Govt’s reaction to protest shows disconnect with people, reality, says Ezekwesili’s Fix Politics

Dr. Oby Ezekwesili

Govt’s reaction to protest shows disconnect with people, reality, says Ezekwesili’s Fix Politics

By Jeffrey Agbo

Fix Politics, a group led by the former minister of education Oby Ezekwesili, has said that the Federal Government’s reactions to the #EndBadGovernance protest shows serious disconnect with the people it was elected to govern.

The citizen-led movement, in a statement, faulted government’s reactionary and ill-advised actions to give the protest and the protesters a bad name.

The executive director, Fix Politics Africa, Anthony Ubani, said government’s reaction and provocative utterances about the protests reflected a deep disconnect with the people’s reality. He faulted the government’s attempt to demonise the valid demands of the hungry populace and brand it the work of opposition parties.

According to him, searching for imaginary sponsors of the protests only bolstered the courage of the people, who fear the loss of their voices and dignity in an oligarchy in the garb of a democracy.

Ubani also accused the government of sponsoring individuals, groups, traditional rulers and religious leaders to speak strongly against the protests; getting the Lagos traditional institution to announce a “curious Oro” festival coinciding with the period of the protests; the Attorney General of the Federation going to a “captured judiciary” to secure an order of court restricting the protest in Lagos to Gani Fawehinmi Freedom Park in Ojota and the Peace Park in Ketu.

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He further stated that making doomsday scenario references to Venezuela; promising to slash salaries of the federal representatives by half for six months; allowing thugs to threaten citizens not to come out for any protest and sundry other clandestine actions underscore a complete lack sensitivity and understanding of the nation’s predicament and the people’s disaffection were equally unnecessary.

Ubani said the Office Of The Citizen is the highest in a democracy, adding, “To make it impossible for citizens to express themselves or criminalise their right to free assembly in peaceful protest is an unacceptable descent into dictatorship.

“Peaceful protests are a constitutionally protected right of citizens and the rational response from a democratic and well-meaning government would have been a call for national dialogue, and more importantly, a commitment to definite actions to be implemented in the next few weeks. It is not too late for the Bola Tinubu administration to allow citizens to freely express their disagreement with government’s policies and programmes through peaceful protests.”

According to him, the determination of citizens to execute the protests peacefully from August 1 to 10 reflects the failure of the government’s underhand and patronising tactics to placate the people.

“It is now the responsibility of the government to ensure the security of the protesters, stop criminal elements from hijacking the protest and, more importantly, create opportunities to listen to the citizens.

“To act otherwise will be tragic. Painful memories of #EndSARS still linger. The world is watching and citizens are no longer docile. The mistakes of the past should not be repeated, especially in light of ongoing agitations in other African countries. We, therefore, make bold to state in precise terms that the authoritarian and intolerant reflex that characterised the government’s statements and actions in the build-up to the protest has no place in a democratic country,” he said.

Ubani said the protests provided the opportunity for the government to rethink its actions of the past 14 months and make the needed changes.

“The pain, suffering and hardship in Nigeria are real and cannot be politicised. The government should eat the humble pie and urgently go back to the drawing board to initiate new people-centred policies to ameliorate the pain and anger across Nigeria,” he stated.

Jeffrey Agbo:
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