Still on June 12 remembrance

Events after the infamous June 12 election may not be forgotten on account of sentiments that culminated in a bloodbath. The late Moshood Kashimawo Abiola was adjudged to have won election in 1993 and believed to have been denied his mandate. Twenty-seven years after the botched June 12 election, the pain continues to bite harder, building a critical mass, which makes it a potentially deadly part of our history.

It is true Nigerians raise dust once an issue of salient importance arises and loses steam after few days, what people fail to understand is that Nigerians do not forget. It’s only a matter of time before the election annulment, death of Abiola becomes an issue that may threaten our corporate integrity. We must realize that issues bordering around ethno, religious cleavages don’t just fizzle out in Nigeria, they have a life of immortality with potentially dangerous consequences.

The point is, Nigerian leaders have managed to take so many things for granted when action would have been veritable in solving problems that has high potentials of affecting our corporate existence. The usual approach culminated the post Nigerian civil war era. The three ‘R’, which stands for Rehabilitation, Reconstruction and Reintegration by the Gen. Yakubu Gowon administration, is adjudged a failure on account of lack of will to implement. The component of reintegration may have taken place to some extent, while the other two were completely jettisoned.
It is therefore instructive to intimate that Biafran agitators are engaging the secessionist gear on full throttle over alleged claims of marginalization on account of failure of the three ‘R’ among sundry reasons.

While the issue of marginalization exists everywhere including villages, communities and families, the nonchalance of ruling elites has further aggravated already bad situation. The call for Biafran republic is having domino effect as northern youths have decided to take the issue to a different turf.
Today, we have all kinds of agitations in the country. From the south-east/south-south, there is MASOB, IPOB/Biafra, Niger Delta Avengers. From the North there is Boko Haram. The Fulani herders are taking their slice off the violence pie by raiding homes, farms, killing innocent Nigerians and kidnapping for ransom. There are real and imaginary agitations everywhere with dangerous consequence on hapless Nigerians and continued existence of our corporate entity.

Nigerians are so aggrieved with each other. The Biafran agitators have open fresh wounds with hate speech and secessionist advocacy. The so called northern youths are tired of the threats and have decided to heighten the stakes by calling for expulsion of the Igbo race from their region – a tacit move for anarchy. Nigerians are indeed tired of their federation. The only people holding the country together are the ruling elites. What divides us unites them. They control financial resources and have used it to control the will power of many dependent Nigerians. How long this will last appears bleak, as the street is already crying for splinter along regional cleavages.
Nigeria has indeed reached a cliff edge where restructuring appears inevitable. It therefore mean, we must return to 1960 where it was stipulated that all component regions should keep their wealth but contribute a portion to the central government.

It also mean, Nigeria has been a big ponzi, our existence has been fashioned according to the prescription of the military juntas in the country for central government. If we must practice true federalism, if we must continue as a country, restructuring appears to be the only way out.
Let me therefore assert that once a part of the country unsettles the polity with unyielding calls for secession, other silent agitators will pick on things like June 12, others to set their trajectory for splinter. Remember, the north is known for “talk-and-do”, they do not mince words or “sit-at-home”. It is instructive for Nigerians to understand that united we stand, divided we scatter in piecemeal.

Israel A. Ebije,
Abuja.

Leave a Reply