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“Desist from running to Buhari on security issue, instead discuss with your people” – Senate tells Govs
 
By:
Tue, 9 Feb 2021   ||   Nigeria,
 

The Senate has advised the state governors to discuss the security challenges their states face with their people and address it rather than always running to the Presidency for solutions.

Senate Leader Yahaya Abdullahi, disclosed this on Monday while addressing newsmen in Abuja.

He said the Senate was worried that herdsmen/farmers’ crisis, banditry and insurgency remain unabated in the country.

He revealed that the Senate would on resumption today debate a motion by Deputy Senate Leader Ajayi Boroffice, on the incessant clashes between herders and farmers across the country.

“These are issues that should be resolved at the local level either through dialogue anchored on the spirit of give and take.

“Whatever crises that are involved should be resolved by political leaders at appropriate levels be it, at the National Assembly, at the level of the governors, local government and even councillorship level where state actors are expected to sit down with their people so that a lot of these issues can be articulated and addressed by the local population.

“In fact, this is what the governors at their levels should do and not always running to the presidency to solve one dispute here and there.

“This is a federation and we’re all politically responsible leaders. I can assure you that in no distant time, these inter-communal conflagrations would be resolved,” Abdullahi stated.

He further disclosed that “This kind of crises must be addressed promptly and squarely in preventing ethnic entrepreneurs from hijacking the whole situation and putting the country in danger.

“There are existential issues that have set communities, which have hitherto lived together peacefully, against each other either for political advantage or political matters.”

On the fate of the former service chiefs scaling the hurdle of Senate’s confirmation as ambassadorial nominees, the leader said this would be brought to the floor of the Senate.

“The committee (on Foreign Affairs) will do its work and after that will bring the report to the Senate,” he noted.

 

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