Until recently when the erstwhile Vice President of
Nigeria, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, (Turaki Adamawa), began to attract my attention
in a very edifying and ennobling manner, I had almost concluded that President
Muhammadu Buhari had no challenger within and outside the All Progressives
Congress enclave. At the risk of alienating himself from his regional political
constituency, Atiku, as he is popularly called, who is better appreciated as a
child of events and circumstances, has espoused a large vision of a new Nigeria .
*Atiku Abubakar |
"No section of the Nigerian State can claim correctly that
its people are better served by the current structure of the federation within
the context of the past 50 years of a failed unitary federalism", he boldly proclaimed. Atiku, one of the most respected and
consistent national voices, especially in the current political dispensation,
has also said that state actors and other politicians who insist that Nigeria
cannot be renegotiated and who equate every demand for restructuring with secession
may actually be setting the stage for unsavoury outcomes.