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2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders - Politics - Nairaland

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2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by etokhana: 12:48pm On Jan 15, 2022
–Millions of Northerners frustrated

The overwhelming majority of politicians warning up to takeover power in 2023 and continue the business, as usual, should be rejected, leaders of the Northern Elders Forum ( NEF), have said.

The NEF leaders who reiterated that they were the Kingmakers, were made up of Prof. Ango Abdullahi, Dr Hakeem Baba Ahmed and others.

They spoke in Kaduna on Saturday during the meeting of Northern Leaders of Thought at the Arewa House.

Democracy, they said; was essentially the freedom to choose a good leader and everybody should be allowed to choose the person he wanted.

“We want a President with the vision and the capacity to retrieve the country from the verge of collapse,” they said.

Our leaders, they warned, should avoid the temptation of coming up with policies that would raise the emotions of the poor.

“Millions of Northerners are angry and frustrated that their level of living is worse than how it was in 2015,” they alleged.

The Northern leaders said, ” we say to them turn your anger into an asset” by voting for the right candidate (s) in the forthcoming election.

In a keynote address titled “Rebuilding the North”, Dr Hakeem Baba-Ahmed, Director, Publicity and Advocacy, Northern Elders Forum, said “anger is not the best fuel for change, but in our case today, it is the most potent. If used constructively and responsibly, it can create an environment that will remove its sources and its manifestations. Unfortunately for the North, it is also the only fuel source we have. We have voted people into power who have either turned their backs at us or have usurped the very sources of their power and turned them into personal assets.”

He said: “May I start by expressing my profound appreciation for the privilege of delivering this Keynote Address on a date and a venue that have major historical significance for the North and Nigeria. This honour is all the more humbling given the significance of our present surroundings as well as the current state of the North and the country as a whole. This is also a rare event. Although groups and associations have raised voices on insecurity, poverty and the damaging decline of the economy of the North and the setbacks in relations between communities that make up Nigeria, many Northern elders and leaders with personal integrity and other qualities who should stand up to be counted have largely retreated into the discomfort of silence.

“Younger Northerners are angry, frustrated and alienated, with virtually no linkages with elders and leaders, unless they are hired thugs in the service of politicians. Many others are criminals, bandits, informers or kidnappers exploiting the weaknesses of the State, or at margins of hopelessness in a country that they believe promises a lot and delivers nothing. This meeting appears to have been designed to commence the building of bridges that should link generations of Northerners around a vision which gives hope and heals a region lacking a single excuse for its many wounds.”

”The effort of the organizers of this meeting, specifically to bring together prominent, elderly and future leaders of the North is particularly commendable. In this room, and in these surroundings, there is the history of people who took over the responsibility to steer the North through the challenging waters of decolonization and finding for it a fitting place in the new Nigeria. Most of them were in their 30s and 40s, but they understood their historic opportunities; the values they were prepared and groomed to defend, and the challenges which they were to face.

“Their team leader, Sir Ahmadu Bello, fell to bullets from cowardly murderers in these very premises. The people who killed him simultaneously launched Nigeria into a different and negative trajectory from which it has not recovered. Today, we can speak as three or four generations of Northerners who have seen the best and now live in the worst of the North. We can lament the loss of great opportunities, but we will also support each other to find the strengths and the courage to ask the right questions and find the right answers.”

”We should use this day, at this venue full of history, to signal a turning – point in our circumstances as a people and bring an end to lamentations. We have wasted enough lives, blood, energy and resources drifting and blaming leaders who have reaped hugely from our misfortunes and self-inflicted injuries. It is enough.

“We have no one else to cry to; no one to look up to, to lead us out of terror and poverty and no one willing to use their positions to turn the fortunes of the North around. Our fate will only be designed and determined by us. We may be facing unprecedented challenges, but these are times to prepare to find extraordinary strengths and assets so that our children will be rid of the current nightmares which are our lives today.”

”We do have massive sources of energy and muscle to bring real change to our circumstances. We have the anger of people whose lives have been taken over by armed criminals who know we are basically undefended against them. We have limits on how much we can run away from bullets, rapists and kidnappers, and we are reaching those limits.

“We have memories of a period when life had values; when religious faith meant you tolerate, and not kill those who worship differently from you; when leaders feared God and had respect for the people they led; when being a Northerner meant honesty and hard work, and not a disposable threat; when our young where taught values that prepared them to fear God, respect authority and stand up to bullies and those who were intolerant of our basic identities and values.”

“Anger is not the best fuel for change, but in our case today, it is the most potent. If used constructively and responsibly, it can create an environment that will remove its sources and its manifestations. Unfortunately for the North, it is also the only fuel source we have. We have voted people into power who have either turned their backs at us or have usurped the very sources of their power and turned them into personal assets.

“We have a democratic system that progressively benefits only a handful of leaders and politicians, and leaves millions of our people to wonder how it could be the best option available to terrorized, poor people. We have decaying value systems that breed evils such as corrupt leaders, armed criminals and drug pandemics, and encourage cheating and corruption as the only means of getting what we need. We have a huge population that is sinking into poverty and desperation in a harsh and unforgiving world.

“Every indicator suggests that things will get considerably worse in the near future. The cost of living will rise and compound the wretchedness of the poor. Armed criminality will continue to determine how we live and die, even if it could be defeated at some future date. Our political process will feed widespread violence as political competition pumps up every one of our demons to escort individual political ambitions. Our current leaders will continue to recede into their own world, mumbling incomprehensible fiction while they wait out their terms.”

“The North faces two distinct choices: atrophy and destruction, or recovery and growth. The first is already visible and in the process; the second is a difficult, yet achievable goal. The most vital requirement that will make the difference between the two is a critical and honest self-evaluation. The North has to understand how cultured, hardworking and intelligent people cannot produce good leaders who can build a strong economy from its huge potential.

“How did corruption assume such magnitude among our communities that even the democratic system and our home-grown social and political structures and strong social values are now securely its hostage, consigning every segment of social life to insignificance unless it is linked to plundered wealth and stolen power? Why is its massive population a liability and not an asset, coming to life only during elections when it is needed to reinforce a shrinking democratic system, and relapsing into drudgery and scrapping an existence thereafter? “

“Who and what was responsible for the virtual de-industrialization of the entire Northern region, creating patches of possibly the poorest of humanity within it, and destroying an economy that had shown an impressive potential to grow into the economic powerhouse of the nation and West Africa’s breadbasket?

How did the North lose its tenuous hold on managing its cultural and religious diversity, setting into motion raptures that leave every community worse off, and creating enemies out of even unborn neighbours? What created the Boko Haram insurgency, and what explains its resilience and the ineffectiveness of our security assets to eliminate it? What turned some Fulani herders long used to hardship and frictions into the monsters that they are today?

How did the Fulani, famous for learning and administration and living with huge assets with the most minimal demands on resources of the State, become identified by its lowest denominator, the Fulani bandit and kidnapper?

Who can explain the dramatic deterioration of the most intimate of relations between Hausa and Fulani, and the rising demonization of Fulani among communities with which they are barely distinguishable, or have lived for decades or centuries?

How did the Northerner become the villain of the rest of the nation, the source of all its recent ills and liabilities, in a country he helped build and sustain with lives, limbs, blood and labour? Above all, does the North have the capacity to re-engineer its reconstruction and sustained development?”

“The North does not have the luxury of finding answers to these puzzles while the nation moves on and its problems worsen. Its only choice is to target the major source of its multiple challenges and attempt to deal with it. This, in my view, lies in the quality of its leaders and those that will lead the nation. The North needs a major shift in its elite selection processes, which will allow it to put into power, competent, honest and visionary leaders at all levels.

“What this means is that the overwhelming majority of politicians warming up in our major parties to take over and continue business as usual should be roundly rejected, and others who will not have to buy or steal power because they have credibility and evidence of some integrity will be voted in by voters who will resist the temptation to sell votes for less than a meal. The imperative of affecting major changes in the quality of leadership starting from the 2023 elections is beyond question. This is why the North should support major amendments of the electoral process, and improvements in the capacities of INEC to reduce rigging and vote-buying and violence.”

“For most of what the North needs to do, the centre is important. The successful campaign to defeat the damaging narrative that no Northerner should aspire to contest for the Presidency of Nigeria is a credit to committed democrats and those who believe in justice, equity and fairness. It is important to emphasise, however, that this was not a campaign that sought to bestow any favours on the North and shortchange the rest of Nigeria.

“It was essentially meant to avoid restricting the political space, as well as the danger of the emergence of a President who bears all the hallmarks of limiting identities and the stamp of a victory of the part over the whole. Now that a level playing field is being taken up by politicians from all parts of the country, it is equally important to remind ourselves that democracy is essentially about the freedom to choose leaders, and all Nigerians should be free to choose any contestant from any part of the country they want.”

“For the North, we cannot say it louder. A Northerner should be voted President only if he is the best. Being Northerner is not enough. All Nigerians need good leaders, but for us in the North, we will demand to see evidence that a candidate does not just want the power to fulfil a personal ambition. We want to see evidence that those who want to lead us in future understand the roots of and solutions to our insecurity and poverty and distances from each other.

“We want to know how irredentism will be handled; how and when major changes in our structures and systems will be made to address popular grievances over the way our country should operate; how our economy can be re-engineered to achieve sustainable development and work for the rich and the poor equally, and how our young will be groomed to become productive, honest and patriotic citizens. We will demand to see an inclusive and competent team that will campaign with the candidate and transit with him into governance. We want a thoroughly Nigerian President who will be as hard on the bandit as he will be on secessionists and insurgents. We want a President with vision and the energy to retrieve a country on the verge of collapse and place it securely on the path of stability, security and growth.”

“We are, of course, some distance from next year’s elections, but it will be dangerous to ignore signs that the journey from this point until those elections could place the country in greater danger. We should warn politicians to avoid destroying a country they seek to lead. We must demand that the fight against organized, violent crimes is intensified. We need to improve elite cohesion even in the context of intensely-divisive electoral campaigns. Our leaders should avoid the temptations to roll out policies that will raise levels of desperation among the poor. Activities such as the planned population census which have enough sensitivity and potential to generate massive controversy a few months before the elections should be postponed.

“Key reforms to the constitution and the electoral process should be implemented to improve the quality of elections and signal a commitment to address limitations to our federal structures. Our leaders should raise their levels of empathy for the plight of poor and desperate citizens. To ignore the circumstances which create hundreds or even millions of internally-displaced persons and leave the next administration to handle it will be the height of irresponsibility. Huge resources must be deployed to improve the capacity of our defence and security assets and provide relief to fellow Nigerians or pauperized by criminals.”

“Millions of Northerners are justifiably angry and frustrated that they are worse off today than they were before 2015 when they voted for an administration that promised to improve and secure lives. Many think voting for another set of leaders will add no value to their lives. We say turn your anger into an asset by voting in better people into office this time. There are politicians that will continue where the present administration stopped, and, while angry citizens refuse to vote, they will buy votes and get power. So, the most important thing a Northerner will do for himself and the community is to register and vote in 2023. Do not exchange your votes for another four or eight years in a country where your dignity and your life have little value.”

“Distinguished participants, please look around these premises, and you will draw inspiration from strong, purposeful leadership, not just of the Sardauna, but the team he was a part of. From Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, Sir Kashim Ibrahim, Aliyu Makaman Nupe, Turaki Ali, Sunday Awoniyi, Ali Akilu and dozens of Northerners who reflected the true diversity of the North and shared a common vision and purpose, there was a North which knew its place in Nigeria and gave all it took to defend it.

“That North is still available to be recreated, but it needs to recognise the place of good leaders, hardworking and honest citizenry, a diversity that demands the highest standards of justice to manage, and a strong sense of destiny as a strong community for all who are part of it. In this hallowed hall, there is powerful history and a great potential to re-invent a region that will be great again. Please make that potential reality, and God in His infinite mercy will help us all.”
https://www.vanguardngr.com/2022/01/2023-presidency-were-the-kingmakers-say-northern-elders/
Lalasticlala
Mynd44
Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by RenaissanceGuy: 12:50pm On Jan 15, 2022
Lol. The voters are the kingmaker. That statement that Tinubu made of him being a kingmaker is enough for other heavyweight politicians who had wanted to support him, to take a second thought. He was indirectly ascribing great power and influence on himself.

3 Likes

Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by headSmasher: 12:51pm On Jan 15, 2022
Let me wait for summary
Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by tollyboy5(m): 12:59pm On Jan 15, 2022
headSmasher:
Let me wait for summary
Lemme use this opportunity to go back and read cheesy

Edited: i no fit finish am embarassed
Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by ThEGodFaThEr101(m): 1:00pm On Jan 15, 2022
Well said! The people are the kingmaker and the power resides with them and not one 85 year old drug addict and cocaine baron who has destroyed the destinies of millions of lagosians all in the slogan of "Itesiwaju ipinle Eko lojewa logun o" while sipping on campari.

7 Likes

Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by Putinmyrod: 1:06pm On Jan 15, 2022
They are still recounting the death of Ahmadu Bello. Can these people ever forgive ibos?

1 Like

Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by Moferere: 1:22pm On Jan 15, 2022
Indisputably, they are
Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by omowolewa: 1:25pm On Jan 15, 2022
Okay, failed rotation agreements led to this
Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by Injera(f): 1:33pm On Jan 15, 2022
ThEGodFaThEr101:
Well said! The people are the kingmaker and the power resides with them and not one 85 year old drug addict and cocaine baron who has destroyed the destinies of millions of lagosians all in the slogan of "Itesiwaju ipinle Eko lojewa logun o" while sipping on campari.
So you were right there to know with perfect centainty how old the GREAT TINUBU is. Continue to stew in your hatred and animosity for a man that cares less of your existence.

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by Penguin2: 1:34pm On Jan 15, 2022
Nothing for Tinubu grin

Umahi/Zulum2023

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by ThEGodFaThEr101(m): 1:36pm On Jan 15, 2022
Injera:

So you were right there to know with perfect centainty how old the GREAT TINUBU is. Continue to stew in your hatred and animosity for a man that cares less of your existence.
Oya! Swore with Sango that he his 69 years old let's see whether you'll make it alive the next day.

5 Likes

Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by ERockson: 1:38pm On Jan 15, 2022
Only voters are the King Maker.
Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by AntonVince: 1:42pm On Jan 15, 2022
Injera:

So you were right there to know with perfect centainty how old the GREAT TINUBU is. Continue to stew in your hatred and animosity for a man that cares less of your existence.

Where is the "hatred and animosity" in exposing an obvious lie from a toad-eyed age-cheating crook seeking to fool us with his falsified age?
So, Tinubu can steal, kill, falsify his age, and perpetrate treachery but anyone who exposes him "hates" him right?

I wonder if Tinubu's lackeys have anything useful residing in their craniums at all.

4 Likes

Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by trutharena: 1:45pm On Jan 15, 2022
Penguin2:
Nothing for Tinubu grin

Umahi/Zulum2023

If you read the post well you can see they spoke of how Igbos murdered thief leaders and said that’s why they are backward.

If you think they will vote an Igbo, then you are living in a fool’s paradise.

4 Likes

Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by CaptainAyub: 1:48pm On Jan 15, 2022
Yoruba greed is all that's causing this misyarn.
Starting from Obasanjo, the whole if the south and parts of the middle belt determined who becomes president and it worked well and we had honest and manageable leaders.
Until yorubas decided to align with the ethno-religious supremacist section of the northern oligarchy and betrayed the south too.
It has been downhill since.
Same greed is propelling them again to go for the presidency instead of doing the just and honest thing by supporting an Igbo president,just like Ogbonnaya Onu relinquished his APP presidential ticket for Olu Falae while Ekwueme did so for Obasanjo who was in prison while they(Ekwueme) formed PDP.
We go see sha,likely na Shekau go be next president grin

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by Injera(f): 2:17pm On Jan 15, 2022
AntonVince:


Where is the "hatred and animosity" in exposing an obvious lie from a toad-eyed age-cheating crook [/b]seeking to fool us with his [b]falsified age?
So, Tinubu can steal, kill, falsify his age, and perpetrate treachery [/b]but anyone who exposes him "hates" him right?

I wonder if Tinubu's lackeys have anything useful residing in their craniums at all.



These are mere character assasination. Baseless accusations and innuendoes fueled by..you guessed it, [b]HATRED [/b]and [b]ANIMOSITY
Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by AntonVince: 2:21pm On Jan 15, 2022
Injera:

These are mere character assasination. Baseless accusations and innuendoes fueled by..you guessed it, HATRED [/b]and [b]ANIMOSITY

"...baseless accusations", really?
So, you mean Tinubu is indeed 69 years old and hasn't been looting Lagos State since 1999?

cheesy grin

1 Like

Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by Injera(f): 2:21pm On Jan 15, 2022
ThEGodFaThEr101:

Oya! Swore with Sango that he his 69 years old let's see whether you'll make it alive the next day.
Opinions are not fact. Neither me or you can speak with certainty about any ones age.
Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by Injera(f): 2:24pm On Jan 15, 2022
AntonVince:


"...baseless accusations", really?
So, you mean Tinubu is indeed 69 years old and hasn't been looting Lagos State since 1999?

cheesy grin
If you have ever been accused falsely before you will understand what I mean. we should be extremely careful of what we say . Especially if we dont have all the facts.
Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by ThEGodFaThEr101(m): 2:24pm On Jan 15, 2022
Injera:

Opinions are not fact. Neither me or you can speak with certainty about any ones age.
If his first daughter is sixty one then Tinubu should be in his 80's.

2 Likes

Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by Injera(f): 2:27pm On Jan 15, 2022
ThEGodFaThEr101:

If his first daughter is sixty one then Tinubu should be in his 80's.
I am partly igbo myself and look more like ibos and would really like Igbos to rule. However they have to be less rude and disrespecting to other tribes

1 Like

Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by mrvitalis(m): 2:27pm On Jan 15, 2022
The only men who can realistically change this country is Peter obi and sanusi combination
Even at that it's very very very very very very very unlikely they can turn it around
Nigeria have less than 5% of working again

But both men know Nigeria is gone

3 Likes

Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by ThEGodFaThEr101(m): 2:33pm On Jan 15, 2022
Injera:

I am partly igbo myself and look more like ibos and would really like Igbos to rule. However they have to be less rude and disrespecting to other tribes
Please tell us, how are Igbos rude and disrespectful to other tribes?
Oh! You mean they should keep shut in the face of injustice?

1 Like

Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by Odin13: 2:42pm On Jan 15, 2022
And Yoruba and Tinubu are counting on the North grin

Meanwhile Yoruba urchins are wailing how north are wailing for Ahmadu Bello.. not concern as northern elders just carpet Tinubu ambition

Seunmg should come and tell us why North no Dey buy Yoruba Tinubu ambition after all the money he’s spending in the north

1 Like

Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by PVision2020(m): 2:48pm On Jan 15, 2022
AntonVince:


Where is the "hatred and animosity" in exposing an obvious lie from a toad-eyed age-cheating crook seeking to fool us with his falsified age?
So, Tinubu can steal, kill, falsify his age, and perpetrate treachery but anyone who exposes him "hates" him right?

I wonder if Tinubu's lackeys have anything useful residing in their craniums at all.



Tinubu's age declaration forms as far back 1992 and 1998 when he contested and won Lagos senatorial/Governorship seat respectively are in INEC archive. On the two occasions, his age wasn't contested.

His CV's with Delloite and Mobil can still be recall.

The rabid hatred of you and your people can't stop destiny.
Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by AntonVince: 3:07pm On Jan 15, 2022
PVision2020:

Tinubu's age declaration forms as far back 1992 and 1998 when he contested and won Lagos senatorial/Governorship seat respectively are in INEC archive. On the two occasions, his age wasn't contested.

His CV's with Delloite and Mobil can still be recall.

The rabid hatred of you and your people can't stop destiny.


Sadly, his "destiny" does not include being president of Nigeria and he shan't.
Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by bjdon: 3:08pm On Jan 15, 2022
As usual the North fails to address the problems within their mist, that are of their own making. By refusing to accept population control, by refusing to end the awrful Alimajari system, be refusing to ensure that their young people are educated, they are creating a massive population set of illetrate paupers. This population set then makes up the fertile recurting mass for Boko Haram, Bandits and other neferous groups. Untill the North face their own problem within, there will never be peace there. Rather the region will just continue to slide into anarchy and lawlesness. There are currenlty over 10 milliion northern kids not in school, any expert in security and conflict will know what that means for the future.
Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by Racoon(m): 3:13pm On Jan 15, 2022
Kingmakers that specialised in foisting incompetence on others.Imagine the catastrophe they enthrone since 1966 till date(except the late Yar'Addua- RIP) and the terrorism they have allowed to continue unabated down north.Yet here they are bragging nonsense
Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by Racoon(m): 3:13pm On Jan 15, 2022
“Millions of Northerners are angry and frustrated that their level of living is worse than how it was in 2015,” they alleged.

The Northern leaders said, ” we say to them turn your anger into an asset” by voting for the right candidate (s) in the forthcoming election.
"Which right candidates" After voting a catastrophe like Buhuri. If 2015 is forgivable, but 2019 will never be forgiven but parochial & ethno-religious sentiments beclouded their sense of sound judgement. Buhari was a bad market but they foist him via rigging.

"..Truth is: President Buhari finds running Nigeria a drudgery. He enjoys the perks of the office, but not the hard graft, not the toil. He has wasted six-and-a-half years, and, going by his record, is likely to waste the remaining one-and-a-half years. That’s not being cynical.

Look at the problems: insecurity, poverty, corruption, cost of governance, debt, etc. Buhari is unlikely to leave any of these better than he met it in 2015. And because he lacks the zeal for big, nation-transforming ideas, he would also leave Nigeria’s deeply-flawed politico-governance structure more skewed, and Nigeria’s unity and stability more fragile.

Of course, Buhari’s acolytes won’t see things that way. In a country where myopic and vested interests override the national interest, and where mediocrity is tolerated and celebrated, Buhari’s supporters are praising him to high heaven!..."

https://www.vanguardngr.com/2021/12/buhari-at-79-a-man-given-so-much-who-gives-so-little-back
Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by johnmartus(m): 3:17pm On Jan 15, 2022
Poverty maker's we heard you.
Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by adebayo10977(m): 4:20pm On Jan 15, 2022
They are just insignificant people hiding under an umbrella of a group or forum, one of them should come out and be bold and courageous to tag himself kingmaker.....
Re: 2023 Presidency: We’re The Kingmakers, Say Northern Elders by GeneralOjukwu: 4:30pm On Jan 15, 2022
CaptainAyub:
Yoruba greed is all that's causing this misyarn.
Starting from Obasanjo, the whole if the south and parts of the middle belt determined who becomes president and it worked well and we had honest and manageable leaders.
Until yorubas decided to align with the ethno-religious supremacist section of the northern oligarchy and betrayed the south too.
It has been downhill since.
Same greed is propelling them again to go for the presidency instead of doing the just and honest thing by supporting an Igbo president,just like Ogbonnaya Onu relinquished his APP presidential ticket for Olu Falae while Ekwueme did so for Obasanjo who was in prison while they(Ekwueme) formed PDP.
We go see sha,likely na Shekau go be next president grin

The coward Ekweume and Onu didn't RELINQUISH anything.

They were just thoroughly thrashed like any Igbo that ever dreams of Presidency.

Come to North.... ask anyone, they would NEVER vote Igbo till 2nd and 3rd coming of Jesus Christ.

No deceive yourself.

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