THISDAY

You Are Appointmen­t Seekers, Osinbajo Tells Protesters of Marginalis­ation

- Paul Obi in Abuja

Acting President Yemi Osinbajo yesterday took a swipe at those complainin­g about the marginalis­ation of their ethnic groups, saying they were opportunis­ts seeking political appointmen­ts.

The acting president who spoke at a seminar on Unity and National Security, organised by the Institute of Security Studies, Abuja said most of the agitators were fighting for personal interest rather than the good of their ethnic groups.

“It is also not true that those who make marginalis­ation charges are altruistic. Often what they are saying is: I am marginalis­ed, appoint me," Osinbajo said.

He spoke against the background of the prevailing groundswel­l of agitations for the restructur­ing of the country, which many people and groups claimed was caused by the marginalis­ation of their ethnic groups.

The agitations had led to hate speeches from separatist­s groups that had sprung up all over the country.

But the acting president cautioned against the trend, saying those complainin­g about marginalis­ation were insincere and were only using it as a bargaining chip to feather their self-serving interests.

He berated the agitators for resorting to hate speeches, saying that it was inimical to the unity and developmen­t of the country.

While insisting that hate speech was not an exercise of freedom of speech, he warned: “Hate speech precedes tragedies

in human history.”

Osinbajo said the evidence that the agitators were selfservin­g could be found in the endemic nature of corruption, arguing that its perpetrato­rs were from every ethnic group in the country.

“It is a false narrative that one group is more corrupt than the other. Not so. If you look at a corruption charge sheet, there is unity; you find all ethnic and religious groups equally represente­d in corruption. There’s complete unity in the business of corruption,” he said.

The acting president pleaded for restraints, saying Nigeria would be better and stronger as one united nation.

“It is a false narrative that we are better off when ethnic groups are on their own,” he said, contending that: "while different groups have strength, we are better united."

Osinbajo said it was untrue that nations that were formed the way Nigeria was formed were bound to fail, explaining that the term “mere geographic expression” was not original to Nigeria.

The country had been in the grip of agitations from separatist­s agitating and clamouring for restructur­ing. This has also been worsened by the National Assembly’s rejection of the constituti­on amendment bill seeking to devolve more powers to the states.

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