
Ijaw leader, Chief Edwin Clark and Governor
Godswill Akpabio of Akwa Ibom State have incurred the wrath of the
governors of Yobe and Adamawa states for asking President Goodluck
Jonathan to dismantle democratic structures in the North-East to pave
way for a full military takeover.
The two governors, Ibrahim Gaidam and Murtala
Nyako, said Clark and Akpabio, who are supposed to be democrats, threw
caution to the winds by advocating the removal of the elected
representatives of the people of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa and replacement
with sole administrators.
The governors described the advocacy by Clark
and Akpabio as ill-advised, provocative, unfortunate, diversionary and
totally out of sync with democratic
norms and values.The statement was
signed by Abdullahi Bego, Special Adviser (Media) to Governor Ibrahim
Gaidam and Ahmad Sajoh, Director of Press and Public Affairs to Governor
Murtala Nyako.
They pointed out that the contemplation of
the removal of the North East governors and replacement with ‘sole
administrators’ is a ‘constitutional aberration, which cannot be found
in any of the 320 sections of the 1999 Constitution’.
The statement said: “Mr. Clark’s comments
(and indeed Mr. Akpabio’s) therefore smack of fascism and are clearly a
veiled attempt at sabotaging our nation’s democracy which should be
resisted by all and sundry.
“Curiously, both Clark and Akpabio are
beneficiaries of constitutionalism and democracy in Nigeria. It is
therefore mind boggling that the two would seek to put both
constitutionalism and democracy in jeopardy on the altar of their
personal interests.”
They said that Clark made a fundamental error
by comparing the situation that led to the declaration of emergency
rule in Ekiti State by the Olusegun Obasanjo administration and the
current security scenario in Yobe, Borno and Adamawa states, saying that
the two cases were not the same.
They noted that as a former Senator Clark
should know that the meaning of the provisions of Section 305 of the
1999 Constitution, which gives the President the power to declare a
state of emergency in all or parts of the country, does not necessarily
apply to security situations.
The two governors allege that by his
suggestion, Clark did not wish the President well and was out to scuttle
the nation’s democracy.
The governors noted: “That Mr. Clark would
gladly and blindly ignore overriding legal opinion and historical
contexts and suggest something that goes against the letter and spirit
of our Constitution as a democratic nation, go to show that not only is
he not wishing Mr. President well.”
The governors also said Clark demonstrated
crass ignorance and insensitivity to the plight of people in the
North-East by suggesting that the missing Chibok school girls would not
have been kidnapped if Borno State was under a ‘total state of
emergency’.
They said: “Is Clark not aware that over the
past 12 months, there was all manner of security presence in the three
states when we witnessed some of the most heinous and despicable
terrorist attacks on our schools in Mamudo, Buni Yadi and Gujba and on
our towns and villages from Izge to Baga?”
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