A former Chief of Defense Staff, Mr Alexander Ogomudia, retired army general, has expressed fear about recent negative developments in the country, saying they were indications that the country was overdue for restructuring and in urgent need of a new way of governance.
Ogomudia said he feared for the future of the country and the present security situation in the country, saying “a country where a former Chief of Defence Staff, Mr Alex Badeh, retired air chief marshal, was killed in the streets like an urchin, and nothing happened, is a sign that the nation is not moving in the right direction”.
The former Chief of Defence Staff who delivered the keynote address at the Good Governance Lecture organised by Catholic Church of Warri’s Justice Development and Peace Commission (JDPC) warned that the continued suppression of the agitations for the restructuring of the country could lead to a violent break up of the country.
He urged those opposed to restructuring to borrow a leaf from the break up of Yugoslavia and Sudan saying that even in Spain the Catalonians want to break away and that in Britain, Scotland seeks autonomy.
He said restructuring was a global trend which every right-thinking government should embrace for national integration and development especially in a country like Nigeria, where he said we practice “a fake federal system”.
Ogomudia equally criticised the death penalty for the hate speech bill. He created a mild drama in the hall when paused to ask anyone who can define hate speech to come forward.
When no one came out, Ogomudia said “something that no one can truly define, they want to impose death penalty for? Where is this country headed?”
He described the type of politics practised in Nigeria today as toxic and detrimental to national development, saying “we have a fractured politics and everyone is doing things that will hurt the country.”
He said Nigeria needed true federalism to advance like other nations saying that Nigeria is the only country where states share money coming from only one source monthly.
He argued that Nigeria was overdue for change saying that restructuring the country would guarantee, ethnic harmony, accountability, freedom of speech, Independence of the judiciary and a fair electoral process.
The Guardian