
As concerns grow over the ongoing move by the federal authorities to re-arrest leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu, groups across the geopolitical zones have described it as a“costly mistake” and warned of dire consequences.
In a statement issued at the
weekend by the Eastern Consultative Assembly (ECA) and Igbo Leaders of
Thought said the federal government which has been floundering with one
political mistake after the other should restrain itself from plunging
the nation into more crises by angling to re-arrest the IPOB leader.
The ECA which is a coalition
of several civil society groups noted in the statement signed by its
secretary, Elliot Ugochukwu-Uko, who also doubles as Deputy Secretary of
Igbo Leaders of Thought, said the government at the centre has
continued to portray itself as “a parochial and ethnic-driven
government” in its actions and policies hence the bias in handling case
of IPOB and its leader.
“Any attempt to re-arrest
Kanu, especially without arresting the quit notice givers, genocidal
song writers and herdsmen-murderers will spell doom for Nigeria. May the
world never say nobody told them. Those plotting the re-arrest of Kanu
do not know how deeply divided Nigeria is at the moment. It will be a
miracle if Nigeria survives this re-arrest agenda.”
“The agenda to re-arrest
Kanu, agreed by the political class, sponsored by those fiercely opposed
to the restructuring of Nigeria and endorsed by those who hate our
people with passion, will permanently alter the Nigeria political
firmament. This is probably ordained by God,” the statement said.
The group recalled that “for
close to two years, the world has been regaled by series of childish
mistakes by the Nigeria government, as regards to the manner the federal
government has handled agitation for self-determination.”
It therefore
noted: “The decision to re-arrest the most popular easterner alive
today in the belief that nothing will happen, is a very costly mistake
(and) there will be consequences, from which Nigeria might never
recover.
“Arresting
him in October 2015 was a big mistake. Denying him bail was another
mistake. Executing his followers in cold blood in Aba, Onitsha, Asaba
and Nkpor, a much bigger mistake. And now, re-arresting a man who
commands the fanatical following of millions of angry young men will
definitely spur grave surprises for us all, head or tail. Nigeria will
never be the same after Kanu’s re-arrest.”
Meanwhile,
groups in the Niger Delta and Middle Belt have equally voiced their
opposition to the move by the federal government to re-arrest the
Biafran leader, saying the entire nation would bear the consequences of such action.
Speaking
from the Niger Delta, the leader of the Afra Descendants Movement (a
pan- Ijaw ethnic organisation), Jene Kalada, said any attempt to re-
arrest Kanu would only exacerbate the already bad political situation in
Nigeria.
Kalada who
voiced the concerns of Niger groups on phone, said the federal
government should know that the Niger Delta people “fully support the
Biafra agitation adding that the ongoing move to re- arrest Kanu was ‘a
step in the wrong direction because it negates the spirit of unity the
government claims it wants to achieve.’”
He argued that re-arresting Kanu would bring no solution to the rising ethnic tensions in the country but rather it
would “postpone or even bring nearer the doom’s day,” adding that the
demand for self- determination did not amount to treason.
From the
Middle Belt, an activist, Dr. John Danfulani, said the consequences of
re-arresting Kanu should not be taken lightly as it would definitely
spell doom for the nation.
He pointed
out that there was no doubt that Kanu had so far conducted his
activities peacefully and had done nothing to be labelled a threat to
national security “when in fact obvious threats to national security are
ignored and allowed to fester.
Danfulai,
who is from Southern Kaduna, warned: “I don’t see the security agents
ready and capable of containing the fall out together with the Boko
Haram insurgence in the North-east. So, the best is to avoid any action
capable of unleashing anarchy in the land.”
The Ijaw
Youth Council (IYC) worldwide, the umbrella body of all youths from Ijaw
land, yesterday alleged that the federal government was
institutionalising double standards in the running of the nation’s
affairs.
President
of the group, Mr. Eric Omare, in a statement in Yenagoa, national
headquarters of the IYC, specifically noted that the planned re-arrest
of Kanu was not only unfair but smacks of double standards.
He argued that the federal government partiality had even become more obvious given that the Arewa youth leaders that threatened to evict Igbo people from the North were neither arrested nor firmly reprimanded.
According to
the group, many Niger Delta agitators are also languishing in various
jails in the country, while the Arewa youths are being feted by state
governments in the North.
Also, the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) has said any attempt by the federal government to re-arrest Kanu will be resisted by the people of the South-east zone.
The group described media reports credited to Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice,
Abubakar Malami, in which he requested the Federal High Court to revoke
the bail given to IPOB leader as the “height of insensitivity’ and
unwarranted ‘intimidation.”
The group in
a statement by its leader, Uchenna Madu and made available to
journalists in Enugu yesterday, said Kanu’s non-violent activities
towards Biafra actualisation and restoration have never breached,
truncated or confronted the “fragile and inconsistent constitution of
this federation called Nigeria.”
He said the
minister’s request was born out of “mischief and ignorance,” stressing
that the federal government was indirectly trying to overheat the
polity. “Even the Interior Minister, Abdurahman
Dambazzu, a Fulani man defended his Hausa Fulani youths of Arewa that
threatened the people of Biafra with an ultimatum of quit notice to
vacate Arewa land before October 1, 2017 that the coalition of the Arewa youths were misquoted by the media,” he noted.
Source: THISDAY, September 8, 2017.
Source: THISDAY, September 8, 2017.
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