
As Ezeife, Okorie, Ikedife, others reject 2023 presidency offer
Ohanaeze, Okechukwu, others insist on 2023 Igbo ticket
During
the 2015 presidential election, the people of the South-east region
threw their weight behind former President Goodluck Jonathan.
They
were to be paid back in their own coins when President Muhammadu Buhari
made his key appointments without considering any Igbo fit for the
positions.
An ostensibly angry Buhari had said he would not take
what he would use to compensate those who supported him overwhelmingly
to give to the people who gave him only five per cent votes at the
polls.
For some of the Igbo, the support for Jonathan then was
anchored on the belief that it would be easier for him to support a
president of the Igbo extraction after serving out his eight years in
office in 2019.
The Igbo who believe in the tripod nature of the
country have been crying of marginalization in the country, particularly
as their zone has not had a shot at the presidency, which probably was
responsible for their always seeking for a way to actualize the dream.
And
as if the other parts of the country know the desire of the Igbo, they
always raise the hope of the people of the South-east by telling them to
support them so as to get power thereafter.
Therefore, Ohanaeze
Ndigbo and some of the people of the South-east are again thinking that
it would be easier for them to accomplish the desire after the eight
years of the Buhari presidency since the South-west had served for eight
years under former President Olusegun Obasanjo.
Indeed, the apex
Igbo socio-cultural organization, Ohanaeze Ndigbo, believes that the
Igbo should better wait for 2023 when the coast would be clearer for the
South-east zone to contest for the presidency.
The Ohanaeze
Ndigbo President General, Chief Nnia Nwodo, who spoke through his Media
Adviser, Chief Emeka Atamah, said the North should be allowed to serve
its eight years after which it would be the turn of the South-east.
He
pointed out that the eight-year tenure of the North was truncated when
former President Umaru Yar’Adua died and power shifted to the
South-south, saying that the North would have been adequately
compensated if Buhari is allowed to complete eight years.
Then in
2023, he said, it would have become statutory for the Igbo to take a
shot at the presidency, which has eluded the zone for many years.
But
Sunday Sun findings revealed that the Ohanaeze Ndigbo position
notwithstanding, the South-east zone might again deny President Buhari
their votes in the 2019 elections.
This was also despite the
concerted efforts being made by Buhari’s loyalists to convince the
people of the South-east to support his re-election bid so as to have a
better chance of producing his successor in 2023.
A cross section
of Igbo leaders interviewed by Sunday Sun expressed divergent views
concerning the proposal with many of them saying that 2023 promise was
conceived to mislead the people again.
Recently, the Secretary to
the Government of the Federation (SGF), Boss Mustafa, had told a
delegation of the Ebonyi State chapter of the ruling All Progressives
Congress (APC), who visited his office, to “preach to the other
South-east states that the shortest way to Igbo presidency is to support
Buhari in 2019.”
Since that pronouncement by the SGF, many APC
chieftains in the South-east have been unrelenting in marketing the
offer to the people of the zone.
A chieftain of the All
Progressives Congress and Director General of the Voice of Nigeria, Mr
Osita Okechukwu told Sunday Sun that supporting Buhari in 2019 would,
among other benefits, bring Ndigbo back into the mainstream of the
Nigerian politics.
Hear him: “President Buhari’s victory in the
2019 presidential election presents 2023 as a landmark year for Ndigbo
who genuinely want to end sulking, lamentation and agonising over
decades of marginalisation. This is the antidote and will showcase our
hard work and enterprise. The alliance with Buhari is surreal and
realpolitik. Realpolitik, for more than any other event, 2023 will
consolidate not only our fledgling democracy, but will Bring Back Ndigbo
into the Mainstream (BBNM) of Nigeria politics. This is why I’m one of
those who would like to ask, what would the Great Zik have done in the
circumstances we find ourselves?
“I sincerely believe that Zik, a
foremost nationalist, if given our present scenario, would have
mobilised Igbo votes for President Buhari so as not only to benefit
handsomely from the massive Roads, Rails, Agric and Power (RRAP)
projects; but also to position one of our own for president come 2023.
This is better than alliance with Afenifere that today doesn’t control
even one local council in the South-west.
“The golden opportunity
for a president of Nigeria of Igbo extraction is predicted on the
truism that since 1999, a zoning or rotation convention is subsisting,
between the Southern and Northern regions. The South-west ruled from
1999-2007 and the South-South ruled 2010-2015. So, the South-east is the
only geo-political zone in the southern zone, which is yet to benefit
from this treasure.
“Ndigbo should shake off ancient prejudices
and stereotypes for equity and natural justice is on our side. In the
political domain, there is the law with its legal teeth and there is
convention with its moral weight. The zoning convention is meant to
cement unity and that’s why its utility for Nigeria is realpolitik.”
Also
Imo State-born business mogul and philanthropist, Chief Chukwudi Ezeji,
urged the people the South-east to put sentiments aside and join the
mainstream politics as it would pave way for the actualization of Igbo
presidency in 2023.
“Generally speaking, it is his (Buhari’s)
constitutional right to seek re-election, but as an Igbo man, I see it
as a welcome development because his re-election would guarantee the
emergence of a president of Igbo extraction in 2023,” he said.
But
speaking with Sunday Sun, a former governor of Anambra State, Dr
Chukwuemeka Ezeife, differed with the duo of Okechukwu and Ezeji as he
believes that the 2019 elections would present a better possibility for
the Igbo to produce the president of the country than 2023.
“I
don’t see the possibility. Indeed, we may be very negative and we may be
timid also, otherwise the circumstances of now make 2019 a better
possibility for Ndigbo. And I don’t believe that we should be begging
people for Igbo presidency. It is my view that we should go and pray to
God now because He knows that if we take over the presidency of Nigeria,
the Fulanis will be happier, the Yorubas will be happier and every part
of Nigeria will benefit when we handle the economic development of
Nigeria. Therefore, my recommendation is that we should pray to God.
Talking about 2023, it is mission very dicey and anybody selling that to
people is trying to deceive them.”
Ezeife faulted the belief in
some quarters that the power equation of the country at the moment does
not favour the South-East to produce the president in 2019, maintaining
that those who beat the drum for power equation only do so when it’s
convenient for them.
“What is the power equation you have? How
many times have they rotated power to the South-east? What is important
for me is that Igbo people should go and pray to their God to forgive
them everything they may have committed and give them a chance to save
Nigeria. To give Ndigbo a chance to save Nigeria economically is what
I’m talking about. When we take over power and I hope the right person
takes over, the economy will experience explosive growth and instead of
looking for petty things to fight over, people would prefer to be at the
frontiers of the economy,” Ezeife added.
On his part, the
Convener of South-East Elders Forum (SEEF) and former President General
of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Dr Dozie Ikedife, said the Igbo had been victims of
unfulfilled promises in the past and would be circumspect this time
around.
“There are so many unfulfilled promises and our people
often fall victims to lies. If someone has deceived you for about two or
three times, if he comes the fourth time you will have a second
thought. One is just tired of this country. What bothers me is how to
realise Biafra through legal and diplomatic processes, and through
dialogue without fighting or abusing anybody. That’s my position,”
Ikedife said.
Like Ezeife, the National Chairman of the United
Progressives Party (UPP), Chief Chekwas Okorie, saw the 2023 presidency
offer to Ndigbo as the “worst form of deceit”, stressing that only the
unintelligent would fall for it.