Politics

Ile Arugbo: Those condemning peace c’ttee only mocking allegiance to Emirate – Baraje

 

Former acting National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Founder and Financier of Baraje Center for Arabic and Islamic Studies, Alhaji Abubakar Kawu Baraje will mark his 69th birthday on Monday (today).  In this interview with newsmen spoke on state and national issues including 2023, the controversy over the establishment of Amotekun and the contentious Ile Arugbo demolition among others. Excerpts:
You will be clocking 69 on Monday (today), what is your message to the good people of Kwara state and Nigerians in general?
I give Allah the glory as the perpetual owner of all glories. I want to thank everybody, particularly those that have been following my antecedents, ways of life and achievements and my entire supporters as well. I also wish to appreciate all Nigerians for their resilience, perseverance and their never say die attitude at this very difficult times in the country. We are all aware and now feeling the pinches of the difficult times. Good governance is really difficult to get these days. I therefore wish to say that the most difficult and most depressing of the entire situation is the insecurity in the country. Consequently, I am urging Nigerians to be security conscious about their environment. We must remove neglect; I don’t care attitude or “sit down look” behaviour. We must be conscious of what goes around in our neighborhood including objects and people moving around us and report to the appropriate authorities, any suspicious movement or situations. Nigerians must go back to our culture of working together and cooperating with our neighbours in ensuring that our environment and country are safe. This is the period we must be very alert and live up to our responsibilities and be our brother’s keepers. This is a clarion call on Nigerians particularly the elites, and especially the youths to be more involved in governance. We must show that we are alive in our thinking, in our perseption and in our belief in good governance.  We must tarry and be critical of whatever the authorities tell us. We must be wary and analyze whatever we come across in the social media. Be it news items, write-ups, opinions and even the notorious “video messages”. It is time to get our mind, body and soul working. We must put on our thinking caps, analyze issues and situations and separate the wheat from the chaff – truth from baseless and destructive lies. I am particularly referring to our youth because this is the time for them to stand up and bail the future, which we believe is their own. It is not for the youths to believe in anything they throw at them and later lament when the truth stares at them. The youth must come out of their gullibility, demand and even fight for good governance. Government in Nigeria stands on tripods. We have the judiciary, the legislative and of course, the executive. One major arm of government, the legislative, must be the eye, the brain, and the conscience of the public who elected them. Whenever they are not doing their jobs, the youth and indeed, the entire populace should question them. The three arms of government are supposed to be complementary agreed, but the legislative arm must be at alert always. It is the checks and balances in any functional democracy. Therefore it should work for the people and not the executive. It should insist on ensuring that the executive deliver good governance to the people as well as the judiciary delivering justice to the masses. While we appreciate the fact that the legislative is doing its job for the progress of the people, they are not supposed to be rubber stamp to the executive. They are supposed to appreciate what the public needs and what the public lacks and then tell government to do the right things. Of course, we are all living witnesses to what is happening now. I mean the performances of the 9th National Assembly with regards to the insecurity in the country. It is on record that the 8th National Assembly worked relentlessly and passed laws on how to beef-up security in the entire country. Where are those laws? Accented or not accented to? It is now we are lamenting. Regrets and lamentations are not the best for us in this country. So, these are my two major messages to my fellow compatriots.
There is the call for rejigging of our security apparatus from the top as measures to stop our security challenge, what’s your position on this?
That is one of the reasons I thanked Nigerians for their resilience and calling on the youth and the general public to demand good governance because we have never had it so bad. Our brother countries in West Africa like Sudan, Niger that have been in wars, did not had their security as threatening as high as we have now in Nigeria before they went into war. Yet we are taking advantage of the fact that Nigerians are so resilient. But we must be warned, there is always a limit to the elasticity of any pressure. The panacea the eighth National Assembly recommended then which was put in abeyance is what we are now dusting up. That is one step forward and ten steps backwards. It is not the best to govern by sentiments of nepotism, hatred, insincerity and injustice.  My take is the security apparatus of this country has failed us. It has collapsed and the center can no longer hold. We need to sit down and dialogue. I am now beginning to change my mind that it is high time that we begin to decentralize authorities, institutions. Over and above all, it is high time that we Nigerians need to sit down and reason and make the right choice before we put our fingers on the ballot papers to vote who ever we want into power.
What is your take on this issue of Amotekun by the South West governors?
They are complementary to government security agencies and should stay. I hasten to appreciate the Inspector General of Police for his courage on this out-fit. I have been listening to and observing comments of well meaning Nigerians as well as reactions from the representatives of the federal government. The Nigerian police is saddled with the purview of providing public security. I have never heard the IG condemning Amotekun. That is an educated, honest and dedicated police officer different from what we had in the immediate past. Government should sit down with the organizers of Amotekun and dialogue with the Governors from the affected states, instead of coming out and condemning them.  The issue of Amotekun and the like has been existing in other regions of the country anyway. I am not a Nigerian that would be partial because I belong to one section of the country,  what is good for the goose is good for the  gander ,  so if other parts of the nation  have been operating such out fit successfully why not in the Southwest. In  Kwara state, for example,  we have vigilantes.   Many individuals, groups and organisations resolved to hiring services of vigilante security out fits in many occasions and in  communities in Kwara state. They have been successfully and peacefully   complementing police efforts in the state. Why haven’t the government blacklisted vigilantes? We have been hearing the activities of the  Joint Task Force (JTF) in the troubled North Eastern part of Nigeria .Why didn’t government say it is illegal? As far as I am concerned, the Amotekun is a welcome idea coming from leaders that have the concern of their people at heart.
2023 is around the corner and politicians have started overheating the polity. Some members of your political party (PDP) have even suggested a change of the name of your party. What is your position about 2023 and the issue of the PDP?
You want me to be partisan this time around and I will be. As far as 2023 is concerned, PDP is ready and is preparing and we thank its supporters and even non-supporters because, this is the time to be realistic and our minds should be alive and alike to move Nigeria forward. We have tasted the so called change; we have tasted the so called next level. We have seen change in inverted coma. It is now left for Nigerians to choose. The PDP has its own black-spots like any other outfit but I think we now know the better party, indeed the best party, if I may use that expression. We now know the party that is able to fight insecurity, that was able to ensure the economic viability of the country, we now know the party that is best for Nigerians to go back to. It is now time to vote PDP again at the center.
Does PDP need to change the name of the party?
Well as far as am concerned, there are many things attached to a name and there are many things that a name can do and may not be able do. Yes, it is not the name that matters but the characteristic and behaviour of the bearer of such name, same with political parties. The members and performances of the party members of a party send the wrong or right signals.  This results in the perception of the people about the party. But as far as I am concerned, the PDP stands for progress and the people just like the mantra says, power belongs to the people. The PDP is more interested that the wealth of the country goes round the nook and crannies and not concentrated in the hands of the so called cabals. In any case we now know which party is the chief of the thieves in Nigeria.
Back home, what is your take about the committee set up to resolve the issue of Ile Arugbo?
It is a good idea. People have their own tradition and culture and the Ilorin Emirate community is not an exception. Ilorin Emirate community is known for its peaceful coexistence among families and individuals. My view about the committee is that we are putting our house in order and that the leaders who thought of it are carrying out one of our passionate values in Ilorin community, which is peaceful coexistence. That is what we are known for. Anybody who is condemning this is only telling a story about himself or herself. Anybody that is standing against this is standing at a distance and throwing stones at his father’s house. In Africa, we know the kind of people who throw stones at their father’s residences. Yes, the matter is in court. But the court itself recognises the importance of peace and thus directed settlement out of court which is not strange to law. I applaud the setting up of the committee and advise that it should not be ad-hoc but a permanent and functional committee and its membership should not be unwieldy.

Show More

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

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

Back to top button