Atiku Abubakar yesterday disclosed
that the call for restructuring has placed the country’s unity in a dilemma. He
spoke in Kano when he paid a condolence visit to Governor Abdullahi Umar
Ganduje over the death of the Danmasanin Kano, Yusuf Maitama Sule.
Former Vice
President Atiku Abubakar yesterday disclosed that the call for restructuring
has placed the country’s unity in a
dilemma. He spoke in Kano when he paid a
condolence visit to Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje over the death of the
Danmasanin Kano, Yusuf Maitama Sule.
Atiku
disclosed that the demise of Maitama has further dIMMED the hope of a united
Nigeria, which is currently being threatened. Extolling the virtues of the late
former Nigeria’s Permanent Representative at the United Nations (UN), Atiku
described him as a unifying factor, whom would be greatly missed.
“The late
Danmasani Kano epitomised the unity and oneness of Nigeria. It is painful that
we lost him at this time when he would have played a key role in the
restoration and normalisation of the country’s unity.”
Similarly,
the Chairman of the northern chapter of the Christian Association of Nigeria
(CAN), Rev. Yakubu Pam urged a peaceful coexistence irrespective of religion or
ethnic diversity.
Also, the
Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Lamidi Adeyemi has called on the Federal Government to
begin the process of restructuring the country to correct alleged lopsidedness.
He spoke in
Ibadan yesterday at the launch of a biography Samuel Ladoke Akintola in the
eyes of history, which was written by a former member of the House of
Representatives, Femi Kehinde.
According to
him, the founding fathers operated successfully in the first republic with a
true fiscal federal system, until the January 1966 coup that introduced the
current unitary system of government.
The Alaafin
lamented the current political arrangement, which favours the north in terms of
revenue allocation, adding that while more states and council areas have been
created from the region, other regions were yet to enjoy similar opportunity as
federating units.
Meanwhile,
Ministers of God’s Kingdom Society (GKS) have appealed to groups and
individuals agitating for the country’s breakup to exercise restraint.
In a
communiqué, the church’s its Publicity Secretary, Benedict Hart, he urged
government and the aggrieved groups to dialogue to avoid bloodshed and save the
country from reliving the experiences of the last civil war.
The
statement reads: “The resort to emotionalism and mutual recriminations were the
ingredients that led to the outbreak of hostilities between Nigerian and
secessionist forces in the destructive 30-month civil war, which are the
country’s most weighty calamity since self-rule.”
“Since there
can be no perfect system or arrangement, both the leaders and the led must be
prepared to follow after the things, which make for peace and the things
wherewith one may edify another until God’s Kingdom would take over the affairs
of the whole world.”
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