THE EXPLOSIVE WORDS OF JUSTICE IDRIS KUTIGI On June 11th 2014 - TopicsExpress



          

THE EXPLOSIVE WORDS OF JUSTICE IDRIS KUTIGI On June 11th 2014 in the Punch newspaper, the former Chief Justice of Nigeria and the Chairman of President Goodluck Jonathans ongoing constitutional conference, Justice Idris Kutigi, said the following: Most of the southern delegates had said they looked forward to the conference recommending a restructuring of the country and establishing a true federalism that would be characterised by regional autonomy, resource control, state police, among other changes. But their northern counterparts wanted the status quo to remain in terms of the country’s governance structure. They also sought for an increase in revenue allocations from the Federal Government to the states in the North. Going by these positions and those specially presented by different blocs like the North, the South-West, and the South-South, the recommendation of the committees seem to favour the North more than the South. Resource control is not going to happen as long as we (northerners) are part of Nigeria. The implications of these revealing and instructive words surely cannot be lost on even the dullest and slow of learning amongst us. At least Justice Kutigi has the courage of his convictions. He has been brutally frank and honest about the whole thing and the existing situation and I commend him for that. Simply put he has said that nothing can change in Nigeria unless the almighty north agrees to it regardless of how everyone else feels or what their collective aspirations may be. I told Nigerians all this well before the conference started a few weeks back and I have been saying it ever since the annulement of Chief MKO Abiolas June 12th election in 1993. That is how I knew right from the beginning that the latest national conference which was put in place by the Jonathan administration, just like all other constitutional conferences that came before it, could not possibly bring any real and fundamental change and was nothing but an exercise in futility and a waste of time and money. The bitter truth is that Nigeria cannot and will not enjoy any form of deep and meaningful fundamental constitutional change, be restructured or be broken up by peaceful means, negotiation or any constitutional conference. It can only be restructured or broken by the force of arms and fire. If you really want the country to be restructured or you want Oduduwa Republic or Biafra you better be ready to pay the price for it and that price will include plenty of violence and blood. Now this is not a call to arms because personally I deplore the use of violence under any circumstances and the shedding of human blood. I am not declaring war on anyone but simply making an observation and a statement of fact. Take it or leave it. Those that believe that they own Nigeria and all that is in it have made it so. It is left for the rest of us to determine our fate: do we wish to continue like this in utter bondage and servitude for the next 100 years in a land where a bunch of desperate, unlettered and uncouth haramites have the power of veto, the right to thwart our will and the guts to slaughter our people? Do we bequeth nothing but fear, ignorance and slavery to our children and our grandchildren in a land where those that believe that they are born to rule constantly terrorise and kill our citizens when they dont have political power and when they are not ruling from the centre? Do we, like the proverbial victim of anal rape, bow down, role over, take a deep breath, take it all in and just accept our sorry plight and pathetic fate and condition? Or do we finally stand up, accept the fact that slavery, rape and bondage are neither natural or acceptable conditions, say no more and enough is enough, put aside our petty differences, rise up like real men and end it once and for all by breaking the country up completely if we cannot get regional autonomy? How desperately do we want our freedom? Are we ready to pay the price or shall we just continue to fantasise and talk about it in fanciful and long-winded essays, boring and heated verbal debates, endless and, more often than not, uninformed facebook and twitter discussions and in laborious and ill-fated government-sponsored constitutional conference after government-sponsored constitutional conference? We either remain passive, accept our lot, stop complaining and keep our mouths shut for the next one hundred years or we put our money where our mouth is, demand for change and prepare for a long hard struggle for liberation, autonomy and, ultimately, independence. The choice is ours. As for me I made my choice long ago. I believe that there are some things that are well above politics and one of those things is nation-building. I believe that if Nigeria cannot be restructured and power devolved from the centre, according to the will and aspirations of the majority of the people of the south and the Middle Belt, and if this cannot be done quickly and smoothly, I say Give me Oduduwa or let me die. Love me or hate me, that is my stand.
Posted on: Wed, 11 Jun 2014 01:45:35 +0000

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