Ayo Fayose, governor of Ekiti state, says dictatorship is returning to
Nigeria with the sealing-off of the residences of Sambo Dasuki, a
retired colonel and former national security adviser. He asked the
president to put Boko Haram, and not Dasuki, under house arrest. In a
statement issued on Friday on the two-day-old SSS siege to Dasuki’s
residence in Abuja, Fayose said the persecution of Peoples Democratic
Party (PDP) stalwarts and others perceived as opposed to the All
Progressives Congress (APC)-led federal government “is an ominous sign
of imminent return of dictatorship and draconian rule in Nigeria”.
Maintaining that he believed the “invasion” does not have the blessing
of President Muhammadu Buhari, Fayose said it is being done “by some
people to please the president” and asked the president to check the
excesses of those behind it.
“Democracy is already being put
on trial, less than two months that President Muhammadu Buhari assumed
office… Rather than invading homes of Nigerians and putting people under
house arrest, the government should invade Boko Haram territories and
arrest the insurgents,” he said.
“President Buhari should rather
keep Boko Haram under house arrest, not opposition party members. Those
heavily armed security men that invaded Col. Dasuki’s Abuja and Sokoto
homes should have been put to a better use by sending them to the Boko
Haram ravaged North Eastern part of Nigeria,” he said. “The president
should keep the rising exchange rates of Dollar, Pound Sterling, Euro
and other foreign currencies under house arrest. He should pay attention
to governance, be guided by the rule of law and be for everyone and for
nobody as he promised when he was sworn into office.” He advised Buhari
to be magnanimous in victory, act like a leader and father of all
Nigerians instead of seeing his return to power as an opportunity to
revenge against those perceived to have wronged him in the past.
Fayose said: “Was there any invitation by the DSS to Col. Dasuki that
he refused to honour? Isn’t it worrisome that in this democratic age,
security agents could in a commando-like invade the house of a former
NSA to carry out his arrest when there is no record that he was invited
and he refused to honour the invitation, or that he resisted arrest?
“Could Col. Dasuki’s present ordeal be as a result of his advice that
the presidential election be postponed? Is this not an indication of an
impending clampdown on PDP members and other Nigerians perceived not to
be on the same page with the President Buhari-led All Progressives
Congress (APC) government? “We in the PDP supported our party during the
presidential election like every other loyal party members should do,
should this display of support for our party and its candidate now
warrant persecution by the federal government? “If Col. Dasuki actually
committed any offence to warrant his arrest and questioning by the DSS
or any of the country’s security agencies, shouldn’t warrant of arrest
have been issued against him? Shouldn’t he have been invited by the DSS
instead of invading his houses and sealing them off in a commando-liked
manner?
“Nigerians must therefore rise against this emerging
dictatorship and save the country’s democracy from imminent collapse
because today, it is Col. Dasuki, tomorrow it can be any other person.”
He also spoke on Ike Ekweremadu, the deputy senate president, saying
the “desperate plot” to remove him from office “is dangerous to
democratic rule in Nigeria because there is no portion of the Nigeria’s
1999 Constitution that made positions of Senate President and Deputy
Senate President the exclusive rights of the political party with
highest number of senators”.
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