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Resist return to dictatorship, Utomi charges Nigerians

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After failed presidential bids, Utomi now goes for governorship post

The co-Chairman of the National Consultative Front (NCF), Professor Pat Itomi has called on Nigerians to resist a return to dictatorship.

Utomi, who was reacting in a statement on Tuesday to the invitation and grilling of a former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Obadiah Mailafia and a former Speaker of the House of Representatives, Ghali Na’abba, expressed worry over the assault on freedom of expression in the country.

Utomi said in the statement: “If we resisted the military, surely, the people can resist civilians bound towards fascism.

“My co-chair of the National Consultative Front, Mr. Ghali Na’Abba and Dr. Obadiah Mailafia, were invited by the Department of State Security, DSS, on account of remarks they made. For Dr. Mailafia, it was a second journey within a week.

Read also: Restructuring will not fix the issue of bad governance – Utomi

“History shows us that such invitations bear ominous foreboding because freedom of expression is usually the first victim in the decent toward totalitarianism. Check the trends in the early days of Hitler’s East Germany.

“Much blood has been shed to prevent our country from undeserved fate of a totalitarian order. That blood flow includes that of General Shehu Musa Yar’Adua, the annulment of the elections of June 12, 1993, and the life of Chief MKO Abiola, who we have come to honour posthumously, including many undergraduates, like Kyle Adepeju of the University of Ibadan 48 years ago. Adepeju was shot by the police and probably would have been a grandfather today. Should his grandchildren be denied the freedom he gave his life for?

“These security harassments of citizens exercising their fundamental human rights to express themselves and request accountability from those who ostensibly represent them are coming one month to the day the United Nations set aside, September 15, to mark the International Democracy Day, leads me to call on the global community, from the Secretary General of the United Nations, the prosecutors of the International Criminal Court, and our development partners to note development in Nigeria, and prepare to act appropriately.”

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