Former
military President General Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida and Pastor Tunde Bakare
have strongly condemned the current insecurity in the country and charged
President Muhammadu Buhari to end the bloodletting and other dangers besetting
the nation. Bakare, a former running mate to Buhari in the 2011 elections,
yesterday, outlined the shortcomings of his ally’s administration, concluding
that the country was in urgent need of restructuring.
In a state
of the nation broadcast titled: ‘It’s Time To Renegotiate Our Union,’ the head
of the Latter Rain Church said although the government anchored its policy
outlook on security, job creation and anti-corruption, there are signs of
retrogression everywhere.Babangida has called on the Federal Government to
urgently end the current bloodletting in the country.
“The Federal
Government should stop the flow now,” the former leader stated in a statement
on this year’s Armed Forces Remembrance Day.“We should eschew hate speeches,
discrimination and other vices that trigger senseless violence and bloodshed.”
“I must also
call on governments at all levels, religious leaders, traditional rulers,
social activists and the media to serve as national vanguards in resolving some
of the recent disturbing incidents affecting our national security.’’And in the
aftermath of the recent violent attacks on communities in Benue by Fulani
herdsmen, political, traditional and opinion leaders from the state are
expected to meet with Buhari today, to address the security challenges .
According to
the Presidency yesterday, the meeting has become inevitable because of the
frequency and disturbing menace of such violence and the reactions that have
trailed the incidents.A Presidency source said it has been embarrassed by the
large- scale loss of lives caused by such repeated violence against innocent
people.
The source,
who did not want to be named, said that the discussions at the meeting will
address the issue of the Fulani herdsmen, but may go beyond their menace to
include the issue of the arming, training and financing of militia groups by
some state governments. Buhari’s government appears to be merely patching
cracks on the wall, Bakare said.He stressed that opponents of restructuring
were doing so for political gains.
Bakare noted
that despite efforts at improving enterprise and job creation, unemployment
rose to 18.8 per cent from around 8.2 per cent in June 2015. He said the figure
indicates that between 2015 and 2017, the number of unemployed Nigerians rose
from about 6 million to almost 16 million.He faulted the economic
diversification policy, saying oil still accounts for over 90 per cent of total
exports revenue.
The
ineffectiveness of the anti-corruption war could be seen in the loss of crucial
corruption cases, he said. “For instance, in April 2017, the Federal Government
lost four high-profile corruption cases in 96 hours. These are in addition to
bizarre developments such as failure of the government to confirm a substantive
chairman for the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), despite the
fact that the same political party controls both the executive and the
legislature. This is not to mention the public showdown between EFCC and the
Department of State Services (DSS) officials, or the opposition of the director
general of the DSS to the confirmation of the acting chairman of the EFCC.”
The
government has not only failed to stop killings by herdsmen, said Bakare, “it
has done so against the backdrop of conspiratorial silence, choosing rather to
label such attacks ‘an issue of communal misunderstanding,’ as the Inspector
General of Police recently did in respect of the Benue attacks. It has treated
the menace with kid gloves, even after the Global Terrorism Index 2015
described militant herdsmen as the fourth most deadly group of 2014.”
He alleged
that some of the killings were carried out in collusion with the
military.“Despite the antecedents of the marauders, including the recent
Adamawa incidents, Mr. President, in his New Year address to the nation, did
not consider the menace or the pain of victims of previous attacks worth a mention.
It has been reported, for instance, that as a result of the failure of
government to act, there have been reprisals on herdsmen, resulting in a
vicious cycle of death and destruction. Yet, Buhari is rejecting the call to
restructure our nation in order to bring lasting solutions to these and other
signs of sectional discontent.”
On whether
he would contest the presidency, Bakare said: “I am indeed running, but not for
elections. It is a race of destiny and the destination is certain. The method
by which God intends to do it is up to Him.”
The Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP), meanwhile, has challenged the All Progressives Congress
(APC) to a test of popularity.A statement by party spokesman, Kola
Ologbondiyan, described the APC as mortally afraid of going into any election,
particularly at the grassroots.
“Nigerians
are at pains over the poor welfare direction of the ruling party, which has
resulted in the penetrating hardship now being suffered under the
APC-controlled Federal Government. The APC is petrified because Nigerians have
renewed their interest in the PDP as the only genuine people-oriented party,”
the PDP said.
It noted
that the APC is aware it could no longer return to the electorate it scammed in
2015 “with lies and empty promises; promises of bogus jobs, monthly stipends,
free meals, free houses, reduction of fuel price, and bringing of the dollar to
the same value with the naira.“The APC knows it cannot face the more than 8
million Nigerians it has rendered jobless with its reckless policies. They know
that judgment awaits them from thousands of workers who were unjustly sacked in
the states where APC governors rule, particularly Kogi and Kaduna.
“The ruling
party also knows it cannot return to the families of those slaughtered in Benue,
Taraba, Adamawa, Borno and other parts of the country by marauders, encouraged
and emboldened by the indifference of the Federal Government and unguarded
comments from unpatriotic presidential aides.”
According to
the party, “The landslide victories of the PDP in the recent elections are
incontrovertible response by the people, not only to the achievements of our
government in the states, but also to the ideological disposition of the PDP as
one genuine democratic platform where all Nigerians are free to socially
express, politically aspire and economically flourish.”
The APC
National Publicity Secretary, Mr. Bolaji Abdulahi and the Minister of
Information, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, could not be reached for comments.
Prince Tony
Momoh, an APC founding member, however, dismissed the PDP as a party without
focus.He said the APC is working tirelessly to clear the mess of PDP’s 16 years
of misrule.
“The once
impassable Enugu-Onitsha Road, which the PDP failed to fix, is now passable
courtesy of the APC. The Benin-Auchi Road, which used to be about seven hours’
drive, due to its bad state, is now less than two hours courtesy of the APC.
The Second Niger Bridge, which the PDP couldn’t fix, is on the way.”
Momoh added:
“When the election proper comes, it is the electoral commission that would
conduct it while the people decide. Time will tell which party is popular.”But
on Saturday, the PDP defeated the APC at a keenly contested bye-election in
Taraba State’s Ardo-Kola constituency.Results from the 10 wards of the local
government council showed PDP’s Dominic Bukuni had 8848 votes, while APC’s
Sanusi Usman Jambawaile polled 8257.
The
returning officer of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Manu
Donga, described the election as free and fair. The APC agent, Barrister
Mohammed Mustapha, however, said the exercise was riddled with malpractices.It
came as the PDP in Abia State said it had learned the hard lessons of candidate
imposition and would no longer repeat the mistake.
The chairman
of the chapter, Chief Johnson Onuigbo, said the party would therefore throw
every position open for contest in accordance with the constitution.He told
reporters in Umuahia: “We have worked very hard to return to the path of peace
and tranquility after what imposition cost us. Our 16 years in the saddle was
stolen from us. But following our repentance and resolution, the PDP now has the
capacity to change the change that changed us.”
Onuigbo said
Nigerians have regretted voting for the APC at the federal level in 2015,
because of the hunger they have suffered. And “as if this was not enough, the
APC government is unfolding plans that may Islamise the country.”He said the
only salvation left for the country is the return of the PDP in 2019 to right
the wrongs of the APC. “Our life will change again for the better when the PDP,
which has turned a new leaf, returns to power. We shall address the lopsided
local government scenario. There must be restructuring of the country,” he
added.
The
Miyetti-Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN) has attributed
the ongoing attacks by herdsmen in different parts of the country as a revenge
for the killing of some of its members, in Mambila, Taraba State and Numan.The
general secretary of the association Usman Baba, at a press briefing yesterday
in Abuja claimed that the herdsmen have been neglected for so long and
732pastoralists were killed in Mambilla Jo’s including the killing of 82 women
and children in Numan.
He described
the anti-open grazing law put in place by some state government as draconian
and to deliberately chase herdsmen away. He said the Ekiti State Government
anti-open grazing law has a human face and represented the interests of the
pastoralists.Usman, who admitted that the association still battles with
‘misguided and criminally-motivated elements,’ however emphasised that the
fraction do not represent the mainstream of herdsmen.
According to
him, there is a need for a federal judicial commission of enquiry to probe the
killings and unravel the truth about those behind the attacks.
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