…Backs Akeredolu, Igboho
The Oodua Peoples Congress, OPC, has advised the Presidency and the Arewa Consultative Forum, ACF, against playing politics and ethnicity with the worrisome state of security in the South-West.
The OPC has also offered to assist Ondo State Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu to enforce the deadline issued to herdsmen to vacate government forest reserves in the state.
Deputy President to late founder of the OPC, Fredrick Fasehun, Wasiu Afolabi, declared this on Sunday in a statement, following an emergency meeting of OPC leaders at the Century Hotel, Okota, Lagos.
Afolabi, popularly known as Askari, issued a stern warning to trouble makers, pointing out that no Southerner would dare go to the North “to carry out killing, kidnapping and banditry that Fulani criminals have unleashed on Southern communities and highways.”
The Yoruba socio-cultural group said, “ACF is threatening reprisals, instead of telling its prodigal sons to halt their criminality. ACF should know that nobody has a monopoly of violence.
“Although the millions of law-abiding Fulani men and women living in our midst have absolutely no cause for alarm, those Fulani criminals hiding under the cloak of being herdsmen to perpetrate evil against law-abiding citizens should know their time is up. Henceforth, it will be fire for fire.”
Expressing his group’s backing for the ultimatum issued by the Ondo State governor, Arakunrin Akeredolu, that herdsmen should leave government forest reserves for open areas by Monday, Afolabi said, “We are fully prepared to help enforce Governor Akeredolu’s quit notice in Ondo State at the expiration of the two-week deadline. Anybody found in the jungle will be regarded as a kidnapper and bandit and will be appropriately dealt with.
“We Yoruba shall rise up to defend our land from foreign marauders, who daily rape our women, kill our farmers and kidnap Nigerian citizens. Enough is enough.”
The OPC also described the manhunt launched by the police for Yoruba activist, Sunday Igboho, as misguided and provocative, adding, “The government must guarantee the life of Sunday Igboho. Rather than declare Sunday Adeyemo an outlaw, the Federal Government’s security agencies should turn their attention against criminal elements engaging in kidnappings and killings in the South.”
Similarly, Afolabi also declared as divisive, provocative, ill-advised, as well as an insult to the nation’s federalism and the principle of separation of powers as enshrinemed in the constitution the Presidency’s opposition to Akeredolu’s order.
The statement added, “In this federation, one level of government will be overstepping its bounds by dictating to another level of government. The evil of kidnapping and killing being perpetrated by Nigerian Fulani and their foreign cousins can no longer be tolerated. This kids-glove treatment was how authorities encouraged Boko Haram to transform into a full-blown terrorist organisation that has made the North-East the most dangerous place to live in the world.
“Therefore, in line with His Excellency’s directive as the Chief Security Officer of Ondo State, herdsmen, tourists and farmers alike must vacate forest reserves to enable security agents and vigilantes move in to smoke kidnappers out of their hiding places and restore sanity to the backwoods.”
Urging all Yoruba to speak with one voice against the rising insecurity in their land, the OPC said the race currently faced an existential threat to its survival as foreign criminals had turned highways, forests and farms into danger zones while the Muhammadu Buhari government turned a blind eye.
It said, “We cannot fold our arms and wait to be wiped out of our fatherland by foreign elements. The Yoruba are peace-loving people, with a great reputation for extending hospitality to visitors in order to produce mutually-beneficial advantages.
“But what we see today are invaders, murderers and parasites, committed to snuff the life out of their hosts. We can no longer tolerate them and we must reclaim not only our land, but our peace from these children of Satan.”
The OPC reiterated that the imbalance in the country’s security architecture had always raised suspicion; maintaining that the government’s apathy to the rising menace in the South showed that the authorities felt nothing about the daily murder and plundering of Nigerians.
The OPC insisted, “Time has come for all Nigerians, especially the National Assembly, to compel the President to alter the security architecture to conform to the Federal Character principle of the Nigerian Constitution he swore to uphold. What obtains now is lopsided in favour of a section of the country and this is dangerous.”