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Akinwande Soji-Ojo
Imo State Governor, Hope Uzodinma, has attributed the attacks on security personnel, installations and residents of the state to political bitterness.
Uzodinma stated this while featuring on Channels Television programme, ‘Politics Today‘ on Tuesday night.
He asserted that the attacks enjoyed the support of the people when they started two years ago.
The governor added that residents of the state welcomed the continuous attacks with applause, taking them as a form of entertainment, until they started killing people.
Asked if he knew the reasons behind assaults on security agencies in the state, Uzodinma said: “It is not limited to Imo State alone… You can see the wave of banditry in the country today; there is banditry in the northern part of the country, banditry in the southern part of the country, also banditry in the eastern part of the country. But there are peculiarities state by state.
“Some of these crimes are being supported. Recall that two years ago when this started in Imo State, when the bandits attacked police stations, as they were leaving the scene of crime, people would be clapping for them. People would be laughing with them. The people took this thing as a form of entertainment.
“But incrementally, lives were lost. Incrementally, assets were destroyed. Incrementally, police stations were burnt down. Individual homes, some targeted politicians, their houses were burnt.
“So, we took personal interests to begin to investigate the reasons behind these attacks. I told you times without number in Imo State, some of the cases of banditry here are politically contrived. Some are real attacks by bandits.”
He continued: “So, I think that the kind of politics with bitterness that is going on in the state and some parts of these regions should really be condemned. That is why we have decided to embark on both kinetic and non-kinetic approaches. We’ve engaged community leaders, we’ve engaged vigilante approach, we’ve engaged people in dialogues, getting traditional leaders to embark on reconciliation, addressing the political grievances of some politicians who have not been able to manage the defeat of losses from the last election.
“But we are on it. I think we are getting close to a final solution to the issues of banditry, kidnapping and these sorts of crime in Imo State.”
Uzodimma further said Nigerians had not been able to learn how to manage political defeat since 1999, noting that the nation’s democracy was “highly threatened” because of this.
“People are not doing politics with the spirit of sportsmanship as it is practised in other climes.
“People are so bitter when they’re not able to have their way, and they can go to any length to ensure that individual or personal interest is achieved,” the governor added.