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AS
a way to stem the spate of killings in Plateau State, President
Goodluck Jonathan has directed the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), Air
Marshal Oluseyi Petinrin, to move into the state and take full charge of
the security situation.
He
has charged the Defence chief to use all means necessary to put an
immediate end to the rising cases of killings in parts of the state,
while also directing the Secretary to the Government of the Federation
(SGF), Senator Anyim Pius Anyim, to bring forward for review all pending
reports of committees on the Plateau crisis.
The
decisions followed a meeting of the National Security Council presided
over by the president at the State House, Abuja, on Monday.
A
presidency statement issued by the Special Adviser to the President on
Media and Publicity, Dr Reuben Abati, in Abuja, said the directive was
in line with the determination of the president to ensure the full
security of life and property in the country.
According
to the statement, “in keeping with his avowed resolve to ensure the
full security of life and property across the country, President
Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, on Monday, in Abuja, directed the Chief of
Defence Staff, Air Marshal Oluseyi Petinrin, to take full charge of the
security situation in Plateau State immediately and take all necessary
actions to stop the recent spate of killings in the state.
“Following
a meeting of the National Security Council, President Jonathan also
directed the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Chief Anyim
Pius Anyim, to bring up all pending reports by recent committees set up
by the Federal Government on Plateau [State] for immediate review and
implementation.”
The
statement also confirmed that Jonathan would be meeting with Plateau
State governor, Jonah Jang, today (Tuesday) over the worsening security
situation in the state.
It
also said that the president had further directed the National
Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) to take prompt action to address the
plight of internally displaced persons in the state.
Jonathan
renewed his call on parties involved in the crises in Plateau State to
embrace tolerance, dialogue and compromise to ensure the success of
ongoing efforts to achieve a lasting resolution of their differences.
Meanwhile,
following the recent attacks on some villagers by a sect in Jos Plateau
State, in which several people died, the Christian Association of
Nigeria (CAN) has called on President Jonathan to allow every Nigerian
to carry arms for self-protection.
The
national president of CAN, Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor, made the call
through a statement, a copy of which was made available to the Nigerian
Tribune on Monday.
He
said “we urge the president, as the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed
Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, to stop the orgy of ethnic
cleansing or accede to recent calls for all Nigerians to carry arms.”
Stating
that the killing of innocent villagers could not assuage electoral
disadvantages, Oritsejafor added that if the president could no longer
guarantee the safety of life and property of Nigerians, in accordance
with the oath he took, then the National Assembly should immediately
enact a law that would make every Nigerian to carry arms for their own
protection.
“As
a nation, we cannot continue like this. There has to be a genuine
demonstration of commitment to the collective development of the
country, through honesty of purpose. The current orgy of violent ethnic
crises has continued unabated for several days, just a few days after
the president had identified the people behind the growing spate of
terrorism in the country,” the statement said.
Worried
by the new dimension the crises had assumed in recent times, which had
led to the killing of over 52 persons, including pregnant women and
children within 10 days, the CAN president called on President Jonathan
to reassure Nigerians that he had the capacity to guarantee their
safety in any part of the nation, by urgently halting what he called the
madness taking place in parts of Plateau State.
Reacting
to reports of Sunday evening explosions in Jos and the continued serial
killings in parts of Plateau State allegedly by Fulani herdsmen,
Oritsajefor wondered what nation on earth would accommodate as much as
eight violent attacks in neighbourhood villages near Jos without taking
decisive measures to stop what he described as “madness in Plateau State
for the past one month.”
He
said “scores of Nigerians have been dispatched to their untimely grave
by a bunch of rascals and it appears the Federal Government has no
answer to the growing menace of terrorism in the country, even after
President Jonathan told the entire world that his government has
identified the sponsors of the mindless merchants of death.”
He
urged the Jonathan-led administration to implement all the white papers
of past panels of enquiry in the crises in Plateau State, adding that
“Nigerians desire peace in every part of the country, but peace can only
be built on justice. Until we see the need to tell ourselves some
truth, it will be difficult for the nation to actualise the dream of
becoming one of the 20 most developed economies in the world in 2020.”
Oritsejafor
said gradually, the country was deliberately moving towards the
fulfilment of a recent American prophecy that the country, as it was
currently constituted, might cease to exist after 2015.
SOURCE: TRIBUNE NIGERIA
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Tuesday, 13 September 2011
Jonathan orders military to end Jos killings• Allow Nigerians to carry guns - CAN
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THAT WILL BE VERY BAD
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