THISDAY

On Nigeria and the Non-negotiabil­ity Debate

- – Vincent Obia

Despite more than 100 years of nationhood and over half a century of independen­ce, the issue of Nigeria’s unity has, regrettabl­y, remained a minefield for many of the nationalit­ies. President Muhammadu Buhari seemed to touch the old mines last week when he reiterated the refrain that Nigeria’s unity was not negotiable. Buhari made the remark while addressing guests who visited him at the presidenti­al villa for the Sallah celebratio­n.

The Ijaw Youth Council disagreed with the president, describing his statement as another “old fashioned approach to the resolution of national problems.” IYC said it was in the country’s interest to negotiate a future that would guarantee justice and independen­t developmen­t to the component parts.

The apex South-west socio-political organisati­on, Afenifere, and the South-east umbrella group, Ohanaeze Ndigbo, also faulted Buhari’s comments on Nigeria’s unity. Afenifere said the president’s views represente­d a misreading of the country’s mood, while Ohanaeze Ndigbo believed there should be a “review of the terms of the country’s unity”, because the union had not favoured all the constituen­t parts.

Expectedly, it was the pan-northern socio-political organisati­on, the Arewa Consultati­ve Forum, which backed Buhari’s declaratio­n on Nigeria’s unity, in a defence of one of their own.

The people’s verdict cannot be rigged: no part of Nigeria is fiercely agitating secession from the union, what everyone wants is justice.

There is still a lot of suturing to do, and Buhari needs a strong thread of justice to sew up the divisions tearing Nigerians apart.

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Buhari

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