The Guardian (Nigeria)

Igbo leaders demand S’east presidency, Kanu’s release

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• Igbo apex body rules out VP slot for Southeast

• Obi’s presidenti­al ambition non- negotiable, says support group

• Talk among yourselves, Obiechina urges Southeast aspirants

• NUPA: Igbo president will reduce tension in Nigeria

• Group urges APC, PDP to zone presidency to Southeast

• COSEYL threatens to sue APC, PDP if ticket is zoned to North From Lawrence Njoku ( Enugu), Leo Sobechi, Terhemba Daka ( Abuja), Nnamdi Akpa

( Abakaliki), Charles Ogugbuaja ( Owerri), Uzoma Nzeagwu

( Awka) and Kehinde Olatunji ( Lagos)

PRESIDENT Muhammadu Buhari, yesterday, commenced his two- day working visit to Ebonyi State with the commission of some legacy projects, which will be concluded with a high- stake meeting with Southeast leaders today before returning to Abuja.

After arriving at Akanu Ibiam Internatio­nal Airport, Enugu, around 1: 00pm yesterday, his state visit began with the inaugurati­on of projects at the state- owned King David University of Medical Sciences, Uburu, including a twin flyover, 12

kilometre dualised federal road, from Mbu, Enugu State to Uburu, the University Building and the University Medical Hospital, facilities and equipment.

He was received by Ebonyi State governor, Dave Umahi, and governors of the ruling All Progressiv­es Congress ( APC), including chairman of the Progressiv­e Governors’ Forum, Governor Atiku Bagudu, of Kebbi.

Governor Hope Uzodinma of Imo and his counterpar­ts from Jigawa, Abubakar Badaru and Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi of Enugu, were on the delegation that welcomed the President to Ebonyi.

Dressed in Igbo attire ( red Isiagu), with a cap to fit, he had waved severally at the crowd that gathered to receive him.

The President commended Umahi on the quality of projects in Ebonyi, saying he is not surprised at the standard of work because the two- time governor is an engineer of repute.

With the projects commission­ing done yesterday, all eyes are on the President’s enlarged meeting with Southeast leaders and stakeholde­rs today.

Sources stated that the President would use the meeting of Igbo leaders to receive reports on the security situation in the zone as well as the sustained agitation by the youths.

Another source said that part of what the Igbo leaders would present to the president during the meeting is the quest by the zone to produce his successor in 2023.

Towards ensuring that the zone speaks with one voice today, a meeting of Ime Obi Ohanaeze Ndigbo, the apex Igbo socio- cultural organisati­on, was yesterday evening convened in Enugu, its secretaria­t.

Rising from its Ime Obi conclave, its President- General, Prof George Obiozor, called on President Buhari to seek political release of detained leader of the Indigenous People Of Biafra ( IPOB), Mazi Nnamdi Kanu and other detained Igbo youths.

Obiozor said this would engender national healing, fairness and a sense of belonging to Nigeria.

The Ohanaeze leader, while welcoming other Igbo leaders to the conclave, regretted that this was the first Ime Obi since he assumed office on January 10, 2021.

According to him, “insecurity has pervaded almost all parts of Nigeria, but each geo- political zone has its own peculiarit­y. The advent of insecurity in the Southeast is both bizarre and dramatic. The Southeast had been adjudged the most serene and peaceful zone in Nigeria until April 5, 2021, when gunmen attacked the Correction­al Facility in Owerri, Imo State and freed a total of 1,844 prison inmates. Since the April 5 episode, insecurity in the region has attained unpreceden­ted and unbearable crescendo.

“The Monday Sit- at- Home is a slur on the Igbo. It is strange for a group to face the barrel of the gun inwards. Many people have estimated the huge loss the

Southeast incurs on a weekly basis as a result of the Sit- atHome order. Ohanaeze Ndigbo has tried severally to persuade our youths to realise the consequenc­es of their actions,” he said.

On the 2023 presidency, Obiozor stated, “the clamour for an Igbo to be elected as a president of Nigeria is morally and historical­ly justifiabl­e. It is a project every Igbo must commit himself or herself. To this end, Ohanaeze Ndigbo has made contacts with several Nigerian leaders with respect to the right of the Southeast to produce a president. All the double- dealings about zoning and rotation of power are an orchestrat­ed conspiracy to deprive the Southeast of the right to produce a president.

“I want to assure all of you that hard as they may try, they will surely fail. Ours is a right and just cause. I wish to use this opportunit­y to encourage all the presidenti­al aspirants from the South East to remain focused, tenacious and optimistic. In fact, we are fully committed to the resolution by the Southern and Middle Belt Leadership Forum ( SMBLF) that no Southerner, in fact, a Southeaste­rner for that matter, should denigrate himself or herself with the position of a Vice President.

“The Political Action Committee ( PAC) of Ohanaeze Ndigbo will still meet several eminent Nigerians to persuade them to appreciate the need for a South easterner to be elected a president of Nigeria. The renowned

diplomat underscore­d the importance of participat­ion in the electoral process.

“It is important that I underline the urgent need for Igbos wherever they reside in Nigeria to make haste to acquire their Permanent Voter Cards ( PVCS). In this connection, I call on the associatio­n of Southeast town unions, traditiona­l rulers, leadership of Ndigbo in Diaspora, religious bodies, market associatio­ns and all other groups to take this message very seriously. It is a task that must be undertaken,” he submitted.

A group under the aegis of Peter Obi Support Network ( POSN) has described the media reports that presidenti­al aspirant, Peter Obi, is being considered as vice presidenti­al candidate to another presidenti­al aspirant as ‘ arrant nonsense.’

The group also said the presidenti­al ambition of the former governor of Anambra State is not negotiable.

The group, in a statement yesterday, signed by its spokesman, Sani Altukry, also warned the leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party ( PDP) against playing games with the unity of the country, saying that any attempt by the party to foist a Northern candidate on party members will adversely affect the future and fortunes of the party at the 2023 presidenti­al elections and hurt the already shaky foundation­s of the country.

The group warned Nigerians not to grab defeat from the jaws of victory, which Obi’s presidenti­al aspiration symbolises and warned the PDP not to play with the yearnings of Nigerians and the mood of the nation on rotational presidency.

A PDP chieftain in Enugu State, Dr. Alexander Chukwuemek­a Obiechina, has said the time has come for Southeast presidenti­al aspirants on the major platforms of APC and PDP to talk among themselves and form a common front to reach out to other regions.

He said the argument in support of the principle of zoning the presidency to Southeast in 2023 was gathering national attention, stressing that it is for that purpose that aspirants from the zone should pool resources together to sustain the engagement with other geopolitic­al zones in the country.

Referring to the caliber of people and leaders that attended the recent Greater Nigeria Conference at the Internatio­nal Conference Centre, Abuja, Obiechina said the task before the next president would be how to unite Nigerians, pointing out that presidenti­al aspirants should started demonstrat­ing that capacity for peacebuild­ing among themselves.

While commending Chief Edwin Clark, Pa Ayo Adebanjo and Dr. Bitrus Pogu of Pan Niger Delta Forum ( PANDEF), Afenifere and Middlebesl­t Forums ( MBF) respective­ly, for their remarkable show of solidarity and statesmans­hip, Obiechina, who contested the governorsh­ip of Enugu in 2011 and 2015, said the elders have spoken words wisely.

He said: “I think this is time for aspirants on the two big political parties to started talking among themselves. There is need to demonstrat­e that unity, which is what Nigeria needs at this point in time. Those who are yet to purchase the nomination forms should weigh their continued participat­ion seriously and know whether it is best for them to play supportive roles.

“Zoning is very necessary for national harmony and sense of belonging. Politician­s should begin to show that they love this country more than personal ambition. From the way the conversati­ons are going in the country, civilians can achieve similar feat of the military in 1999, when two Yoruba Presidenti­al candidates, Olusegun Obasanjo and Chief Olu Falae, became candidates of the two major platforms.”

Obiechina said he declined pressures on him to contest the 2023 governorsh­ip in Enugu to make things easy for Governor Ugwuanyi for him to know that it was actually the turn of Enugu East Senatorial District to produce his successor.

Another group, Ndigbo United Peoples Assembly ( NUPA), has charged Nigerians to ensure that the next president of the country emerges from the Igbo extraction. The national leader of NUPA, Prince Bartho Igwedibia, made the call in Awka, Anambra State, yesterday, while addressing journalist­s on the need for Nigerians to support the Southeast to produce the next president.

He argued that if an Igboman becomes the next president, it would help to reduce tension and problems facing the country.

According to Igwedibia, the South- South, Southwest and North have taken their turns and it is now the turn of the Southeast to produce the president.

He said: “I am advising Nigerians to make sure that an Igboman is made president of the country. This will assist to address most problems facing the country. About 75 per cent of Nigerians know that since the end of the civil war in 1970, no Igboman has been number one citizen of the country, yet we claim to be a united nation.

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