereignt­y, Says it’s Not Sacrosanct

Alleges politician­s attitude created IPOB leader, Kanu

- Sunday Okobi

Human rights lawyer, Mr. Olisa Agbakoba (SAN), has faulted the recent declaratio­n by the presidency, prominent politician­s and various groups in the country that Nigerian sovereignt­y is non-negotiable, insisting that Nigerian unity is not sacrosanct, and that no unit of the government or group has the right to force people of diverse culture and views to co-exist.

Agbakoba who also blamed politician­s for the emergence of people like the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu, lamented that the Nigerian system is not working, adding that the system is not even attractive to call for coexistenc­e.

At a press conference in Lagos yesterday, the lawyer faulted the acting President Yemi Osinbajo for declaring that Nigeria is indissolub­le, adding that there’s nothing sacrosanct about Nigeria unity, and that it (the country) can blow up any day going by different agitations and resentment going on in the country. “My point is that you can’t force sovereignt­y; you can’t force people to live together, the people must be included in the process of things,” he stated.

According to him, “Presently, Nigeria is in a big problemrec­ession, poverty, decaying infrastruc­ture, Biafra, Ijaws/ Itsekiris, Boko Haram, Arewa, Oduduwa group among others-Nigeria is in absolute tatters. But it is important to ask what’s the way forward is. Every Nigerian politician is calling for restructur­ing, but I disagree, because I think there’s a conception irony in assuming that restructur­ing would work or solve the myriad of problems we have. I think the acting president was wrong to say that Nigeria is indissolub­le; there’s nothing sacrosanct about Nigeria, it can blow up any day, it is an artificial creation that happened in 1914, and when it was amalgamate­d, we were not there.

“Nigeria was amalgamate­d for the interest of the colonialis­ts who wanted to export things from the then nation, and since 1914, we had not had any ‘Octotonous’, meaning we have not had any homegrown process in which the people are involved in the creation of their constituti­on, and that is our problem, so to just go to restructur­ing without asking some key questions is fundamenta­lly flawed.

He further stated that surprising­ly, Nigeria has been in this since 1914.

“In that year, the colonial masters deceived us, and when they saw that it wasn’t more relevant, they engineered colonially Independen­ce constituti­on which has nothing to do with us, which eventually collapsed. The military came in, and when they found out that it wasn’t possible to retain power, they created a military-generated constituti­on of 1999. Which one of these constituti­ons represents the people?”

Agbakoba posited that the sovereignt­y of Nigeria is only sacrosanct for politician­s eyeing the 2019 elections, stating that “they will deceive us again till 2019; pretend that restructur­ing is the issue just to climb the band-wagon of popularism (imagine Obasanjo, Babangida talking about restructur­ing, what did they do when they had power?). Painfully, Nigerians are always taken in by these leaders. We are so gullible in Nigeria; about 160 million people unemployed, no health care system, no good road, nothing is working, yet we are being deceived by these people. So these are part of the works to be done by the civil society.

He noted that all these laxities and nonchalanc­e about the people have also given the IPOB leader, Kanu, the platform to spring out from nowhere.

The senior advocate osaid he has nothing personally against Kanu, except that he must agitate in accordance with the Nigerian law. He stated that what the IPOB leader is doing is called ‘self-determinat­ion’ and it is recognised in the United Nation Charter just like the Catalans in Spain.

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