Pro-Biafran groups have been advised by the
Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremmadu that even though the read more.....
agitation
and concerns of the groups are genuine, they should not be pursued with
force or other forms of armed struggle.
Deputy Senate
President, Ike Ekweremmadu, has advised that the sit-at-home order
declared by some right groups in South-East for May 30 should be
optional.
The Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB) and the
Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of Biafra
(MASSOB)had called on citizens of South-East to stay at home on May 30
to observe their anniversary.
Ekweremmadu gave the advice on
Sunday at an Inter-denominational church service at the Presbyterian
Church of Nigeria, Abakaliki, to commemorate 2017 Democracy Day and Gov.
David Umahi’s second year in office.
He noted that while the
agitation and concerns of the groups are genuine, they should not be
pursued with force or other forms of armed struggle.
“Individuals
who operate private businesses and want to stay-at-home on that day
should stay, while those who want to operate their businesses should be
allowed to do so.
“I believe that civil and public workers should
be ready to go to work on that day as I appeal that no group should
force people to stay at home against their wishes,” he added.
The
deputy senate president called on the agitators to embrace dialogue and
constructive engagement in pursuing their agitation; not coercion or
other forms of armed struggle.
“The struggles and concerns are
genuine but with the collaboration of all and constructive engagement,
we will surely get to our destination no matter how long it takes.
“Black
Americans agitated for a long time before Barack Obama became president
in 2008, likewise in India, it took constructive engagement for the
people to actualise their agitation.
“South Africa despite racial
disturbances and black oppression, employed constructive engagement and
intervention of the western world and African interests such as
Nigeria’s, to dismantle apartheid,” he said.
Ekweremadu congratulated the people of Ebonyi on the second year in office of their governor.
He
noted that the state had matured politically and socially, adding that
any indigene could aspire for any political office in the state.
In his remark, Umahi noted that no individual or group would force the citizens of the state to stay-at-home on May 30.
“I
have met the leadership of these groups on various occasions and
discovered that most of their agitations are correct but the ways they
seek to actualise them can be faulted.
“I have also met the
leadership of market unions in the state and we resolved that markets
would be open on that day and no trader or any other individual will be
molested,” he said.
The governor said that the case of Ebonyi
was different as the state had suffered untold marginalisation right
from its days in old Anambra, Imo, Enugu and Abia states.
“The
deputy senate president is fighting marginalisation of the Igbos at the
federal level; when this is addressed, we will start our own agitation
of marginalisation as a state.
“Ebonyi does not believe in
regional government because we will continue suffering deprivation but
believe in the restructuring of the country to address all imbalances,”
he said.
In his homily, Rev. Fr Abraham Nwali urged political
and economic leaders in the state to build industries instead of
embarking on ‘non-direct-impact’ projects such as hotels.
“The
governor should be supported in his desire to ensure that sachet water
companies are constructed in the three senatorial zones of the state,’’
he said.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that prayers
were said by officiating ministers of the Presbyterian Church for the
unity of the country and peace in Ebonyi.
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