BUHARI MEETS SOUTH-EAST LEADERS OVER IPOB, MARGINALISATION, OTHERS
BUHARI MEETS SOUTH-EAST
LEADERS OVER IPOB, MARGINALISATION, OTHERS
![South-East Governors [Photo: twitter.com]](https://i1.wp.com/media.premiumtimesng.com/wp-content/files/2017/06/South-East-Gov.jpg?fit=719%2C404&ssl=1)
South-East Governors [Photo: twitter.com]
President Muhammadu Buhari has held a
closed door meeting with leaders from the South-eastern part of Nigeria.
The meeting held inside the new
Banquet hall of the State House in Abuja shortly after Islamic Friday prayers.
The leader of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, John
Nwodo, who spoke with State House correspondents after the meeting said they
had a “frank and robust exchange” with the president concerning the alleged
neglect of the region by successive administrations.
“We dealt with problems of
development in the South-east, basic capital projects which have for a very
long time been neglected not just from this government but for a very long
time.
“Major arteries of federal highways
in the South-east have been in complete state of disrepair. Enugu-Onitsha,
Enugu-Port Harcourt, Aba-Ikot Ikpene are virtually impassable.
“We talked about the inland waterways
and the dredging of the River Niger. We talked about the reticulation of gas
pipeline on the South-east. We export gas from the south east to the other
parts of the country, but there is no reticulation of the pipeline and
industrial clusters in the south east,” he said.
Mr. Nwodo also said the meeting
discussed the bad state of the only international airport in the region.
“We got assurance from the president
that he will deal with each of those problems,” he said.
The Ohanaeze leader said the meeting
also discussed alleged marginalization of the South-east by the Buhari
administration, saying, “like I have said these problems have been there
overtime and we have had several presidents, it didn’t just happen in the last
two years. But we expressed the desire that he should be able to address them.”
He said the South-east leaders were
confident the president will deliver on his promise to them.
“There is no reason for me to doubt
him because this is the first time I have had this interaction with him. I have
the feeling that he spoke to us very frankly,” he said.
On whether the meeting discussed the
issue of the Indigenous Peoples Of Biafra, IPOB, an organisation seeking
secession from the Nigerian state, the Igbo leader said, “We talked about IPOB
as a symptomatic consequence of the continuous marginalization of the
South-east over a long period of time.
“Understandably our children are
restive and we want to make sure that the federal government is responsive to
the issues that have cumulated in the quintessence of these agitations.”
The federal government has since
declared IPOB a terrorist organisation and arrested several of its members.
Other issues discussed, according to
Mr. Nwodo, include “devolution of powers, the constitution, the paucity of the
states and local governments in our place.”
“And the president has asked that he
be given time to look at this more holistically,” he said.
Those who attended the meeting
include governors from the South-east, traditional rulers and leaders of the
Ohanaeze Ndi Igbo.