Insecurity: Buhari, his people have broken Nigeria’s unity
Prof. Kingsley Moghalu, a former presidential candidate in the 2019 general elections, has advised youths in Nigeria country to join politics.
Moghalu said he stands in solidarity with the youth in their quest to end police brutality and bad governance in the country.
The former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, also decried the apparent impotence of Nigerian security agencies in the face of killer herdsmen and bandits and their quick response to quash peaceful protests.
The economist, however, pointed out that the End SARS protests, which ordinarily represents a welcome awakening of Nigerian youths against bad governance, will not be enough to solve the problem in a democracy
He said the best protest against an underperforming government in a democratic setting is the one at the ballot box, using the Permanent Voter Cards (PVC).
In a statement in Abuja at the weekend, Moghalu noted that what Nigerians want at this point is a better-governed country that creates real opportunities for youths, who make up 65 percent of its 200 million population.
The former Deputy CBN Governor said the future of Nigeria is bleak if the current trends of rising poverty, low-skilled youths, a dysfunctional education system and high youth unemployment are not reversed.
“These also are aspects of our fundamental dignity that the End SARS protests seek to assert. Only an active and structural engagement with democratic politics by Nigerian youth can achieve the goals of #End SARS. Protest simply isn’t enough,” he said.
“I, therefore, call on Nigerian youth to focus their energy on, (1) strong advocacy and pressure to ensure that the National Assembly passes an electoral reform bill by mid-2021 that includes provisions for electronic transmissions of votes from polling units to the database of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and for Nigerians in the diaspora to have the opportunity to vote from abroad; (2) voter registration en masse for the elections in 2023 and subsequent elections, and (3) structural participation in politics, i.e. joining political parties of their individual choice as members, voting, and standing as candidates in elections. All three approaches are essential. It is not enough to simply stand as candidates in the context of Not Too Young, which was nevertheless a commendable initiative,” he added.
The former presidential candidate warned that Nigerian youths are likely to get the same outcome as the Arab Spring countries if they continue to shy away from politics based on weak excuses such as: ‘our votes will not count, ‘the elections will be rigged’, among others.
He noted that with these excuses in play, the youth are surrendering their future to corrupt, incompetent and repressive political leaders, insisting that this should not be an option for the youth in the country.
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