THISDAY

Dickson: Killings Greatest Threat to Nigeria’s Existence

Faults lopsided federal structure

- Gboyega Akinsanmi

Bayelsa State Governor, Hon. Seriake Dickson yesterday warned against the rising spate of violence and senseless killings in the North, noting that the sad developmen­t portended the greatest threat to Nigeria’s corporate existence since after the 1967 civil war.

The governor equally faulted the nation’s lopsided federal structure, describing over-centralisa­tion and politicisa­tion of law and order in the country as another gravest threats to contempora­ry governance

He expressed these views in a statement his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Francis Agbo issued after a lecture the governor delivered at the Institute of Security Studies (ISS), Abuja on Friday.

The lecture was titled Cultural Values, National Security and Challenges of Contempora­ry Governance: Perspectiv­e from Bayelsa State.

Speaking at the lecture, Dickson condemned the recent killings in different parts of the federation, warning that Nigeria would cease “to have a future if President Muhammadu Buhari fails to mobilise the people of Nigeria to build a non-partisan consensus to avert the killings.”

He lamented that some political leaders “are using the security structures of the country to torment innocent citizens for their selfish ends and by so doing, causing national insecurity and instabilit­y.”

He noted that the wind of insecurity blowing across the federation, particular­ly the killings of innocent Nigerians in the North, were fuelled by the imbalance in the country’s security structure and the politicisa­tion of security by members of the ruling party.

Dickson said: “It is very clear that Nigeria’s lopsided federal system and over-centralisa­tion of security powers and the politicisa­tion of security by several agencies are a major clause of instabilit­y and poses a threat to National stability.

“I was talking the politics of insecurity and the insecurity of politics occasioned by the abuse of Nigeria’s federal system and the rate at which those who control powers at the federal level undermine law and order in parts of the federation and make it difficult for our citizens to feel safe and to feel protected under the law.

“When you correct this abuse of federal system, the governor of Benue and Taraba States will be in the position to mobilise the security resources of their states to end unnecessar­y killings. I remember the governor of Zamfara said he did not want to be addressed as the Chief Security Officer of the state.”

Dickson explained that although the military had made appreciabl­e progress in its fight against Book Haram, recent incidents in the country showed that the war against terrorism was far from over.

He, therefore, called on stakeholde­rs irrespecti­ve of their political parties “to unite in order to proffer a solution to the lingering insecurity in the country. When a nation comes under attacks, the leaders – military, civil, Christians, Muslims – must come together to address it.”

He said what was going on in Nigeria was more than the historical herdsmen and farmers clashes, lamenting that the coun- try had lost too many innocent souls to the killings.

“Who are the farmers having clashes with herdsmen in Sokoto, Zamfara and other places? We must call a spade a spade for the good of our country. We are dealing with a calculated attack on our country. We are dealing with machinery of violence against innocent Nigerians.

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