Former Minister of Environment, Housing and Urban Development under
President Umaru Yar’Adua, Chuka Odom, has claimed that President
Muhammadu Buhari is punishing Ndigbo for refusing to support him during
the 2015 presidential election.
Odom admitted that though, the
marginalisation did not start with Buhari, it, however, took a different
dimension under his administration.
Speaking with Daily Sun,
Odom, who also served in the administration of the former Abia governor,
Dr. Orji Uzor Kalu, as commissioner for Lands, Survey and Urban
Planning as well as commissioner for Special Duties, said “the
marginalisation of the South-East zone did not start with him. It has
always been the story since the end of the Civil War.
“The only
thing is that it assumed another dimension under President Buhari. While
others pretended to be in love with the South-East, President Buhari
has no such pretensions. He announced from the beginning that those who
voted for him would benefit more from his government; he put us on
notice that he would not do anything for us.”
He noted that the
continuous detention of founder of Radio Biafra, Nnamdi Kanu had caused
serious tension in the south east region.
“This
is one of the reasons there is tension in the South-East. Not that we
have been accommodated in the past and President Buhari came and
reversed it. It’s just that Buhari made it clear that we will not get
anything from him. He did not pretend about it.
“That is why I
believe that the President needs to consider if the current policies
have worked. He also needs to check if his policies have served the
long-term political interest of his people. These are questions that
should be answered by the President and the people close to him.
“When
the South-South agitation started, there were hawks that told late
Yar’Adua to ignore the people. But he knew that he had a problem in his
hands. He quickly got the stakeholders in the region and had a
discussion.
“Eventually, the amnesty programme was worked out.
What is wrong with extending that same approach to the youths of the
South-East?
“Instead, you are sending soldiers to go and kill
them. Did they do that with the Niger Delta? This is where I do not
agree with the Federal Government. As far as I am concerned, the Federal
Government needs to find a solution. The solution is not in policing
the South-East.
“The solution also does not lie with the
continuous agitation for Biafra. The solution lies with constructive
engagements that will involve the leaders of South-East. The Federal
Government needs to be told that the continuous detention of Kanu is not
the solution,” he added.
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