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Friday, 1 August 2014
comittee to review indegeneship
The government says the idea of indigenisation
could be discriminatory.
The National Council of State has set up a
committee to work towards the abolition of internal
indigenisation and citizenship policy.
The Council took the decision to abolish citizen
registration at the Extra Ordinary meeting, which
was called by the President Goodluck Jonathan to
discuss the state of the country, on Thursday.
The Security Council had, a forth night ago,
discussed the on-going issues of relocation and
indigenes registration in states, especially in the
Northern part of the country. It stated that if allowed
to continue, the effect may be worse than that of
Boko Haram.
Briefing journalists on the outcome of the meeting,
the Akwa Ibom State Governor, Godswil Apkabio,
said the meeting was one of the most important and
frank meeting held in the last five years.
He spoke alongside the Governors of Niger State,
Babangida Aliyu; Enugu, Sullivan Chime; and the
National Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki.
He disclosed that the Council discussed the issue of
how Nigerians could actually be Nigerians in their
own country, feeling free to live and do their
business without molestation.
“Council viewed the report seriously that some
citizens were being deported; deportation should be
from one country to the other but where you have a
Nigerian who is being returned to his state of origin
from other states then you know there is a problem.
We felt that that was capable of disrupting the unity
of the country, making Nigerians to become
apprehensive and unsafe,” Mr. Akpabio disclosed.
He said the Council frowned at the idea of
registering citizens in any part of the country.
“And so we looked at all these issues and the role
every leader should play; from the local government
level to the federal level, the role each one of us
should play to ensure that we solidify the unity of
this country. We also looked at these discriminatory
practices across board from all parts of the country
– north, south, west and the east – and we felt all
those issues must be brought to the front burner,
with solutions proffered to ensure that Nigerians are
united, live freely and do their businesses without
hindrance,” Mr. Akpabio said.
Subsequent to this, he said, a committee of six state
governors was set up to discuss with Nigerians and
come up with the possible solutions on the way to
permanently stop the issue of indigenisation.
The members of the committee included the
governors of Sokoto, Niger, Enugu, Akwa Ibom,
Ondo and Gombe States: one from each of the six
geo-political zones of the country.
The committee would identify discriminatory
practices in all states of the federation and in all the
local government areas and submit its report to
council in the next two months.
“Whether we need to go to the National Assembly,
then we will go to the National Assembly. Whether
we need to do so through policies at federal, state or
local government levels just to make sure that the
country is totally united and all those discriminatory
practices are brought to an end so that Nigerians
can truly feel free and safe to work in any part of
the country without hindrance,” he said.
The Niger State governor, Mr. Aliyu, said the
discrimination when it came to school fees for
indigenes and non-indigenes at state schools also
came to the fore at the meeting. Usually “non-
indigene” students pay higher than “indigenous”
students
“In fact the very concept of indigeneship came to
the fore; whether in Nigeria we should be concerned
about so called indigeneship or residency,” Mr. Aliyu
disclosed.
The NSA, Mr. Dasuki, said that council was worried
by the idea of relocating people from any part of the
country as this was how the civil war started.
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