Apex Igbo socio-cultural organisation, Ohanaeze Ndigbo, on Monday, lambasted Kogi State Governor, Yahaya Bello, over his recent comments on rotational presidency.
Bello had during a maiden edition of the ‘Governor Yahaya Bello seminar for political and crime correspondents’ in Abuja on Friday, declared rotational Presidency “unconstitutional”, adding, “Nigerians should be allowed to make their choices for the best candidate to emerge for the top post.”
But Ohanaeze, in a statement on Monday, by its National Publicity Secretary, Chief Alex Ogbonnia, lambasted Governor Bello, stating that he had demonstrated a remarkable obsession with ambition shortly after providence paved way for him to be sworn in as a governor in 2015 at an impressionable age of 40.
The Igbo group noted that “there is no doubt that Bello has a date with destiny going by a smooth political ascendancy that life has presented to him.”
Ohanaeze expressed fears that the youthful governor “is embarking on a political adventure that lacks both conscience and principle,” noting that all the miseries and evils which men suffer from vice, crime, ambition, injustice, oppression, slavery and war, proceed from their despising or neglecting the inner still voice or conscience.
Recalling the history behind the idea of rotational presidency, the apex Igbo group stated, “Governor Bello was still a student, studying accountancy at the Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria, when an agreement was reached between the North and the South with respect to Rotational Presidency.
“The meeting was held at the National Universities Commission Conference Centre, Abuja in 1998. Dr Chuba Okadigbo spoke on behalf of the South while Alh. Abubakar Rimi spoke for the North. The likes of Dr Alex Ekwueme, Chief Solomon Lar, Dr Okwesilieze Nwodo, etc were at the meeting.
“The Nigerian statesmen examined the merits and demerits of zoning and rotation of power between the composite zones in Nigeria. In the end, it was resolved that the presidency be conceded to the South and that it would rotate between the South and the North in the interest of equity, unity and corporate existence of Nigeria.”
It added, “The foregoing was the basis for the emergence of presidential candidates of the mainstream political parties from the South-West in 1999. Since then, the patriotic and peace-loving Nigerians have adhered to the rotation principle such that at the end of Chief Olusegun Obasanjo’s second tenure, President Musa Yar’Adua was elected; Goodluck Jonathan and then President Muhammadu Buhari.”
Ohanaeze noted that it was on that basis that the Southern governors resolved in the Lagos meeting that the South should produce the next President of Nigeria after President Muhammadu Buhari.
The apex Igbo group, therefore, advised Bello that it would serve his interest better if he supported the resolution by his southern colleagues; more so as “he is still young.”
Ohanaeze enjoined Bello to embrace the ethical functional relationship between the morality of an agreement and the legality of the constitution.
It contended that for clarity sake, “morality is the universal foundation of Laws. On the other hand, law should be seen to stand in defence of morality.”