Breakup Not Solution To Nigeria's Problems, Says Osinbajo

Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo has said there is no truth in the thinking that the different regions of the country will prosper individually if the country breaks up, PUNCH reports.

He said Nigeria needed to learn from countries which had gone the way of secession yet there was no end to their problems.

Osinbajo said Nigeria should learn from Sudan, which split into northern and southern Sudan with the belief that that was the solution to the country’s internal strife.

Also citing the case of Somalia, the vice-president argued that the fact that people speak the same language and practise the same religion was no guarantee that they would live in harmony.

Osinbajo spoke in Lagos on Tuesday at the 70th-anniversary lecture of the Lagos Country Club. He spoke on the theme, ‘Promoting national cohesion as a means of promoting progress and prosperity.’

Osinbajo, while pointing out that diversity could either be a trigger for conflict or a fountain of prosperity and progress, urged Nigerians to embrace the latter like the United States of America, which exploited diversity to its advantage.

He said, “The truth is that any group that suggests that its destiny is outside Nigeria and so must separate to achieve its ambitions will find out soon enough that even within that group there are many little splinters, factions waiting to cut the pie into even smaller pieces, hoping that by doing so, they will eat a large piece.

“The mere fact that we all speak the same language or belong to the same tribe does not mean that there will not be strife; and in the same way, the mere fact that we all speak different languages or belong to different tribes and religions does not mean we will strive.”

Osibanjo regretted that as a result of weak law enforcement and justice institutions, divisive narratives had gained ground in the country.

To reverse this trend, he said the institutions must be strengthened to assure Nigerians of security anywhere they lived.

He added, “The challenge is dynamic and our approach must also be dynamic. That is why I believe that state police in a large and diverse federation is imperative. However, we know that the creation of state police requires a constitutional amendment. In the interim, the Federal Government has approved community policing, as an option. A component of that is that the new approach to police recruitment is that policemen will be recruited in each local government and after training, they will be required to remain in their local government.”
 

Politics News AddThis :  Original Author :  SaharaReporters, New York Disable advertisements : 

from Latest News https://ift.tt/2ytGYtq
via IFTTT

Comments