PRESIDENT Goodluck Jonathan, yesterday, at the National May Day
rally, in Abuja, said Nigeria is not poor, but suffering from the
distribution of wealth, as the main challenge facing the country.
NLC President, Comrade Abdulwaheed Omar; President Goodluck Jonathan
And TUC President, Comrade Peter Esele, at the Centenary May Day
Celebration in Abuja On Wednesday
This came as organised labour berated Nigerian politicians and
political leaders for playing politics with the state of insecurity in
the country, with Governors Babatunde Fashola, Adams Oshiomhole and
Ibikunle Amosun of Lagos, Edo and Ogun states calling for concerted
efforts to tackle the insecurity scourge irrespective of political or
religious affiliations.
Jonathan was reacting to the recent World Bank's report that ranked
Nigeria the fifth poorest country in the world at Eagle Square, venue of
2014 workers' May Day festivities.
President Jonathan said he was amazed when he visited Kenya on an
official trip, only to discover that most of the private jets which flew
into that country were from Nigeria.
He said: "They say Nigeria is poor, but I was surprised when the
World Bank listed us among the poorest nations in the world. Nigeria is
not poor, it only has the problem of unequal distribution of wealth."
President Goodluck Jonathan used the May Day celebration to reiterate
his administration's determination to bring the Boko-Haram insurgency
to an end, vowing that the abducted secondary school girls in Chibok,
Borno State must be found and rescued.
He also restated his earlier submission that the perpetrators of the
Nyanya Bus Terminal bombing in the Federal Capital would be fished out
and punished in accordance with the law.
He assured that government was continuously fine-tuning its security
strategies to curb insurgency which, he said, perpetrators must never be
allowed to succeed in their evil intention.
He, therefore, called for the cooperation of citizens to beat back the threat posed by the Islamic sect to the nation.
He said: "The recent atrocities by terrorists, particularly the
Nyanya Motor park bombing of mainly working class citizens, as well as
the cruel abduction of some innocent girls, our future mothers and
leaders in a very horrific and despicable situation in Borno State, is
quite regrettable.
"The government is constantly reviewing and upgrading mechanisms to
curb this mindless act and together, with the cooperation of the
citizenry, we shall triumph.
"Those who want to re-define our country to be seen as a country of
chaos will never succeed. We will continue to work hard to ensure the
security of our people.
Speaking on the state of insecurity, Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC,
and its Trade Union Congress of Nigeria, TUC, counterpart, argued that,
"it is immoral to play politics with the lives of people," insisting
that the ruling class should realise that Nigeria was at war, against a
far-reaching network of violence and hatred and demanded an end to the
unholy dirty politics over the insecurity in the country."
Governor Oshiomhole while urging workers to stand and speak for
Nigeria in the face of insurgency and ethnic champions, said: "We should
be united in the fight against Boko Haram. We should be united against
terrorism, because we need a peaceful state for us to do politics."
Governor Babatunde Fashola suggested: "I think first of all we should
agree to fight the scourge of insecurity under one flag, the
Green-White-Green Flag.
"Let everyone for now subsume his flag in whatever colour and let us
rally together, not as Yoruba, as Ijaw, not as Igbo, not as Hausa, but
as Nigerians, who rally under one flag, the Green-White-Green to defeat
insecurity."
Governor Amosun of Ogun State said: "I, therefore, appeal to you all
to always take out time to pray for Nigeria and the over 200 students
kidnapped in Chibok in Borno State.
"We pray for God's intervention in securing the release of the
students and stemming the tide of violent crimes against humanity in
Nigeria."
The two labour centres while addressing workers and other guests,
with theme, 'Building Enduring Peace and Unity: Panacea for Sustainable
National Development,' insisted that, "we must all rise in unison,
shoulder-to-shoulder and confront this common enemy once and for all. We
are almost certain that if anyone was left in doubt about the
universality of this war, the Nyanya bomb blast erased all of that."
Both NLC and TUC also commented on the, economy, unemployment,
poverty National Conference and alleged moves "some vested interests
among the governors are mobilizing some delegates to force through the
balkanisation of labour and the negation of a national minimum wage as
currently enshrined in the constitution. It is certainly the machination
of a few privilege few in position of powers at the expense of the
teeming Nigerians. This is an attempt to keep Nigerians in perpetual
slavery and servitude."
They called on "Nigerian workers and the teeming well-meaning Nigerians to rise up against these retrogressive moves."
Insecurity
According to NLC President, Mr. Abdulwaheed "In the past few years,
the nation has witnessed unprecedented security challenges that have
tasked our imagination, resources and temperament. From the Niger Delta
to the northern-most parts of the country, we have had one form of
violent conflict or another that threatened the peace and security of
the nation.
One of the most trying of these has been the kidnapping of over 200
teenage girls at Chibok, Borno state. As Nigerians await the release of
some of them still being held by the terrorists, our hearts bleed and we
pray for their safety and release.
"Beside the human and material cost of this "war" is another cost,
the psychological cost. Every time a bomb goes off or the sound of a gun
rends the air, something in us dies
"We do not need any one to tell us that we have a serious situation
on our hands. The war on terror does not seem to be going on well at the
moment. Our security forces despite gallant efforts have suffered
reversals, taking direct hits in their critical asset areas, raising
concerns about their capacity or willingness to win this war. We are not
unaware of the complexities of a war of this nature, but we demand
better initiative and more commitment.
"In spite of government's effort, the situation, particularly in the
North East, is deteriorating. The initial gains of emergency rule,
clearly have been lost and the momentum squandered. The Boko Haram
elements have matured into a full-blown terror group striking at
high-profile targets with devastating effect. Indeed, the choice of
targets, regularity of strikes, weapons used, co-ordination and
sophistication of their operations make them not only the leading terror
group but the group to dread.
We feel seriously concerned about the state of the nation's security
infrastructure. In spite of the relative huge security votes in the past
few years, it is weak and inadequate. We also believe conflicting
political interests, ambiguous operational order and primordial
sentiments are some of the factors undermining the counter terror war."
On his part, the TUP President, Bobboi Bala Kaigama, stressed that
all Nigerians irrespective political and religious beliefs "in view of
the comatose nature of our socio-economic infrastructure, the
near-breakdown of security and the recent spate of killings and
destruction of property in the North-East and some other parts of the
country.
The fact that we are in the midst of crisis is by no longer
disputable. Our nation is at war, against a far-reaching network of
violence and hatred.
Our economy is threatened by incidents of violence and terrorism due
to unalloyed greed and irresponsibility on the part of many of our
successive leaders and our collective failure to nurture our hard-earned
democracy and prepare the nation for a new progressive age."
In Lagos, the occasion was almost marred by protesting members of the
civil society groups led by the Joint Action Front, JAF, who were
protesting the increase in the tuition fees of the Lagos State
University, LASU.
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