Consider Ndigbo for appointments, Obiano, coalition beg Buhari
April 25, 2015 : JOHN ALECHENU and Chukwudi Akasike
Anambra
State Governor, Willy Obiano, has urged the President-elect, Gen.
Mohammadu Buhari (retd), to appoint Igbo into prominent positions while
forming his cabinet.
He said the forthcoming Buhari’s
administration would require the support of all Nigerians irrespective
of their party affiliations to success.
Obiano spoke after a closed-door meeting with the President-elect at his private residence in Abuja on Friday.
The governor said he was in Abuja not
only to congratulate the President-elect and reassure him of the support
of the South-East, but also to plead with him to consider Anambra
indigenes for appointments.
Obiano said, “I am also here to reassure
him that Anambra and the South-East would support him. I also pleaded
with him on some pressing problems that are of importance to the
South-East like the second Niger bridge and some of the federal roads.
“We
also pleaded in the area of appointment for the people of Anambra and
of course, for people from the South-East be it ministerial,
ambassadorial and what have you.”
The governor, however, dismissed
insinuation that his visit was part of consultations to pave way for him
to defect to the All Progressives party.
Similarly, a coalition of Igbo groups
demanded that the position of the Speaker of the House of
Representatives should be zoned to the South-East in the next political
dispensation.
The groups are Igbo Youth Vanguard, Abia
Democratic Initiative, Imo Professionals for Democracy, United Igbo
Traders Association and South East Students Unions.
In a statement signed by their leader,
Mr. Chikezie Emezuo and Coordinator of the Imo Professional for
Democracy, the groups explained that it was against the principle of
federal character and national justice for the North to keep the
Presidency, the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives
positions.
Stressing that any move to marginalise
Ndigbo will not be accepted, the groups decried a purported zoning
formula where the South-East could be schemed out of the leadership of
the national legislature.
They expressed regret that the Igbo were
being reminded that they were defeated and be treated as second class
citizens at a time the negative effect of the civil war was wearing out.
They said it would be wrong for the Igbo to be denied top positions in the National Assembly because majority of them voted for the Peoples Democratic Party in the last general elections
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