Presidency, APC reject calls for restructuring
National Chairman, All Progressives Congress, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun
National Chairman of the All
Progressives Congress, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun has said the issue of
restructuring is not the party priority for now.
According to him, the President
Muhammadu Buhari-led APC administration is currently focused on
rebuilding the economy, creating jobs and ensuring the security of lives
and property.
The APC chief said this in a telephone interview in Abuja, on Friday.
He explained that because the issue was
important, the party would at the appropriate time; make its position on
the matter public.
This is as the Presidency on Saturday
said it was on the same page with the ruling APC on calls for the
reconstruction of the country.
The Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, said.
Odigie-Oyegun noted that there were several challenges the administration was currently grappling with.
He said, “To bring this additional issue
(restructuring) – is not the wisest thing for a nation that is
struggling to stabilise to go into an unnecessary diversion at this
point.
“Nothing is wrong with the idea but at
this time, it is best for us to concentrate on our priorities. As a
party, our priority right now is to rebuild the economy, create jobs and
deal with the security problems at hand.
“And with what is happening in the Niger
Delta you can see that there is so much to do. We must get our priority
right some day we will come to that.”
He pleaded with Nigerians not to lose
hope because the current challenges were temporary while appealing to
them to continue to give unwavering support for the Buhari-led
administration to enable it to deliver on its mandate.
Former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar
had, on Tuesday, advocated the restructuring of the country to ensure
the development and growth of the federating units.
“Agitations by many right-thinking
Nigerians call for a restructuring and a renewal of our federation to
make it less centralised, less suffocating and less dictatorial in the
affairs of our country’s constituent units and localities,” the former
vice-president had said at a book presentation, “We are all Biafrans”,
in Abuja.
Eminent Nigerians such as a former
Secretary-General of the Commonwealth, Chief Emeka Anyaoku, and an
ex-Chairman of the Nigerian chapter of Transparency International, Maj.
Gen. Ishola Williams (retd.), as well as groups such as Yoruba
socio-political organisation, Afenifere, and the pan-Igbo umbrella body,
the Ohanaeze Ndigbo, had also supported Atiku’s call.
When asked about the Presidency’s
position on the calls, Adesina referred our correspondent to the ruling
party’s roadmap for the country.
He said, “The governing party, the APC,
has a position on restructuring in its roadmap for the country. Please
consult the document.”
Our correspondent’s online check of the
party’s document titled “Roadmap to a new Nigeria” showed that the
closest information to the issue of restructuring was contained in a
section titled “Strengthen peace, security and Foreign Policy.”
Under that section, the APC listed its
roadmap for peace, security and foreign policy to include; to enable
states to have their own local police forces that address the special
needs of each community, including community policing initiatives that
restore trust among local citizens; establishing a serious crime squad
with state-of-the-art training and equipment to combat terrorism,
militancy and ethno-religious communal clashes; and to provide a
comprehensive compensation plan for victims of ethno-religious crisis,
communal clashes and terrorism.
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