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Alhaji Atiku Abubakar. |
Dear
fellow Nigerians, on this occasion of Democracy Day, I wish to felicitate with
you.
It
is remarkable that despite the assault on our hard-won democracy by
anti-democratic forces, we have continued to soldier on as a people and as a
country.
The
integrity of Nigeria’s electoral process and ability of government to be
accountable to the people are the minimum requirements to appreciate the
sacrifices of those who gave their all for the enthronement of democracy in the
country.
Nigeria’s
journey to democracy was a tortuous one that claimed lives and limbs of many a
patriot and it is incumbent upon us as beneficiaries of their sacrifices to
ensure that we advance the course of democracy through transparent elections
and making our governmental institutions work for the people.
Even
as we celebrate, my fellow patriots, let us spare some time to reflect and to
mourn all those murdered in the on-going needless killings across our dear
country.
These Nigerians
have been killed in the continuing murderous rampage of criminal elements
across the country but especially in Borno and Yobe, and the Benue River
Valley, stretching from Adamawa through Taraba to the confluence of Kogi and
Benue, and including Nasarawa, Plateau, Southern Kaduna, and Zamfara. Others
have been killed by armed robbers, kidnappers, cattle rustlers and other
marauding bandits. The killings have even extended to sacred places of worship
where innocent Imams and Christian clergy and worshipers are slaughtered.
This
carnage has gone on for too long and must stop. In a letter that I sent to the
Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria recently on these killings, I pointed
out, and I repeat it here, that only government can stop these senseless
killings if we are to avoid major and further damage to the fabric of our
fragile unity.
The
recent history of Somalia, Rwanda, Burundi and Central African Republic, among
others, should be a strident warning to all of us, especially those in
government whose primary responsibility is the protection of the citizens, but
who have been dithering, making contradictory and ridiculous excuses and
engaging in diversionary finger-pointing.
The
democracy that we celebrate today is a fruit of the labour of
patriots, some of who paid the supreme price. As inheritors of this beautiful
concept of democracy, it behooves us to ensure that democracy is nurtured not just
as a mechanism for a periodic change of government, but as a social construct.
The
ultimate virtue in democracy is the power that it bestows in the people. The
very essence of that power lies in the ability of the people to live a complete
lifestyle that enables every man or woman to triumph in his or her legitimate
pursuit. The concept of democracy is absolutely incongruent with a notion of
regimentation either in the political or economic sphere.
As
we move forward as a country, it is important that we respond to the dynamics
of time in proffering solutions to some of the challenges that beset us. Today,
the popular clamour amongst our people is the need to make government more
responsive and responsible. Our challenges about insecurity and diversification
of the economy have acquired new phases in the past few years and thus should
our solutions to those challenges require a brand new thinking.
As
the nation goes through a cycle of elections in the coming months, it is
important that the integrity of the electoral process is sacrosanct with
guarantees of free and fair election.
Democracy
is by itself a self-correcting concept, but only if there is guarantee of
credibility in the electoral process.
We
have mourned Nigerian souls to terror attacks enough for us to learn that it is
insufficient that the federal government has exclusive statutory mandate in
providing security for our people. Our economy has become too exposed to the
vagaries of global oil prices for us not to decipher that we need to invest massively
in infrastructure and liberalize the economy to create fresh opportunities for
the people. Our communities and associations have become so divided and apart
that we cannot even begin to confront the most basic of our challenges when we
don’t share a mutual sense of belonging.
These
are some of the challenges that we must begin to re-evaluate their
manifestation, and the significance of our celebration of
democracy todayshould mean that we employ the broadmindedness and
participatory notion of democracy in seeking solutions to them.
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