•Osinbajo sues for peace •IPOB backs quit notice
The
Eze N’digbo (traditional rulers) and leaders of Igbo socio-cultural
associations in the North have vowed to resist any attempt by the
Coalition of Northern Groups to chase them out of the region.
The
coalition groups are: Arewa Citizens Action for Change, led by Nastura
Ashir Sharif; Arewa Youth Consultative Forum, led by Shettima Yerima;
Arewa Youth Development Foundation, led by Aminu Adam; and the Arewa
Students Forum, led by Alfred Solomon.
Others are,
Northern Emancipation Network, led by Abdul-azeez Suleiman; Northern
Youth Vanguard, led by Joshua Viashman; Northern Youth Stakeholders
Forum, led by Mohammad
Mohammad; North-East Assembly, led by Mohammed
Tasiupantami; and North Central People’s Front, led by Nathaniel
Ajegenaadigizi.
Concerned by the outrage that greeted the
declaration, Kaduna State Governor, Nasir el-Rufai, and the Inspector
General of Police, Ibrahim Idris, ordered the arrest of the signatories
to the declaration, but none of the youths has been apprehended as of
Saturday.
The tension generated by the declaration of the
northern youths worsened on Friday afternoon, when a prominent member of
the Northern Elders’ Forum, and former Ahmadu Bello University Vice
Chancellor, Prof. Ango Abdullahi, threw his weight behind the coalition.
The
group of northern elders also expressed “disappointment” with the
Northern Governors’ Forum for disowning the coalition, insisting that it
was hypocritical for the Igbo to continue to live in other parts of the
country while agitating for Nigeria’s breakup.
Speaking with one
of our correspondents, the Eze Ndigbo of Kano, Boniface Ibekwe, said
the over three million Igbo indigenes in Kano would not leave the city
with all their investments acquired over several decades.
He
said, “We have advised our people to remain calm and that nobody should
travel. The lives and property Igbo are secure. As far as I am
concerned, no Igbo man has relocated with his family to the East. We are
here and going about our normal business. The northern groups fanning
the embers of war have never experienced the pains and after-effects of
war because, if they had, they would always pray for the sustenance of
peace, unity and stability.’’
Also, the Eze Ndigbo of Kaduna,
Igwe Sylvanus Aneke, told one of our correspondents that his people were
not afraid of the plans of the Arewa youths, especially when the
Federal Government had stepped into the matter.
He said, “The
youths have asked us to leave, but their parents, the police, the state
government and the Federal Government have asked us to ignore the
threat. We will rather listen to the elders and the government.
“Ango
Abdullahi merely expressed his opinion. We are not taking him seriously
because we are used to his antics. We are watching the events for now.
We will take our decisions after we have watched, prayed and discovered
that nothing has changed.”
The President General of the Igbo
Community Welfare Association in Kaduna State, Chris Nnoli, also urged
Igbo in the North to stay still.
He said, “It (the ultimatum) is a
serious issue that should naturally be taken seriously. We are
concerned, but since the Kaduna State Government has assured us of
safety, we want to hold on to this assurance. I am greatly worried that
up till this moment, nobody has been apprehended over the issue. We are
watching events and we believe that government will intensify action and
get the youths arrested. It is when we have seen that the government
and the IG’s assurances are not effective that we will start to think of
other means of seeking protection.”
The Eze Igbo III, Jos South
in Plateau State, Lawrence Onwudinjo, who is also the President, Igbo
Cultural Association, said no Igbo person would leave the North on
account of any threat from any northern youth.
He said, “Igbo
people in Plateau State are going nowhere. There is no right-thinking
human being that will ask people to leave where they are living. This is
one Nigeria where we are living. Nigeria belongs to all of us. I
believe that if any part of the country needs anything, they should sit
down together to discuss it. Everybody should come to a roundtable to
discuss it.”
Another Igbo leader in Lantang, James Abraham, said
no Igbo would relocate and that if they would have to move, northerners
in the South-East should be waiting for their quit notice too.
He
said, “If the Arewa youths tell us to leave the North, their kinsmen in
the South-East should also be ready to leave. Do the Arewa youths have
representatives in Plateau State? They should not be taken seriously.”
The
President General of the Igbo community in Sokoto, Onyebuchi Uwaga,
told SUNDAY PUNCH that, following the assurance from the government and
the police, no Igbo would leave the North.
Also, the Ezeigbo I of
Nasarawa State, Nathaniel Nduba, in calling for the immediate arrest of
the Arewa youths in the interest of peace, pointed out that no Igbo
person would leave the region, despite the threat given by the northern
coalition.
A yam seller in Nasarawa, Mrs. Amaka Chukwudi, also
said, “The threat by the AYCF was an empty threat. They forget that they
have their brothers and sisters spread across other states. Has anybody
asked them to leave? Why should the northerners give such an
ultimatum?”
Igbo in Bauchi State, in reaction to the ultimatum, also stated that they would not leave the North.
One
of them, Joshua Chukwu, said, ‘’For me, I will not take laws into my
hands but will remain law-abiding, as the constitution of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria guarantees everyone, irrespective of tribe or
origin, the right to reside in whatever part of the country he deems fit
to pursue his legitimate business.”
Similarly, Igbo in Niger
State told SUNDAY PUNCH that they would ignore the threat and carry on
with their legitimate activities without exercising any fear.
A businessman, Tochukwu Chikwem, said he had no plans to send his family back to the East.
Another
Igbo man in Minna, Felix Irojiogu, said, “They are seeking recognition
or attention which they don’t deserve. They are wasting their time;
government should arrest them for trying to cause problem in the
country.”
In Katsina State, the mood of defiance was also noticed
when a businessman, Jude Eze, said, “How can I listen to the rantings
of those rascals? You should know they don’t know the consequences of
what they are saying. It took our leaders and elders years of sweat, and
some even paid with their lives, to get Nigeria to this stage and some
boys who have never gone beyond their villages are saying we should pack
our belongings and go. We are not going anywhere.”
Meanwhile, Katsina State Governor, Aminu Masari, has assured non-indigenes in the state of their safety.
But
in Sokoto State, some Igbo men have made up their minds to leave,
stressing that anyone who ignores the Arewa youths’ threat would do so
at his peril.
One of them, Uchendu Sunday, a father of three, who
operates a patent medicine store at Mabera, in Sokoto, said, “I grew up
in Kano. Sadly, my elder brother was killed there during a violent
demonstration against the United States of America, when Osama bin Laden
was declared wanted in 2001, after the bombing of the World Trade
Centre.
“It was this sad memory that haunted me out of Kano to
Sokoto. This is why I have decided to end my sojourn in the North and
return to the East with my wife and three children. One thing I can
assure you is that there will be an exodus of Igbo from the North, based
on this ultimatum.”
In the East, various groups and associations
said they had no intention of issuing a similar ultimatum to
northerners living among them.
Speaking for Igbo youths, the
President of Ohanaeze Youth Council, the youth wing of Ohanaeze Ndigbo,
Okechukwu Isiguzoro, said, “We will not ask northerners to leave. We
will continue to show them love, as Igbo have done in the past.”
Reacting
to the ultimatum, the leader of the northern community in Enugu State,
Sarkin Hausawa, Idris Ado Suleiman, stated that they exercised no fear
of any tit-for-tat response by their eastern hosts.
Suleiman
said, “We have heard about the ultimatum. They said Igbo in the North
should leave in three months. But we know it is not something that is
possible.”
Osinbajo sues for peace
Acting President
Prof Yemi Osinbajo on Saturday called on the various ethnic groups in
Nigeria to live in peace, saying that in any marriage, there was
tendency for disagreement.
Osinbajo spoke at the wedding of the
daughter of the founding National Chairman of the All Progressives
Congress, Chief Bisi Akande, Wuraola, and Dr. Olawale Solabi in Ibadan,
the Oyo State capital.
The Acting President’s message came on the
heels of an ultimatum issued by Arewa youth wings to Igbo people living
in northern Nigeria.
Osinbajo said it was common for nations
with different ethnic nationalities to experience quarrels among
themselves like in any marriage.
According to him, agitations and quarrels can best be addressed when people give peace a chance and work in unity.
Osinbajo
said, instead of fanning the embers of disagreement within ethnic
groups, it would be better if understanding was allowed to prevail.
He
said, “Marriage is a very large institution that requires a lot of
prayers. It is the same marriage that nations go through. Our nation has
been in marriage for a while now.
“Sometimes, there are quarrels
within that marriage. Sometimes, there is disagreement. What is
important is that you must remain together. You must remain united.”
Among
dignitaries at the wedding ceremony were Senate President, Bukola
Saraki, Oyo State Governor, Abiola Ajimobi, Ogun State Governor,
Ibikunle Amosun, Ondo State Governor, Rotimi Akeredolu, Governor Rauf
Aregbesola of Osun State; and Governor Muhammad Badaru of Jigawa State.
An ex-governor of Osun State, Olagunsoye Oyinlola and a former governor of Ekiti State, Segun Oni, were also present.
IPOB backs quit notice for Igbo
The
Indigenous People of Biafra on Saturday supported the three-month quit
notice served on the Igbo living in the northern part of the country by
the Arewa youths.
IPOB, in a press statement made available to
our correspondent in Awka by the group’s media and publicity secretary,
Emma Powerful, commended the northern youths and Arewa Elders Forum for
fast-tracking the Biafra exit with their pronouncements.
The
group maintained that the quit notice had a human face, unlike the
situation in the past, when the people perceived as Biafrans were
attacked without any notice or provocation.
IPOB said it would prevail on Igbo living in the North to adhere to the quit notice.
The
statement read, “Biafrans in general wish to thank these vocal
northerners for at least having the courtesy to issue advance warning
this time before embarking on their routine massacre of the Igbo and
other Biafrans living in northern Nigeria; unlike what their fathers did
in 1966.
“We promise to adhere to your warning to leave northern
Nigeria because a word is enough for the wise. Biafrans and other
southerners should start packing their belongings to come down to the
South.
“We also advise the northern youths and their elders to
keep it up because all they have done is to exercise their right to free
speech which is not a crime under any law known to man.
“We are therefore against those calling for the arrest of these Arewa youths and their elders.”
‘Nigeria can’t afford another civil war’
A
former Nigerian Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Prof.
Ibrahim Gambari, and a former Chairman of the Independent Corrupt
Practices and Other Related Offences Commission, Justice Mustapha Akanbi
(retd.), have warned against any attempt to break Nigeria.
They
cautioned that such an act could lead to another civil war and warned
that Nigeria cannot afford another civil war, leading to another wanton
destruction of lives and property.
Gambari spoke during the fifth
convocation of Kwara State University in Malete, Moro Local Government
of Kwara State, while Akanbi spoke on the sidelines of a summit
organised by Home and Street Kids Welfare Initiative in Ilorin, the
Kwara State capital.
PANDEF seeks arrest of Arewa youths
The Pan Niger Delta Forum has condemned the ultimatum issued on the Igbo in the North by some Arewa youth groups.
It described the three-month quit notice as “an act of treason which portends great threat to the nation’s unity.”
PANDEF,
led by Ijaw national leader, Chief Edwin Clark, said the group
considered the statement by the Arewa youths as “too dangerous.”
The
statement, signed by Dr. Alfred Mulade, called on northern state
governments, elders, particularly the Arewa Consultative Assembly, in
whose House the press conference was held, not only to condemn it but
take concrete steps to reassure the Igbo of their safety in the region.
Igbo youths in North call for Ango’s arrest
The
Ndigbo in the North, under the aegis of Northern Youth Council of
Nigeria on Saturday demanded the arrest of Prof. Ango Abdullahi, the
spokesman of the Northern Elders Forum.
Abdullahi had at a press
conference on Friday backed the three-month ultimatum by a coalition of
Northern group to the N’digbo in the region to vacate the place before
October 1, 2017.
The group, at a press conference, by its
spokesperson, Isa Abubakar, urged security operatives to immediately
arrest the NEF spokesman, following what it described as his hate
speech.
Why Urhobo can’t be part of Biafra — Urhobo leaders
Urhobo
leaders, under the auspices of Urhobo Leaders of Thought, have
condemned the proposed Biafra Republic map which included Urhobo as one
its territory.
They maintained that Urhobo people did not share culture or customs with Igbo people in the southern part of the country.
ULT,
in a statement by its Secretary-General, Mr Mumakai Unugha, on
Saturday, also condemned the recent ultimatum issued to Igbo residents
in the northern part of the country, describing it as reckless and
provocative.
IYC asks FG to intervene in Arewa — Igbo conflict
The
Ijaw Youth Council Worldwide has called on the Federal Government to
show strong and purposeful leadership by stopping the building tension
between the North and the Igbo .
IYC spokesman, Mr. Henry Iyalla,
who spoke in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, on Saturday, decried the
manner in which government was handling the quit order given to Igbo
people living in the North.
Iyalla explained that it was
necessary for the Muhammadu Buhari-led government to arrest the
situation at its preliminary stage and not when it must have escalated.
Source: Punch
0 Comments