| Published Wednesday, 03 October 2018 | 19:45 GMT
Yoruba Liberation Command (YOLICOM) has called for the dissolution of the country, urging the United Nations (UN) to supervise the referendum towards it.
The group claimed that the Yoruba account for over 25 percent of Nigeria’s population, adding that at over 50 million, the population is larger than that of many countries.
Its spokesman, George Akinola, told newsmen yesterday that after 58 years of Independence, the country “is shipwrecked” with indications of backwardness.
YOLICOM frowned at President Muhammadu Buhari’s style of leadership, which it said “favors the Hausa/Fulani more than any other ethnic group in the country”, alleging that the development was responsible for the braggadocio of the armed Fulani herdsmen.
Akinola described the country’s democratic process as flawed, adding that elections could no longer guarantee either the free will of the people or good governance.
He said: “As indicated in the events in Osun and Ekiti states, elections have become a savage stock exchange where the state and politicians institutionalize crime, bribe the electorate with illicit money and ensure that the victor emerges through a totally corrupt and inept system.
- GUARDIAN
We urge UN to quickly dissolve Nigeria in a supervised Referendum - YOLICOM Speaks out
Yoruba Liberation Command (YOLICOM) has called for the dissolution of the country, urging the United Nations (UN) to supervise the referendum towards it.
The group claimed that the Yoruba account for over 25 percent of Nigeria’s population, adding that at over 50 million, the population is larger than that of many countries.
Its spokesman, George Akinola, told newsmen yesterday that after 58 years of Independence, the country “is shipwrecked” with indications of backwardness.
YOLICOM frowned at President Muhammadu Buhari’s style of leadership, which it said “favors the Hausa/Fulani more than any other ethnic group in the country”, alleging that the development was responsible for the braggadocio of the armed Fulani herdsmen.
Akinola described the country’s democratic process as flawed, adding that elections could no longer guarantee either the free will of the people or good governance.
He said: “As indicated in the events in Osun and Ekiti states, elections have become a savage stock exchange where the state and politicians institutionalize crime, bribe the electorate with illicit money and ensure that the victor emerges through a totally corrupt and inept system.
- GUARDIAN
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