YORUBA NATION LATEST : IGBOHO, AKINTOYE WRITE TINUBU, DEMAND YORUBA EXIT FROM NIGERIA
The agitators were subdued and 29 of them were last week
taken before a magistrates’ court in Ibadan, which ordered that they should be
remanded in prison custody.
The Defence Headquarters had described the recent agitation
for the Yoruba Nation as laughable.
Both Akintoye and Igboho dissociated themselves from the
violent action.
However, in an open letter made available to press in
Ibadan on Sunday 21st April 2024, the Yoruba Self-Determination
Movement, led by Prof Banji Akintoye and Chief Sunday Adeyemo, alias Sunday
Igboho, has written an open letter to President Bola Tinubu, seeking a peaceful
breakaway of Yoruba people from Nigeria.
The open letter, dated April 17, 2024, was signed by Akintoye,
Igboho and one Ola Ademola.
They called on the President to within the next two months
set up a negotiation team to negotiate the exit of the Yoruba people from
Nigeria.
The Yoruba Self-Determination Movement, said, “We have the honour to send to Your Excellency this important letter on behalf of the many millions of Yoruba people at home in Yorubaland in Nigeria and in the Yoruba Diaspora in almost all countries across the world.
We send this letter as a follow-up to our earlier letter,
dated August 06, 2022, which we delivered to your predecessor, President
Muhammadu Buhari, in his exalted position then as President of Nigeria.
Since 2015, the Fulani have been killing widely among the
other peoples of Nigeria, including us Yoruba, destroying farms, villages and
other assets, kidnapping men, women and children, extorting large amounts of
money as ransom from friends and family of the kidnapped, and repeatedly
asserting their intention to seize the homelands of all the indigenous peoples
of Nigeria for the purpose of turning all into a Fulani homeland.”
The group said in the Middle Belt, horrendous blood-letting
was going on with many families forced into Internally Displaced People Camps
while many of their villages were seized by the Fulani and renamed as Fulani
villages.
The letter further said “In our Yoruba homeland, our people
are resisting somewhat better, but the Fulani attacks and killings and
kidnappings are unrelenting and are coming daily, leading to horrific
instability, and forcing most of our farmers to abandon farming altogether,
thereby dooming Yoruba people to years and years of famine.”
“All these actions by the Fulani are, to us Yoruba, a
sufficient reason for our seeking to separate our Yoruba Nation from Nigeria.
Most of us, Yoruba have no confidence in the ‘restructuring’ that some of our
most respected Yoruba leaders (such as our fathers in our highly exalted
Afenifere) are advocating.
“And our reason is that we know that restructuring cannot
keep the Fulani marauders away from our homeland. Since, after restructuring, the Fulani would
still be Nigerians like us, and would still have full citizens’ rights to come
in large numbers, and with weapons and intent to kill and destroy and seize
land, to our homeland.
“The Fulani elite seem to be saying in effect that they
intend to make Nigeria ungovernable for President Tinubu, and that they would
never accept any official action of his.”
“We are acting for and on behalf of our 60 million Yoruba
people of the Ekiti, Lagos, Ogun, Ondo, Osun, and Oyo States, respectively,
plus the Yoruba Local Government Areas of Kogi and Kwara State, and plus the
Itshekiri homeland of Delta State, all together constituting the Yorubaland in
Nigeria, hereby most humbly place our crowning request before Your Excellency
as follows:
1.
That the Nigerian Federal Government shall,
within the next two months, but not later than June 15, 2024, inform us Yoruba
Self-determination Movement that the Nigerian Federal Government has graciously
agreed to our proposal for negotiation and that they have set up a negotiation
team that will meet and have a dialogue with our Yoruba Nation’s negotiation
team.
2.
That the Nigerian Federal Government shall
invite the United Nations, African Union and the Economic Community of West
African States, to send observers to the negotiation meetings.”
It, therefore, promised to forward the list of its
negotiation team to the government as soon as it received a message in response
to its request for the negotiation.
There has been no official response or statement from the
Federal Government or the presidency on the demand by the Yoruba Self
Determination group.
Opinions and reactions have been in hushed tones, waiting
for the reaction of government. This is due to the sensitivity of such an issue
and the background of the April 13th incident in Ibadan.
As the clock ticks towards the two-month ultimatum, the
nation, and indeed the world waits.
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