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Voice of Emancipation

Voice Of Emancipation: Yoruba, It’s Time to Wake Up

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By Kayode Emola

For the many Yoruba who can’t discern right from wrong or left from right, it’s time to clearly separate facts from fiction. Before the 1999 introduction of democracy to Nigeria, it was hailed as the panacea for development, the ingredient that would take Nigeria to the next level. 25 years of democracy later, over half the population of Nigeria lives in abject poverty. It is therefore high time we talked about our continuing as Nigerians.

It is plainly evident that Nigeria as a nation is heading nowhere meaningful. Still, my greatest frustration lies with the millions of Yoruba who cannot or will not open their eyes and see that it is over for the country. Many of them believe that one day Nigeria will solve all its problems and become a great nation; yet at the same time, believing that it is better for them personally to travel abroad for pastures green.

This is nothing short of hypocrisy at the highest level in fact, I would go so far as to call it cowardice in the face of the oppression present. For those who believe that Nigeria will one day become great, yet still harbour the idea of travelling abroad; or are currently living outside of Nigeria and not returning to build the country, you of all people are the most miserable.

Today, the people living in Ondo State will go out to validate the failed system the military government handed over in 1999. What they will not see is that the exercise of voting is a mirage that makes no difference either to their personal wellbeing or the good of the nation. And yet still they will believe in the slogans that have been spun by politicians for the sole purpose of deceiving the unsuspecting.

As Yoruba, we ought to look inward, and ask ourselves if we are truly enjoying being part of Nigeria. If not, then we must face the question of why are we silent about the hardship our people face. To paraphrase a popular vlogger, the politicians know that the people must go to bed with hope. It seems that successive governments previously have sowed the seed of hope to keep the people going, even as they knew that Nigeria will not get better.

However, the government under President Tinubu has not only perpetuated the citizens’ poverty but has also stolen their hope. Perhaps Tinubu’s decision to liberalise the country is the push needed to energise the Yoruba people towards the actualisation of Orile-ede Yoruba. If not, if even this can’t jolt them out of their reverie, then I can’t see anything that could shake these poverty-stricken Yoruba people from their die-hard belief that Nigeria will one day be a great nation.

It is now very obvious that when our sovereignty is actualised, we Yoruba will need to guard it jealously from the political hawks who ruined Nigeria. We need to make sure they do not transfer their corrupt way of governing Nigeria into the Yoruba country.

Therefore, it is time to begin planning in earnest what that new country will look like. We need to engage stakeholders throughout various levels of society to discuss how our new nation will function. These includes, though is not limited to, our traditional leaders, civil societies, artisans, various professionals and the general public.

We must now put immense pressure on President Tinubu and the current government to convene a sovereign national conference, so that the question of Nigeria can be answered once and for all. This should not be a conference that gags its participants into agreeing that Nigeria is indivisible, but one that allows each participating ethnic nationality the opportunity to decide their own future.

With that said, we must be aware of the nonchalant attitude displayed by the Nigerian government regarding nations’ quest for sovereignty. The Igbo people have decided to exit Nigeria by declaring their Biafra nation on 2nd December 2024, and will damn the consequences. If this happens, the instability caused will make Nigeria’s remaining as a country entirely untenable, under which circumstances we Yoruba people must be ready and uncompromising for our own exit.

The most sensible path that the Nigerian government could take would be that of peaceful dissolution; but the way things are currently heading, I don’t see that happening. Therefore, if and when the inevitable happens to Nigeria, every Yoruba person, both at home and in the diaspora, must be ready to obey the clarion call.

In so doing, we will show the international community that the Yoruba have affirmatively decided that we no longer wish to be perpetual slaves to those holding us to ransom. This moment is pivotal, the point at which we decide our future once and for all. Let us choose the road to freedom, so that we may truly look forward to building a viable nation that champions the rights and needs of the many, not just the political few.

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Voice of Emancipation

Voice of Emancipation: Nicolas Maduro is a Goner

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By Kayode Emola

From Venezuela to Nigeria the story seems to be the same when it concerns President Trump. Presently, over fifteen thousand US military personnel are battle ready to take out the Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro who has been given the opportunity of a safe passage to any country of his choice. Whether he will take it or not remains to be seen and what actions the US President will take.

When it comes to that of Nigeria, it will be what Yoruba refer to as “abowaba” (we’ll get back to that) approach President Trump is adopting. It’s more than a month now that President Trump threatened to attack the terrorists in Nigeria. Many people are wondering whether it’s still going to happen or whether this is the end we’ve end of the matter.

The truth of the matter is the US President is not sitting on the hands on this matter. He has appointed US congress men and women to investigate the matter, and this people are working night and day to get to the bottom of the matter. However sceptical some of our people may be about the intervention of the US, one thing is certain, it will surely happen.

What we can’t say is when it will happen and what the consequences or the fall out of the intervention will be. The most interesting thing is that at last, for once the US is alive to its responsibilities as the police of the world.

As for Nicolas Maduro, whether he is removed as President or not will depend on the support he receives from Russia. With the war in Ukraine, I don’t know how much appetite and resources the Russia federation is happy to deploy to save a foreign country. Especially when its own country and military personnel are in the frontline of a war. My guess is that if Russia could not save President Assad of Syria, then the likelihood of saving Nicolas Maduro is very slim.

Concerning we the Yoruba people, there are a lot of things we can begin to do amidst all these ongoing events. First thing we must realise is that it is very evident that there is nothing left to salvage in Nigeria. Even if the US army comes to Nigeria with all the armoury and arsenals they have, if the fundamentals that caused the insecurity is not addressed, the problem is bound to reoccur.

Therefore, as much as the US is wanting to fight terrorism in Nigeria which is a blessing. We Yoruba must realise that except we separate from Nigeria, poverty and terrorism will continue to be the experience for many of our folks. There is hardly any day that goes by without an incident of kidnapping taking place somewhere in Yorubaland.

Many of our folks can no longer travel to Nigeria from abroad without the fear of being kidnapped for ransom or worse still be killed by terrorists roaming our forests. Many are choosing to travel to other parts of Africa for holidays just to avoid going to Nigeria. For those who are brave enough to travel to Nigeria, they must get private security for they and their families protection which is not supposed to be.

How Nigeria allowed terrorism to fester for 15 years without any government intervention to curb it beats my imagination. The same Nigeria government that says it could not fight insecurity, and insurgency had the military personnel and equipment to put out a coup plot in neighbouring Benin Republic.

Therefore, it is evident that the lives and properties of Nigeria do not matter to the government. I will urge our Yoruba people to get themselves together and decide now that the only solution for us is total exit from Nigeria. Anything other than that is just cosmetics that is bound to fade away when tested in heat.

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Voice of Emancipation

Voice of Emancipation: When Will Nigeria Ever Have a New Constitution?

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By Kayode Emola

In a few weeks from now, the Tinubu-led administration will unleash a new tax regime on Nigeria, one for which the poor masses are unprepared. Suddenly, people would begin to fear receiving money in their bank accounts in case they get caught up in the tax brouhaha. No doubt, this policy is designed to make Nigerians poorer, thereby worsening the poverty situation in the country.

In all of this, Tinubu, who is nearly three years into his presidency, has not deemed it reasonable to allow Nigerians the opportunity to write a new constitution for themselves. After all, the Americans that we purport to follow have 27 amendments to their constitution and would be ready to alter it again if it failed to meet the expectations of their people.

We know that in over a century since amalgamation, Nigerians have not had the opportunity to choose for themselves how they want to be governed. Nigeria as a country is a forced nation, destined for failure due to the powers that have declined to build a harmonious country. They have instead built a tyranny dependent on brute force to keep the people silenced and staying in line.

However, there comes a time when brute force alone can no longer hold a contrivance like Nigeria together. In fact, when that time comes, it may be the same brute force used to hold the country together that becomes the pivotal element in tearing it apart.

There’s no doubt that Nigeria is going through the most difficult period in its history as a country to date. Every indigenous nation that comprises Nigeria is dissatisfied with the trajectory of the country and wants out. This should have been ringing alarm bells in the ears of the decision-makers, but they are unfazed by the situation due to the tremendous profits they are accumulating from the chaos.

In a country where Christians outnumber Muslims, Sharia and Qu’ran are mentioned in the constitution 73 times, whilst the word ‘Bible’ or ‘Christian’ is not mentioned even once. That this anomaly has gone on for so many years is not only an aberration but a disrespect to the indigenous nationalities that makes up Nigeria.

When the United Nation special rapporteur, Agnes Callamard, visited Nigeria around 2021, she described the Nigeria constitution as a “pressure cooker of internal conflict.” She highlighted these internal conflicts and generalised violence as matters requiring urgent attention.

Seeing how insecurity in the land has taken on an unprecedented dimension, it beats my imagination how President Tinubu missed the opportunity in his day one address to tackle the issues of insecurity and constitution, instead turning his focus on subsidy.

He further compounded the issue by choosing a fellow Muslim to be his vice president, breaking the decades-long practice of having both Christianity and Islam represented within the Presidency and Vice Presidency. The strategy of ensuring both faiths were represented at the highest level was one designed to promote political and religious unity and inclusivity, a tradition that Tinubu swept away in a moment.

If the Nigerian politicians are now feeling the US breathing down their necks to stop these insecurities and the ethnic genocide in Nigeria, I believe their first act should be to dismantle this diabolic document forced upon Nigeria called the ‘1999 Constitution’.

However, the US do not have the mandate to ask Nigeria to change its constitution if we the citizens do not demand such from our government. It is not surprising that Tinubu has not said anything about the constitution, when he stands to gain so much from perpetuating the status quo.

The time is coming when logic and reasoning will fail and the only means by which the country can move forward would be violence. In that time, it won’t matter what the constitution of Nigeria says; the only thing to matter will be the deprivation that the people are experiencing.

I hope our Yoruba people who are close to the president are letting him know that he’s sitting on a keg of gunpowder. Especially since the US are now also involved in demanding justice for the innocent victims of the ethnic genocide in the country.

If Tinubu wants to solve insecurity in the country, the first step is to set up a constitutional review committee. The committee should be given the mandate to create a new constitution for Nigeria that would be acceptable to every section of the country. The new constitution must guarantee the rights of self-determination as enshrined in international law. It must also permit any constituent parts to break away from the country peacefully if they so choose.

Barring that, even if the US were to come into Nigeria with all guns blazing to fight the current insecurity, it would be only a matter of time before it raised its ugly head again. It is better that this matter is settled once and for all so that millions of Nigeria can have the opportunity for a better life.

I urge our Yoruba people to know that all these beautiful proposals are not going to be considered by the government. Therefore, if the Nigerian government will not do the needful, there is no shame in seeking foreign assistance in helping us secure our own independent Yoruba nation.

Ultimately, we are fighting for a future, not only for ourselves and our tribespeople, but for that of our children and our children’s children. With stakes so high, we must take whatever assistance is offered and do so proudly, knowing that we are fighting for the noblest of causes.

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Voice of Emancipation

Voice of Emancipation: Yoruba Must Be Ready

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By Kayode Emola

Anyone observant of recent events in Nigeria needs no prophet to tell them that all is not well with the country. Since the announcement by President Donald Trump that he was designating Nigeria as a ‘Country of Particular Concern’, the level of insecurity has risen astronomically.

We have seen an Army General kidnapped in an ambush and subsequently killed. We have seen churches attacked, villages ransacked, and communities being devastated by the level of rising insecurity. For those who are still in denial, I pray it doesn’t reach their doorstep before they realise we are in a state of emergency.

What we must now realise as Yoruba is that the Fulani jihad against Nigeria is now in full swing. Just this week, they attacked communities in Ogun, Kogi, Kwara and some parts of Osun State. If the alarm bells are not ringing in our ears already, then we are, of all people in Nigeria, the most foolish.

Even people who are staunch supporters of President Tinubu, like Adetoun, are now making videos and asking the government to call for the help of Chief Sunday Adeyemo (Igboho) in dislodging the Fulani terrorists. It shows that the country is now witnessing a high degree of insecurity, and the government has no control over what is happening.

Although the government would like to make some gullible people believe that it is making progress in the security of lives and properties. The truth is that their progress is more of a façade than the reality on the ground.

For instance, the government claimed that the President was active throughout the rescue mission of the kidnapped victims from the CAC Church in Eruku, Kwara State. They also claimed that he left no stone unturned in rescuing some of the school girls who were kidnapped from the boarding house in Niger State. However, they failed to tell us how the victims were rescued and if any ransom was paid.

The truth is that, when it comes to insecurity in the country, the President is only acting when the cameras are turned on, and the international communities are involved. This President is not genuinely interested in fighting insecurity. The reason is that he has been quoted as saying he cannot fight insecurity, and if he dares, they will kill him. He is only interested in the titular privileges the position of a President brings, rather than the security of the lives and property of the innocent citizens.

Therefore, we Yoruba must now be on high alert as to the heightened insecurity in the land. We must recognise that our Yoruba territory is the crown jewel of Nigeria, and that is all these sponsors of terrorism and their foreign collaborators are looking for.

We must not let down our guard at any time and must begin to make serious efforts for the emancipation of our Yorubaland from Nigeria. The Caliphate have activated its long-awaited jihad, and we must be ready to respond in kind at a moment’s notice.

This is not the time to be fearful, but rather, it is the time to be courageous and be ready to declare our Yoruba nation if push comes to shove. Every Yoruba must realise that we are all in this together, and the only way to win is if we all put our differences aside and fight for the defence of our Oodua heritage. I know for a fact that in the end, Yoruba will win this battle, and our glory will be restored.

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