Respected lawyer and an Abuja-based rights activist, Osuagwu
Ugochukwu, has warned the Indigenous People of Biafra, IPOB, against
compelling people to sit at home on May 30.
The activist warned
the secessionist group against taking the laws into their hands in their
planned bid to force Igbos and non-Igbos to stay at home on May 30,
2017.
Ugochukwu said it was totally wrong for the group to force
people who do not believe in Biafra to stay at home and stop motorist
from moving in and out of eastern part of the country on May 30.
IPOB’s
spokesman, Emma Powerful, had in a statement asked its members to
observe the stay at home exercise on May 30 and remember their fallen
heroes.
Reacting, however, in a statement issued on Sunday,
Ugochukwu warned the group against provoking the Nigerian government and
the military, stressing that it would be better to fight for a course
within the ambit of the law.
He said, “Nobody is against your
belief in Biafra and nobody is saying you should not exercise your
rights in promoting your Biafra ideology. But in doing so you must not
breach the laws of the land.
“The
call by IPOB to all markets, transport companies, schools, banks,
companies, civil servants, petrol stations, okada/tricycle unions, park
management, artisans, National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW)
and Drivers Welfare in Biafraland, to shut down on that particular day
in honour and remembrance of our fallen heroes and heroines is unlawful.
This is a threat to Sovereignty of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and
the Nigerian Constitution.
“The laws of the land allow for freedom
of movement and any attempt by any group including IPOB to force people
from freely moving will be treated as treasonable , breach of public
peace and confrontational which the Military and other security agencies
would not take lightly.
“IPOB has no right to restrict movement
of persons and vehicles on May 30 as it is against section 41 of the
Nigerian Constitution (as amended) which provides that Every citizen of
Nigeria is entitled to move freely throughout Nigeria and to reside in
any part thereof, and no citizen of Nigeria shall be expelled from
Nigeria or refused entry thereby or exit therefrom.”
The activist
urged IPOB to follow the path of Igbo apex social cultural group,
Ohaneze, which had been agitating for better deal for Ndigbo within the
ambit of the law.
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