THISDAY

Kogi Stakeholde­rs Seek Tinubu’s Interventi­on on Insecurity in Omala, Dekina LGAs

Ask Gov Dodo to resign

- Onyebuchi Ezigbo in Abuja

Indigenes of Kogi State under the auspices of Kogi East Critical Stakeholde­rs (KECS) has pleaded with President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to intervene in the worsening security situation in Omala and Dekina Local Government Areas and other parts of the state.

They alleged that the state Governor, Alhaji Usman Ododo, has failed to live up to expectatio­ns of his exalted office, adding that he has so far shown that his government is appendage of his predecesso­r, Governor Yahaya Bello.

The stakeholde­rs, therefore, asked Governor Ododo to resign forthwith, “having declared himself unworthy of governance by publicly directing his commission­ers, civil servants and other government officers to ignore his constituti­onal directives should that conflict with that of former Governor Bello’s directives.”

The group accused the state governor of several infraction­s, including the unconstitu­tional establishm­ent of the ‘Office of immediate past Governor’, and attempting to denigrate the ancient traditiona­l institutio­n by ignoring the presence of the number one traditiona­l ruler in the state at his inaugurati­on as governor.

In a communique issued at the end of its meeting yesterday in Abuja and signed by Alhaji Sule Iyaji, the Kogi East stakeholde­rs expressed concerns over what they described as “serious security situation, abuse of power, intimidati­on and encroachme­nts on the rights of the people in the state.”

The communique said: “The president should kindly intervene in the security situation in Omala and Dekina LGA and other parts of Kogi State, where herders have taken over the administra­tion of our fishing and agrarian communitie­s and now levying taxes on the hapless citizens for their own use and sacking them from their farmlands and fishing grounds.

‘The herders are equally expanding their control to other communitie­s thereby creating unrest and displaceme­nt of our people. The urgent interventi­on of the president would prevent further bloodshed and recourse to self-help by the populace.”

Iyaji, who said the stakeholde­rs reached the position after carrying out a comprehens­ive review of the state of affairs in Kogi State, noted that the president’s interventi­on has become necessary because of the inability of the Kogi State Government to arrest the prevailing serious security situation.

“It is on this note that we join other Nigerians in the call for the creation of state and local government police, because we believed that where there is a balance of terror, the security situation will abate as no community will watch their land and resources being taken over by strangers or land grabbers,” he said.

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