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What Obasanjo said during meeting with Fulani leaders

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Former President Olusegun Obasanjo, on Saturday, met with leaders of the Gan-Allah Fulani Development Association of Nigeria (GAFDAN), an umbrella group for Fulani organisations.

The meeting, which held at the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library (OOPL), had in attendance, Yinka Odumakin, spokesman of Afenifere, and Dayo Adewole, son of former minister of health who was recently kidnapped in Oyo state.

Sale Bayari, GAFDAN national chairman, led delegates of the association, drawn from south-west states, Kogi and Kwara states to the meeting.

It was gathered that Adewole’s son was invited to the meeting to narrate his ordeal, adding that the essence of the meeting was to proffer a solution to the killings and kidnappings across the country.

“We are all in darkness, all of us, we are in the darkness. We need to be in the light. I want to learn from you; I hope you will learn from me too. And at the end of the meeting, we will be able to proffer solutions to the happenings in the region,” Obasanjo said.

READ ALSO: IGP, Northern governors bent on keeping El-Zakzaky in Nigeria – Investigation

In the communique issued after the meeting, Obasanjo said the meeting is part of his efforts to understand and facilitate the mitigation of the insecurity and criminality that is pervading south-west states and Nigeria.

“It is critical for us as a people to start talking to each other with a view to find the practical solutions to deal with the challenges. One of the problems worrying the society is the problem of cover-ups and denials by both community and public institutional leadership that ought to expose these problems and deal with them,” the communique read.

“Stigmatization and victimization of a group of people, in this case the Fulani is of grave concern. The Fulani have both good and bad people. The action of bad Fulani should not be taken against all the Fulani.

“Fulani are also victims of kidnapping, banditry, cattle rustling and loss of property etc. There are other tribes who feel so in Yorubaland, and there are Yoruba who feel so in other geo-political regions of Nigeria. So the idea of moving tribal groups en masse from one geo political region to another is inpracticable and should not be talked about by leaders. g. We have to work as one community through our various efforts and responsibilities to protect and safeguard the interest of the community.”

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