Nigerian Newspapers
Terror alerts: An unending season
…As the world marks the anniversary of the Kenyan and Tanzanian terrorist attacks on U.S. embassy buildings today (August 7)
ALL seasons come and go but not this one. “High level al Qaeda communication, advanced security precaution, increased security concerns” have now combined to put the fear of the evil of terror in the minds of many people across the world.
And it is not about the leading western nations. It is about our common humanity, of a collective peace and security now badly shaken by some pipeline development that has a continued potential for massive terrorist havoc. August is a “special” month for terrorists. Kenya, Russia, Indonesia and India have all in the past endured some spectacular bombings in that month.
The prevailing global terror alerts which were triggered last week Friday have now ensured that just a few hours after the United Kingdom (UK) and the United States (U.S.) State Department instructed that their embassies’ personnel and non emergency staff be evacuated yesterday, both countries have now asked their citizens to leave the Arab nation of Yemen “immediately” as the al Qaeda terror threat intensifies.
Once intelligence reports became unfavourable last Friday, warning systems have combined to ensure that by yesterday, no fewer than 22 U.S. diplomatic posts (embassies and consulates) across the Middle East and Africa were initially simultaneously closed after an intercepted conversation of an al Qaeda chief Ayman al Zawahri allegedly instructed the head of the terror affiliate in Yemen, Nasser al Wuhayshi to carry out a major attack as early as last Sunday. The plot is thought to be one of the most serious against American and other Western interests since the September 11, 2001, attacks.
To stay closed until August 10 (following an extension), are the diplomatic posts in Abu Dhabi, Amman, Cairo, Riyadh, Dhahran, Jeddah, Doha, Dubai, Kuwait, Manama, Muscat, Sana’a, Tripoli, Antananarivo, Bujumbura, Djibouti, Khartoum, Kigali, and Port Louis. There have also been new closures –Madagascar, Burundi, Rwanda and Mauritius while the outposts that are reopening include those in Afghanistan, Algeria, Bangladesh, Mauritania, Iraq, and Israel. In adding African missions outside the Magreb – Antananarivo, Bujumbura, Djibouti, Khartoum, Kigali and Port Louis to the list, State Department pushed the ring already drawn outside Arab states.
Are the threats real or orchestrated? As the U.S. drone air strikes kill four Al Qaeda members, is the end of terror alerts ever to become a reality?
Would these terror alerts help the fingered terrorists device another route and timing? How different are today’s global terror alerts from those of yesterday?
The Current Ripple
It all started early last week when the International Criminal Police Organisation (INTERPOL) issued a global security alert after those jailbreaks linked to Al-Qaeda. Then the U.S., Canada, France and the UK began shuttering a few endangered embassies even as farther as the Bangladeshi capital Dhaka.
In issuing this initial alert, the Lyon, France, based INTERPOL said it suspected Al-Qaeda was involved in recent jailbreaks across nine countries, including Iraq, Libya and Pakistan. It said the jailbreaks had “led to the escape of hundreds of terrorists and other criminals” in the past month alone. It then promptly asked its 190 member countries to help “determine whether any of these recent events are coordinated and linked” and to immediately convey any intelligence that could help prevent another incident.
Even though it was trailing the blaze of Washington’s worldwide travel warning, citing unspecified plans by Al-Qaeda to strike U.S. interests in the Middle East or North Africa in August, INTERPOL also noted that August is the anniversary of attacks in India, Russia and Indonesia.
On Monday, General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, told ABC News that the threats were directed at Western interests, and were “more specific” than previous threats. While an exact target was unknown, “the intent seems clear. The intent is to attack Western, not just U.S., interests,” Dempsey said.
The White House has been quoted as saying that the U.S. President Barack Obama has ordered his national security team to “take all appropriate steps to protect the American people,”
The air has been further putrefied when hours after the U.S. alert was issued, an audio recording was posted on militant Islamist forums in which Al-Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahiri accused the United States of “plotting” with Egypt’s military, secularists and Christians to overthrow Islamist president Mohamed Morsi. In what appears his first public comment on the July 3 military coup, the Egyptian-born Zawahiri said: “Crusaders and secularists and the Americanized army have converged … with Gulf money and American plotting to topple Mohamed Morsi’s government.”
Zawahiri, who is said to belong to the militant Egyptian Islamic Jihad group and is believed to be hiding in Afghanistan or Pakistan. He had criticized Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood movement for going soft on applying strict Islamic law.
The current ripple therefore appears justified considering that the U.S. has been especially cautious about security since an attack on its consulate in Benghazi, Libya, on September 11 last year. The unfortunate assault, blamed on Islamist militants, killed four Americans, including ambassador Chris Stevens.
Echoes From The Past Years
Today marks the 15th anniversary of the U.S. embassy bombings in the Kenyan capital Nairobi and Dar es Salaam in Tanzania, which killed more than 200 mostly African citizens and injured thousands.
But where do the threats lie? The September 11 attack on the World Trade Center in New York had become an eye opener for the interested world citizens on where the smoke of terror is coming from and where they are mostly headed. Again the question: who has been able to cope with its own terror threats? Not even the world’s sole super power, the U.S.!
For instance the U.S. had and still has a long list of terror threats and alerts before and after 911. Using Homeland Security Advisory System to depict the threat Level, we see that in September 10, 2007, the U.S. national threat level was elevated, or became yellow just as the threat level was deemed high, or Orange, for all domestic and international flights. But the fears of an upward trend in propaganda tapes and messages has managed to become a constant decimal.
In August 10, 2006 there was a statement by Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff Announcing a Change to the Nation’s Threat Level for the Aviation Sector – The Department of Homeland Security said it was taking immediate steps to increase security measures in the aviation sector in coordination with heightened security precautions in the United Kingdom. The previous year-July 7, 2005 Chertoff had announced a targeted raise in the threat level. And asked for increased vigilance in other transportation systems.
Since March 17, 2003 when there was an advisory on national Threat Level that had been raised, according to a statement by the then Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge, the perception had been oscillating between Yellow and Orange.
After then, travel advisories or warnings by the U.S. State Department, UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO), Canadian Department of Foreign and International Trade (DFAIT) and Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) etc, are regularly issued to alert citizens from the respective countries to avoid certain countries for security reasons.
Nigeria On The Terror Map
The U.S. mission in Nigeria has refrained from issuing any statement on what connections can be traced to Nigeria or the situation in Nigeria in the eye of the U.S. with regards to the current threat alert.
Boko Haram activities have already spoken enough about the situation in Nigeria. When on the 25th of May, 2005, the US National Intelligence Council (NIC), released its long-term outlook and assessment of Nigeria, which projected a catastrophic scenario that Nigeria risks collapse in 15 years as a “Failed State” not only former President Olusegun Obasanjo dismissed the report as emanating from detractors, and sundry “prophets of doom”, most Nigerians were bemused. Security lapses featured prominently in that very controversial report. Terror resorts was the unspoken of factor.
There was a precipitate threat on the heels of the NIC report in June of the same year when foreign embassies were closed with a diplomatic source having said that “Intelligence indicated that foreign militants posed a specific threat to the U.S presence in Nigeria. We also remember that until he met his doom, Osama bin Laden had named Nigeria as a “candidate for liberation”
A similar warning issued two years later – September 6, 2007 – had said Western interests in Nigeria were at risk of “terrorist attack”. The official warning, in a message for U.S. citizens in Nigeria, had also given few details, but said potential targets included official and commercial installations in the capital Abuja and the commercial city of Lagos.
The embassy statement simply said then “The U.S. Mission in Nigeria has received information that U.S. and other Western interests in Nigeria are currently at risk for terrorist attack.”
Now, before Boko Haram bombings became commonplace, the possibility of it happening in Nigeria had some naked antecedents. On the 23rd of December 2006 a car-bomb exploded in Port Harcourt, which incidentally is the Oil capital of Nigeria, tearing down parts of the fencing of the Government House, the administrative hub of the state.
Following The Guardian inquiry which stretched as far as Washington for clarification, a U.S. State Department official then said the advisory was based on “very nonspecific threat.”
In November last year, the U.S. told Nigeria that the war against terror in Nigeria cannot be won by sheer force alone. Rather, according to the United States (U.S.) Assistant Secretary of State in the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labour, Mr. Michael Posner, the employment of rules-based approach and the avoidance of impunity on the part of security forces could be key to the desired success.
The State Department chief disclosed then that his office has received reports on allegations of extra-judicial killings, arbitrary arrests and detention of suspected members of the sect, committed by Nigeria’s security forces. Specifically on Boko Haram, Posner said the US was worried by the reports of lack of prosecution of security and police officers involved in human rights violations in the course of counter-terrorism activities.
But terror cells are up there hanging over Nigeria. So as authorities in Nigeria step up the search for the wand to break the skull of terrorist organisations that turned the country into an operational base until the recent military assault, they may still have to look more critically at the countries lying on the northern belt of Nigeria.
From all indications, Nigeria now needs to be a central element, not an outlier in efforts to improve security beyond its northern fringe – the Sahel.
Before latest findings surfaced, the link between Boko Haram in Nigeria and Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and the Al shahab in the Arabian peninsula and Somalia had been established since Al-Qaeda publicly identified Boko Haram as an organisation it can do business with.
Today, previously skeptical observers have been forced to accept evidence pointing to Boko Haram’s increasing sophistication. While some of its recent tactics suggest possible foreign training, it is also displaying increasing tactical nuance, crafting political messages to accompany its high profile attacks. Well the events in Mali and elsewhere have now proved that the position is correct.
It was therefore not surprising that U.S. General Carter Ham, in charge of American forces for Africa, attended a conference on anti-terrorism in the Sahel in Algeria where he made vital submissions.
The worry here among diplomatic watchers is that the fallout of this scenario is increasingly driving Al-Qaeda and terrorist elements southwards and making them concentrate or increase their conglomeration on the borders of the northern states of Nigeria, waiting and willing to be employed or paid for bombing and destabilisation activities.
The thinking now is that terror threats may also continue to alter Nigeria’s grant stature with its development partners. One of Nigeria’s unsung researchers Oladiran Bello of FRIDE, with a Madrid based think tank told The Guardian in a response to an enquiry that if nothing is done about the danger currently existing in the Sahel, “drug-trafficking and other trans border crimes linking West Africa could increase. Western business interests in what is the world’s sixth-largest oil exporter (Nigeria) could become targets. And threats to Nigeria would pose a broader danger because regional stability is impossible without Nigerian leadership”
In the eyes of right thinking people, the prevention of violent extremism and radicalisation is just one of the already identified strategic lines of action badly needed today.
International Affairs Experts Say Threats Are Real But Wrapped
Speaking with The Guardian on the matter, foreign affairs analyst, Dr. Nwangu Okeimiri noted that besides having devastating affects on many African economies they (terror alerts) are imposed on, there are now serious concerns being raised as to whether these alerts serve the purpose of ensuring that citizens of the respective countries are safe when they travel to the countries deemed insecure.
“It can be argued that issuing travel alerts is in line with the responsibility of governments to protect their citizens. However, does this responsibility extend to threatening the livelihoods of citizens of other countries that rely on income generated from the tourism industry? Why is it that until last week’s threat, existing lists contains only poor, non-Western countries? How come travel bans are rarely imposed on Western countries, particularly those most threatened by both domestic and international terrorism?
He continued: “The place of Nigeria in the scheme of things? Now, Nigeria has to immediately begin to interrogate the alliances that our northern neighbours have with those capable of harming the Nigerian society and economy. The government also must now review our engagements with them. There are states that appear stateless for example Mauritania has become a real menace with the presence of terrorist training camps, while an enclave like western Sahara appears to harbour so many non-state actors that even the struggling authorities there cannot control. Yet these areas just lying above our northern frontiers. Everyone knows that there is a nexus between drug trafficking, money laundering and terrorism financing”
Ambassador Ayo Adeniran, former envoy to Venezuela, now with the National Defence College, Abuja spoke of a matured response “We are in the centrist part of the world. But a whole lot of activities (terrorism inclusive) are moving towards the center.”
He said further: “There are conventions and international statutes that guide the way and manner things of internal security are treated. The principle of mutual respect must be held sacrosanct at all given times for relations to remain healthy.”
According to Ambassador Adeniran, Nigeria has a rich collection of terror scenarios developed over the years and more recently which she can rely on for a “more proactive approach… That is why we have started anticipating the terrorists in our country. With an early warning system, the battle is half won.”
But the Director General of the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs (NIIA) has given a more critical dimension to the link between insecurity and terror attacks.
At a special brainstorming session recently in Abuja on Migration and Terrorism in Africa, he fingered the international community of contributing to insecurity and insurgency going on in parts of the continent.
He said, “Of course, international community does, when there is double standard. I give the example of International Criminal Court (ICJ), all right. When you have a principle, if you are applying it to Africa, apply it to Africa. When it is the case of Europe, you apply it. But when you do not apply it to Europe, then you create a situation of order and counter-order which will always amount to disorder. That’s how it constitutes insecurity.”
“However, the fight against terror is a global one and it calls for alertness by national armed forces, national police, and the national intelligence network. The hope is that as the war goes on out there, the right lessons would be learnt by all,” he added.
Going Into Tomorrow
The Gulf News on Monday quoted the chairman of the US House of Representatives Homeland Security Committee, Michael McCaul describing intelligence reports to be “probably one of the most specific and credible threats I’ve seen, perhaps, since 9/11.”
Similarly, Representative Dutch Ruppersberger, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, told ABC’s ‘This Week’ that Al Qaeda’s “operatives are in place.”
Realising that the chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Martin Dempsey had already said the threats were “more specific” than previous threats. While an exact target was unknown, all of the current frenzy might not be out of place.
The State Department has spoken of an abundance of caution, diplomatic watchers believe that the decision to close the embassies is coming as the U.S. government battles to defend recently disclosed surveillance programmes that have stirred deep privacy concerns.
Besides, according to earlier reports, western governments are taking seriously the perceived threat from al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), because “the group has an established track record of highly innovative bomb plots”.
Terror trackers must daily be remembering the elusive Saudi bomb-maker Ibrahim al-Asiri, who is said to have sent his brother to blow up a prince with a bomb concealed on, or possibly even inside, his body.
Among the many thwarted efforts and plots, they would also remember our own Omar Farouk Abdulmutallab, who tried to detonate a bomb in his underpants on a flight to Detroit in 2009.
Even though AQAP’s leaders have been intensively targeted by U.S. drone strikes in recent years, what does tomorrow bring when by hiding out in remote tribal areas, they have managed to remain largely beyond the reach of the authorities and to continue to plot attacks?
The Guardian’s efforts to get some prompt reaction or local position of the US mission in Nigeria regarding the current global terror alerts, have been also from “an abundance of caution.”
The embassy in response to lodged enquiry yesterday restated a position of the U.S. state department as conveyed by the embassy’s Senior Information Specialist Mr. Sani Mohammed, thus:
“Given that a number of our embassies and consulates were going to be closed in accordance with local custom and practice for the bulk of the week for the Eid celebration at the end of Ramadan, and out of an abundance of caution, we’ve decided to extend the closure of several embassies and consulates including a small number of additional posts. This is not an indication of a new threat stream, merely an indication of our commitment to exercise caution and take appropriate steps to protect our employees including local employees and visitors to our facilities…”
When the U.S. issued a travel warning to Kenya on February 6, 2007, the Mwai Kibaki-led government cried foul and accused the U.S. of sabotaging the World Cross-Country Championships that was to take place on March 24 in the port city of Mombasa of that year. Considering the reality on ground today, such a warning anywhere would be taken more seriously by state actors.
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Posted in Nigerian Newspapers. A DisNaija.Com network.
Source: Guardian Newspaper
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This Day
Military, Police Ring Abuja to Forestall Boko Haram Attack
•Deploy more personnel as army chief vows to wipe out terror group
•Security beefed up at N’Assembly
Deji Elumoye and Kingsley Nwezeh in Abuja
Abuja, Nigeria’s seat of power, is under a massive security cordon following threats of attacks by insurgents and the increasing wave of banditry in the contiguous states of Kaduna, Kogi, Nasarawa and Niger States, THISDAY’s investigation has revealed.
There has been a wave of kidnappings in the outskirts of the federal capital, notably Pegi, Tuganmaje and Kuje among others, which the police have battled in recent times.
The security situation in and around the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) was heightened by the pronouncement of the Niger State Governor, Mr. Sani Bello, that Boko Haram fighters who he said sacked 50 villages in the state and hoisted the terror group’s flag, were about two hours drive away from the FCT.
Security has also been beefed up at the National Assembly as operatives, yesterday, thoroughly screened every vehicle approaching the National Assembly complex in Abuja.
The deteriorating security situation nationwide prompted the National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Prince Uche Secondus, to warn that the 2023 general election may not hold, demanding the declaration of a state of emergency as well as the convocation of a national conference.
However, the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Ibrahim Attahiru, yesterday restated the Nigerian Army’s determination to annihilate Boko Haram.
But the Governor of Katsina State, Hon. Bello Masari, cautioned against declaring a state of emergency, saying doing so isn’t the solution to combat the security challenges facing the country.
The security of the nation’s airports was also in focus yesterday as the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA) said there was no threat to them.
THISDAY’s investigations showed increased presence of troops, police, Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) personnel and intelligence operatives at the three strategic entrances to the city notably, Keffi, Zuba and Gwagwalada.
More checkpoints were also mounted around Gwagwalada and Keffi.
THISDAY also observed increased intelligence deployment at the entrance and the borders of FCT with contiguous states.
Beyond the borders, there were more deployments and police patrols inside the city and increased intelligence deployments as well.
Security sources told THISDAY: “There are deployments here and there but they are routine. Alertness is key to a secure environment.”
It was also learnt that security agencies were involved in frenzied meetings throughout yesterday.
The meetings, coordinated by the office of the Chief of Defence Staff under the new joint operational strategy of the armed forces, were aimed at coordinating a joint response to possible threats of attack to the FCT.
“I understand the security teams have been meeting for some days now and if you look around you, you will notice that there are increasing patrols and numbers of security personnel. The threats are not been taken lightly,” a source said.
National Assembly workers, lawmakers and visitors also had a harrowing experience accessing the legislative complex due to heightened security in the area.
Security operatives thoroughly screened every vehicle approaching the National Assembly complex in Abuja, impeding both human and vehicular traffic.
The Sergeant-at-arm of the National Assembly and other security agencies supervised the operations, leading to huge traffic build-up inside the complex.
Legislative staff, visitors and lawmakers were seen patiently waiting for their cars to be searched so that they could go ahead with the business of the day.
Some staff and visitors at some point got tired of waiting and were seen alighting from their cars to trek from the gate to the complex.
Meanwhile, the ONSA has said there is no threat to the nation’s airports.
A statement by the Head of Strategic Communication, Mr. Zachari Usman, said the reports of threats to the airports were an internal correspondence of security threat assessment misconstrued as security threat to the airports.
PDP Demands State of Emergency
In a related development, the PDP National Chairman, Prince Uche Secondus, yesterday demanded the declaration of a state of emergency, warning that the 2023 general election might not hold if the federal government failed to tackle insecurity.
He called on the federal government to summon a national conference to address the spike in insecurity.
Secondus added that the national caucus of the party will meet today to discuss the state of the nation.
Addressing members of the National Executive Committee (NEC) in Abuja, Secondus said: “We are worried Abuja is not even safe. It is no longer politics. We got alert of plots to bomb and burn down our airports.
“We urge the federal government to declare a national state of emergency in security. There is the need to call a national conference to discuss the insecurity in the country.
“There may not be any election in 2023 in Nigeria due to insecurity. This government must listen to the people. The Buhari government should call a national confab to discuss security and state of the nation. It is no longer politics. This time we are not playing politics. Let’s keep politics aside and move the nation forward.”
He said the country had been grounded, regretting that there had been no matching response from the federal government.
Secondus said in the past, terrorism in the North was confined to the North-east, but with the report of Boko Haram occupying villages in Niger State, terrorism had spread to the North-central
“Herdsmen are also menacing in the West; gunmen causing havoc in the East; and the militants in the South; all killing, looting, raping, maiming and burning down homes. The situation is bad; Nigerians all over are living in fear,” he said.
The Senate Minority Leader, Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe, said the problem of Nigeria was outside of the PDP headquarters, while pledging the support of the Senate to the declaration of state of emergency in security.
Abaribe said he deliberately decided not to speak on the floor of the Senate but to allow the APC senators to speak so as to avoid being accused of giving a partisan colouration to the issue of insecurity.
He stated that only electoral reforms would give victory to the opposition party in the 2023 general election and ensure a democratic defeat of the APC-led federal government.
Also, the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives, Hon. Ndudi Elumelu, commended the NEC and the PDP leadership for their collective efforts at resolving the House leadership crisis.
The NEC meeting adopted the position of Secondus, calling on the federal government to convoke a national conference to discuss the state of insecurity in the country, according to a communiqué read by the National Publicity Secretary, Mr. Kola Ologbondiyan.
Army Chief Vows to Wipe Out Boko Haram
The army yesterday reiterated its commitment to wipe out Boko Haram.
Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt. Gen. Ibrahim Attahiru, told reporters in Maiduguri, Borno State that Boko Haram had been defeated in many encounters and would continue to be defeated until it’s annihilated from Nigeria.
“We will take on Boko Haram decisively, and we are committed to the focus of the operations, which is the total annihilation of Boko Haram from Nigeria,” he said.
The COAS, who was visiting the headquarters of Operation Lafiya Dole in Maiduguri for the fifth time since his appointment four months ago, said the visit was to boost the morale of the troops, reassure them and listen to any issues affecting them.
Earlier, the Theatre Commander of Operation Lafiya Dole, Maj. Gen. Farouq Yahaya, lauded the visit, which he said had continued to boost the morale of the troops.
“We are honoured, we are grateful, we are encouraged by those visits. You provided us guidance, logistics and other things we required. We are most grateful for those visits,” Yahaya said.
State of Emergency Won’t Solve Security Challenges, Says Masari
Katsina State Governor, Hon. Aminu Masari, has, however, said declaration of a state of emergency won’t solve the security challenges facing the nation.
Masari, who spoke yesterday with journalists after meeting with the Chief of Staff to the President, Prof. Ibrahim Gambari at the State House, Abuja stated that he was against the recent call by the House of Representatives for the declaration of a state of emergency in the security sector as it would not solve the problem.
According to him, declaring a state of emergency will not achieve the desired effect as the security structure and personnel to be used to execute the emergency are already overstretched in a bid to safeguard lives and property.
Sourced From: THISDAYLIVE
Tribune
Nigeria records 55 new COVID-19 infections, total now 165,110
Tribune Online
Nigeria records 55 new COVID-19 infections, total now 165,110
The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) has recorded 62 new cases of COVID-19, bringing the total number of infections in the country to 165,110. The NCDC disclosed this on its official Twitter handle on Friday. “55 new cases of #COVID19Nigeria; Lagos-21, Yobe-19, Ogun-6, Akwa Ibom-3, Kaduna-2, Plateau-2, FCT-1, Rivers-1.” YOU SHOULD NOT MISS THESE HEADLINES FROM NIGERIAN TRIBUNE COVID-19: Nigeria Recorded […]
Nigeria records 55 new COVID-19 infections, total now 165,110
Tribune Online
Sourced From: Tribune Online
Vanguard
Attacks on S’East: We must explore all options of negotiation — Stakeholders urge Igbo
By Olasunkanmi Akoni
The people of the South East region have been urged to explore the power of negotiation and mutual settlement in the face of ongoing killings and security challenges in the zone because the east can not afford another war at present.
Stakeholders from the South-East geo-political zone made the remark on Thursday, at the unveiling of the book, “Igbo, 50 years after Biafra,” written by Special Adviser to Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu on Drainage Services, Joe Igbokwe, held at Ikeja G.R.A.
Speaking at the unveiling of the book, the chairman of the occasion, Mr. Cutis Adigba,
urged the people of the South-East to learn to build bridges across the country, so that they can realise their ambition of producing the next president of Nigeria.
Adigba urged leaders from the zone to discourage the move and agitation by some youths in the South East to go to war and secede out of Nigeria.
Also read: Banditry: Disregard viral video, Niger State gov’t urges residents
He said that Igbo have always found it difficult to rule Nigeria because they refused to build bridges across the six geo-political zones that made up Nigeria.
While describing the agitation as uncalled for, Adigba noted that after two decades that Nigeria returned to civil rule, the Igbo has predominantly identified with only one political party.
He maintained that remaining in one party can not advance the cause of the people of South East and cannot make them realise their objective of producing an Igbo man as president.
He maintained that the publisher of the book, Igbokwe played politics outside his state, so that the Igbo race can be integrated with one another race.
Adigba said the failure of the Igbo to reintegrate with other ethnic nationalities politically was responsible for the retrogression of the race in Nigerian politics.
Igbokwe, also addressing guests on the occasion, maintained that the Igbo are not advancing politically because they refused to be integrated into National politics, lamenting that, despite their success in business, they are not successful in playing politics at the national level.
Corroborating Dimgba, Igbokwe noted that there was the need for the Igbo people to stand up and build bridges so that their objective of producing the next president of Nigeria could be realised.
According to him: “I have decided to raise my voice, I hope my people will hear me while trying to quell the effect of the war, our people are spoiling for another war, mayhem is being unleashed in Igbo land, and there is palpable fear.
“Those who could speak have lost their voice, mindful of the consequences of their actions, I am calling on all Igbo leaders to speak up because all actions carry consequences, consequences of the silence will be too dastardly to sustain.
“Those silently supporting the wild wind should be careful or else they hand over to their children,” he said.
Igbokwe urged those spoiling for war to jettison their plan and embrace dialogue, urging them to learn from the South West region that despite the challenges faced after the annulment of the June 12, 1993, election, they did not go to war, and the region had the opportunity of producing two of her sons for presidential position in 1999.
“You have to build bridges to become president of Nigeria, but it is unfortunate the Igbo are burning bridges.”
Speaking at the event, Chief Uche Dimgba who is the coordinator of Igbo in All Progressives Congress, APC in Lagos, described Igbokwe as “a Frank, fearless and reliable leader, who based his views on issues and stand by his opinions, and we the Igbo have confidence in him and believe he can lead us aright.”
“He is a leader we Igbo believe in and we will follow him. If he can serve all the governors produced in Lagos State since 1999, he is a better man to follow because he possesses all the experience that can be of benefit to Igbo both at home and in the diaspora.”
The post Attacks on S’East: We must explore all options of negotiation — Stakeholders urge Igbo appeared first on Vanguard News.
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Premium Times
Insecurity: Lagos bans occupation of abandoned buildings
The government said that no worker should stay back beyond 6:00 p.m. within premises of buildings undergoing construction.
The post Insecurity: Lagos bans occupation of abandoned buildings appeared first on Premium Times Nigeria.
Sourced From: Premium Times Nigeria