ONE of the ugly sides of the recently-concluded Presidential and National Assembly elections held on Saturday, February 23, 2019, was the reported ethnic tensions arising from the alleged harassment and disenfranchisement of a section of the non-indigenous ethnic groups in some parts of Lagos.
The affected group complained of a prominent political chieftain threatening to have their shops demolished and markets shut if his party lost the elections in areas where they live in high numbers.
The Nmanwu masquerades at the Igbo Cultural day celebration at the National Stadium, Lagos on Saturday November 3, 2018
During the election, hoodlums had invaded polling stations, snatched ballot boxes, destroyed and burnt already thumb-printed ballot papers and chased away voters in areas like Surulere, Aguda, Isolo, Ojo, Okota and other areas. At least, one suspected miscreant was lynched while another was rescued and hospitalised.
Long before the elections, many non-indigenes called into radio stations complaining of the refusal of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, officials in some areas in Lagos to issue them with the Permanent Voter’s Cards, PVCs, because of the fear they could vote against particular political interests.
The purported disenfranchisement of non-indigenes is a sign of major political retrogression in Nigeria because in the 1950s and 1960s Nigerians freely settled and fully participated in politics in any part of the country they chose to. Many of our founding fathers like Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, Dr. Egbert Udo Udoma and Mallam Umaru Altine (the first Lord Mayor of Enugu) enjoyed flourishing political careers outside their native regions.
Ironically, some of the leaders behind these dastardly acts once lived in foreign countries and even acquired foreign citizenship only to return home to victimise fellow Nigerians.
This is wrong and should not be encouraged. We call on the leaders of thought of the various ethnic groups in Lagos to meet often and discuss towards strengthening intergroup harmony. We should spare no effort to end further ethnic tensions.
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