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Three Things The Government Must Do To Keep Nigeria United – Gbajabiamila Reveals
Speaker of the House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila, has listed three things the government must consider doing to keep Nigeria united.
According to the lawmaker, citizens must be accorded due respect, protected and guaranteed all fundamental rights without exception.
These, Gbajabiamila believed will create a bond between citizens and hence keep the country away from break up.
The statement was delivered yesterday at the 112th Founder’s Lecture of the King’s College Old Boys Association in Lagos.
The Speaker also said that the people must be free from want and have the resources to pursue their dreams and achieve their aspirations.
Gbajabiamila insists the government must set Nigerians free from the current terror and accompanying limitations of wanton insecurity in all its forms.
He said that Nigeria belongs to all of us in equal measure, and that the creation of the union was divinely ordained.
The speaker’s statement titled, “House to ensure constitution amendment to provides for inclusiveness, unity”, was tagged the KCOBA Lecture – Unity in diversity, stronger together.”
The Speaker noted that the ongoing review of the 1999 constitution being undertaken by the National Assembly will correct all forms of imbalance in the country.
Gbajabiamila reiterated that Nigeria stands to achieve a lot when the citizens are united.
The statement read: “Nigeria’s unity is incumbent on our ability to do three things and do them well. The first is to ensure that the government respects, protects and guarantees the fundamental rights of all citizens, without exception,”
“The second is to provide a society where our people are free from want and have the resources to pursue their dreams and achieve their best aspirations.
“The third is by freeing our people from the abject terror and accompanying limitations of wanton insecurity in all its forms.
“This is the pathway to a truly united Nigeria. A nation where our diversity is a source of strength, and we are not defined by the differences of tribe, tongue, religion and history.
“All of the above depends a lot on the quality of political leadership at all levels of government.
“It also depends on whether we are ready to have the difficult conversations about the realities of our country without recourse to easy tropes and comforting shibboleths.
Gbajabiamila said it is wrong to continue to assume and act in the assumption that every criticism, political action and governing decision, for good or bad, is the product of ethnic, religious or other such considerations.
He said: “We need to begin once more to extend to ourselves the benefit of kindness and the assumption of good intentions. We are capable of this.”
The Speaker said that the House would ensure that the ongoing constitution amendment produces a document that would entrench inclusiveness and unity among Nigerians.
He said the efforts of the House would also put in place mechanisms for holding the institutions of state accountable and “put an end to the debilitating conflicts that continue to tear our nation apart.”
Going down to memory lane, Gbajabiamila said having inherited the union called Nigeria, “we have built it up and held it together. We accomplished this through joint effort over many years.
“We did it through citizens moving from one end of the country to another, acquiring education, building businesses, making friends, falling in love, and marrying. We did it through the joy of shared victories and the mourning of communal loss.
“We took ownership of our country by sacrificing blood, sweat and tears to secure democratic governance and make Nigeria into a place where grand visions can be made real by determined effort and where hope can thrive. As in the words of our old national anthem, we have made of this nation where ‘though tribes and tongue may differ in brotherhood we stand’.”
Gbajabiamila, who said “Nigeria belongs to all of us in equal measure,” noted that “Nigeria belongs to all of us in equal measure,” noted that “the creation of this union was divinely ordained. Therefore, it is our sacred duty as citizens of this great country to identify the purpose of this divine creation and give ourselves to those activities that will make real the divine purpose of our national union.
In the House of Representatives, we are currently in the process of a substantive review of our nation’s constitution. Our objective is to deliver a constitution that more effectively organises our politics to make it more inclusive, enshrine efficient mechanisms for holding the institutions of state to account and put an end to the debilitating conflicts that continue to tear our nation apart.
“We will not produce a perfect constitution; no such thing has ever existed in the world.
“However, together we can, by the choices we make and our actions, use our constitution as the foundational document of our nationhood to give life to the best promise of Nigeria.”