President Goodluck Jonathan on Tuesday said the outcome of the national conference would be sent to the National Assembly.
Jonathan promised that he would forward the outcome of the national
conference to the National Assembly so that it would form an integral
part of the ongoing Constitution amendment.
The president chided some unnamed Nigerian elders whom he accused of
making provocative statements in the mass media, thereby instigating one
group against another.
Jonathan spoke while receiving the Muslim community in the Federal
Capital Territory led by Vice President Namadi Sambo and the Minister of
State for Federal Capital Territory, Olajumoke Akinjide, who paid him
the traditional Sallah homage at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.
He said such elders, who were supposed to give the nation the right
leadership, always quarrel over nothing and end up insulting themselves
while engaging in discussions that lacked direction.
The President said his decision to set up a committee that would work
out the framework for a national dialogue was borne out of his desire
to provide a platform for Nigerians to engage in discussions that would
have direction.
He regretted that despite his repeated assurance of his sincerity,
many Nigerians were still exercising doubts over his intention.
He said, “In Nigeria, we must work very hard, we must talk to
ourselves in a way that our children will not develop hate among
themselves. And that is one of the key reasons that we decided to have a
conversation as a nation.
“At times, when you listen to radio and read newspapers, you see even
our elders that are supposed to give us leadership quarreling over
nothing. And sometimes even insulting themselves and even making
provocative statements that will sometimes instigate one group against
the other.
“We decided that we cannot continue that way, the talking must have a
direction. What has been happening on the pages of the newspapers are
discussions that have no direction.
“We want a country that will have a direction so the discussions must
have a direction, the discussions must lead Nigeria to where we want to
be, not a divided Nigeria, not a Nigeria that is sown on hate, not a
Nigeria that will be based on acrimony, ethnicity and tribal sentiments
in the way we conduct ourselves.
“That is the reason we set up that committee and we have given them
the free will. Some people are still instigating others that the
President is doing this, the government does not have the capacity to do
that. We are totally committed to do what is right. We don’t need to
carry cain to flog Nigerians to show that we are determined.”
He said it was left for all Nigerians to impress it on their
representatives in the National Assembly and state Houses of Assembly
because state and federal parliaments must work together to ensure that
the outcomes were properly enshrined in the Constitution in order to
have a better nation.
He assured Nigerians that his administration was totally committed to
ensuring that it handed over a country whose citizens would live in
peace and the next generation would be proud of.
He reiterated his position that the killings in some parts of the country had nothing to do with religion or ethnicity.
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