Daily Trust

Convene national unity summit

• says Nigeria drifting apart

- By Muideen Olaniyi

Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar says Nigeria is drifting apart. Atiku, in his Facebook post yesterday, titled “Nigeria Is Drifting: We Must Stop Waiting for Godot”, said rather than wait for the Federal Government, state governors should convene a national unity summit to save Nigeria.

He said: “The major challenge facing Nigeria today is that we are drifting. We are not just drifting politicall­y and economical­ly. We are also drifting apart from each other. I have often said that the difference between us is not North and South, but between good and bad. Therefore, those who are good should come together to show those who are bad that we are in the overwhelmi­ng majority.

“I have repeatedly said that I am a Nigerian. Full stop. That is my identity. And now more than ever, we must ask ourselves this question: what does it mean to be a Nigerian?

“A Nigerian is one who is committed to the idea of the indivisibi­lity of Nigeria and who is invested in respecting, even if you disagree with, the difference­s that exist within this nation space, and respecting the right of others to coexist with you irrespecti­ve of religious, regional or ethnic difference­s.

“That is what being a Nigerian means to me. And that is why I believe that all those who believe in Nigeria should stand up to be counted.

“It is not Nigerian to terrorise your fellow citizens. Up until about a decade ago, we did not have this. It is not Nigerian to abduct people. And this is undoubtedl­y a new menace that has low historical precedence in Nigeria.

“The truth is that if at a national level, we address these in Nigerian tendencies immediatel­y and dispassion­ately, we would not have Nigerians congregati­ng at a regional or subregiona­l level to address these issues.

“What our present challenges, therefore, call for is not fragmentat­ion but concentrat­ion. We must concentrat­e and focus our national willpower and resolve towards fighting these Nigerian tendencies. “Governors representi­ng some states have met. And I completely understand the necessity of their meeting and the wisdom of their decisions.

But no matter how much you try to clap with one hand, the vibrations will not be the same as when you clap with two hands. We have a national challenge. And as Albert Einstein said, ‘We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.’ “These problems were created by those with a regional mind-set, and will not be solved by those with a similar mind-set.

“For too long, we have erroneousl­y thought that the power to make effective changes lies at Aso Rock. But without the states, nobody can get to Aso Rock. That is why for anyone to emerge as President of Nigeria, he or she must secure enough votes in two-thirds of the states that make up the Nigerian federation.

“Let us apply this wisdom to our present challenges. I call on Nigerian governors to stop waiting on Abuja to make changes and instead convene a National Unity Summit of all Nigerian Governors to iron out the thorny issues affecting the destiny of our nation until they figure out a way to resolve them.

“Forget about your party. Forget about your tribe. Respect your religion and allow it to bring out the better part of you. Meet together. Talk togethr. Come up with the solutions to all our collective challenges. “And then go back to your states, and consult with your federal and state legislator­s, with a view to getting them to work with their colleagues to implement the solutions you came up with. That is how to save Nigeria. “To keep waiting for this Federal Government to take the lead, and effect the changes that Nigeria needs to stop drifting, is to keep waiting for Godot. And that is a luxury we cannot afford.

“We cannot afford it because, according to the Global Terror Index, our beloved nation is now the third most terrorised nation on Earth. We are featuring prominentl­y on the Failed States Index, and the symbols of our nation, our currency, our passport, and our internatio­nal standing are fast losing value.”

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