Minister of Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, says that
there are opportunities in ongoing separatist agitations in Nigeria.
He stated this on Channels Television’s ‘Hard Copy’
programme aired on Friday night..
Agitations for secession in Southern Nigeria have increased
in the last one year as separatists complain about perceived injustice and express
dissatisfaction with lopsided appointments into top government positions,
improper allocation of resources amongst the federating units, insecurity,
worsening economy.
While Nnamdi Kanu leads the proscribed Indigenous People of
Biafra in the South-East, Sunday Adeyemo aka Sunday Igboho is an arrowhead of
Yoruba Nation agitation in South-West Nigeria.
The regime of the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari
(retd.), which turned maddening heat on separatists this year clamped down on
the two agitators and they are currently behind bars. Both Igboho and Kanu have
been accused of terrorism and treasonable felony and are facing similar charges
in court.
Many Nigerians including socio-political groups including
Afenifere and Ohanaeze Ndigbo have called for political solutions to resolve
the crisis.
When asked whether he sees opportunities in separatism,
Fashola said, “I see opportunities in the challenges that we have as a country;
there are always opportunities every time that we have a problem and that is
why people tell you: ‘don’t waste a crisis’. There is one thing to have a
crisis but the worst thing is to waste one.
“There are
opportunities in every problem that we face and I am always positive in my
outlook: how do I get better from this? A life without problem is not a life
lived at all. A life lived is a life that confronts problem, solve them, learn
from them.”
When asked for the second time the opportunities he sees in
separatism, the two-term ex-governor of Lagos said, “There are opportunities
there for a conversation around why those voices are now louder perhaps than
they were 20 years ago.
“Those agitations are not unique to Nigeria; the Scottish
wants a referendum and they want to leave if the opportunities provide them, so
it not unique to us. These are human issues and how we engage with one another
and to then ask a genuine question and we would always be better off together
and to find out how to make that union stronger, better and more fulfilling.
That is an opportunity and it is a conversation I will like to have.”
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