Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo has urged Nigerian elites and politicians to use legislative instruments and policy framework to blur Nigeria’s fault lines and strengthen its sociocultural cohesion and unity.
To achieve this, and also address the perennial settlers-indigenes impasse, the number two man suggested the abrogation of the state of origin and indigene certificate policy.
In its stead, he called for the promulgation of policy that gives legal backing to issuance of certificate of residence or birth, insisting that such a move would foster unity and peaceful coexistence in the country.
Osinbajo also harped on a stronger and more equitable justice system that will treat all Nigerians equally, regardless of tribal, religious or ethnic affiliations.
The vice-president also called on the media to reduce focus on issues that promote ethnic and religious profiling and urged them to report news that would unite Nigerians.
Osinbajo spoke on Monday at the maiden ‘Policy Making and Good Governance Lecture Series’ organised by the National Institute for Policy Strategic Studies (NIPPS).
The vice-president, in his lecture, ‘Creating a Homeland for All: A Nation Building in a Diverse Democracy’, decried the rising spate of divisiveness, which according to him, was responsible for Nigeria’s backwardness.
He maintained that “our diversity ought to be a blessing and not a curse,” adding that Nigeria has the potential to be a great nation.
Osinbajo, who cited examples of Singapore, Tanzania and Rwanda as nations that effectively managed their diversities, said Nigeria could take a cue from them.
”Most heterogeneous nations have been able to manage and harness their diversities for the good of all and we can also do same in Nigeria. Our diversity in Nigeria should not be a burden. In fact, it is a blessing, and so we must develop the capacity to manage this diversity for the growth of our nation,” Osinbajo stated.
He added, “So, elites must come together and agree to end the ethnic and religious profiling that we are currently facing in our dear nation. We must prioritise things that bind us together and deprioritise ones that set us apart.”
Osinbajo believes that “the political class and the nation’s leadership can do more in developing policies, laws and the enforcing them toward addressing the weaponisation of ethnicity and religion in our dear nation.”
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