Stakeholders
across several divides have urged Nigerians to declare protests against the
current challenges in the country.
They spoke
yesterday at a symposium tagged “Nigeria: which way forward?”
It was
organised by Magodo Associates at the Afe Babalola Auditorium at the University
of Lagos.
Among those
who made the declaration yesterday were a former chieftain of the National
Democratic Coalition (NADECO) Dr. Amos Akingba and a Public Affairs Analyst,
Prof. Femi Otubanjo.
Others are a
former Chairman of the Nigerian chapter of Transparency International, Major
Gen. Ishola Williams, and Professor of International Law and Jurisprudence,
Akin Oyebode.
Otubanjo
said Nigerians are tired of symposia, seminars, lectures and the likes, adding
that they had not yielded any fruits.
He urged
communities to assemble and protest for their freedom in this failing country.
He said:
“There is nothing said here today that we have not heard before, what has been
the outcome of all these meetings, seminars, lectures, nothing.
“We need to
move from oganising things like this, to gathering people to protest, because
no protest has ever failed to achieve its purpose.”
Oyebode
said: “The country is moving into civil war, but because we are in the comfort
zone, many of us are not yet aware.
“Nigeria
salvation does not rely on the National Assembly, neither does it lie on Aso
rock. But it is on the people of Nigeria; when they are tired and cannot take
it anymore, they would fight back,” he said.
He added
that the subjective condition includes the existence of the conscious party
that can decide when to strike.
“I studied
Maxism as a young man and the contradiction are unfolding before our very
eyes,” he said.
On his part,
Akingba said: “When the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB) were doing their
agitation, they didn’t cause any problem, but they set up the military against
them.
“We still
don’t know where they have kept its leader Nnamdi Kanu, and nobody cares
anymore. But when they killed people in the Middle Belt, the military didn’t go
there, but even supported them.”
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