New Telegraph

September 18, 2024

Incoming Govt Must Strive For National Healing, Reconciliation – Obasanjo

Following the divisiveness in the just-concluded 2023 general election, former President Olusegun Obasanjo has called on the incoming administration to facilitate national, moral rearmament and reconciliation.

He alluded that the work of the incoming Government was already cut out to ensure that it closed the division caused in the country as a result of the last general elections.

Obasanjo, who spoke on Thursday at a conference themed: “From Elections to Governance and Performance,” organised by Nextier and the Ibadan School of Governance and Public Policy, said he believed such moves could help in healing and assuaging Nigerian youths, who were angered by the shortcomings of the elections.

The ex-president insisted that the next administration must explore all avenues to ending the ethnic division that sprang up from the recent elections and work to facilitate national moral consciousness and reconciliation, following the divisiveness occasioned by the elections.

 

He, however, told his audience that he would always speak in the overall interest of the country, because “I am too old to keep quiet.”

 

This, he said, has the potential to bring about healing and to assure Nigerian youths who were angered by the shortcomings of the elections.

 

According to him, governance in Nigeria now required thinking outside the box, to rescue the nation, in terms of its plunging economy and huge national debt burden, adding that there must also be the political will and action, as well as administrative efforts, to reform the public service, and turn it into a capability-ready unit.

 

He suggests three ideas to enrich conversations at the event, which are, “One, given what we saw during the election, Nigeria is now even more divided and more corroded than we thought.

 

“This places a deep onus on any administration following the current one, to urgently facilitate the process of national moral rearmament and national reconciliation for the aggrieved and will lead us across Nigeria and to assuage the youth.

 

“This must be done in sync with the imperative of national value orientation that Nigeria requires to build a collective sense of enduring local values and national belonging.

 

“Two, governance in Nigeria now calls for thinking outside the box in terms of development financing. This has become inevitable in the face of Nigeria’s dwindling fortune, oil revenue, Nigeria’s huge foreign indebtedness, and the urgency of diversifying the Nigerian neo-cultural economy.

 

“We cannot be spending like a drunken sailor on frivolities and corruption and expect development and growth. Such a situation cannot take us into the fourth industrial revolution already underway.

 

“My experience and understanding, however, is that the money to develop and grow our economy is out there if we provide a conducive environment for it to come and stay.

 

“Three, political will, political action, and administrative efforts must be invested in reforming the public service into a capability-ready institution that could enable Nigeria’s development agenda beyond 2023.

 

“All of these and more are necessary to correct and not to repeat the sickening and painful show of shame, that the elections of 2023 generated.

 

“Let me conclude by stating clearly that I am now too old to keep quiet and watch Nigeria’s seemingly clueless launch into dystopia.

 

“All efforts are now required from all, well, many and committed patriots to rescue the nation from the precipice. And when I look at the audience, I have a feeling that among the people, who can do it and who must do it are some of you here.

 

“It has become my obligation, continuing in my relentless service as a letterman, dedicated in my twilight years to say the truth, as I see it, so as to push Nigeria, in the direction of our collective aspirations. What is our collective aspiration? A better society, where all of Nigeria can become what the Almighty God destined it to be.

 

“It has become my own personal obligation, continuing in my relentless service as a letterman, dedicated in my twilight years to say the truth, as I see it, so as to push Nigeria, in the direction of our collective aspirations. What is our collective aspiration? A better society, where all of Nigeria can become what the Almighty God destined it to be.

 

“In times like this, some of us have to adopt the attitude of being known to be blind and not being afraid of the dark. But we must continue to work for the light of all,” Obasanjo sta

Read Previous

JUST-IN: Gunmen Abduct Ex-Nasarawa Deputy Gov, Gye-Wado

Read Next

Ogun Guber: Adebutu Files Petition Against Abiodun’s Victory

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *