Tuesday, 17 May 2016

How I escaped death during June 12 crisis — Ooni of Ife

                       
                     
At a time the spate of  violence across Nigeria  seems to be threatening national security, the Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Enitan Ogunwusi Ojaja II, offers a valuable intervention, in this interview conducted at his palace preparatory to a non-violence programme, Peace Icons and the NMVA, coordinated by veteran broadcaster and cultural activist , Mr. Cally Ikpe. The monarch, who  has passion for getting the teeming youths of Nigeria  gainfully engaged, examines the country’s rate of violence within the context of the role of the youths and concludes that addressing the challenge is an urgent issue of national interest. He ascended the throne in December, 2015. 
Your concern about the youths in the country is well known  especially on empowerment and youth violence. How concerned are you about the spate of violence everywhere in the country? I am indeed very concerned because if you look at the statistics of those engaging in violence all over the world, they are mostly youths between the ages of 18 and 40 years. Those formative years you don’t have proper balance. You will rarely see someone of about 60 or 80 years engaging in violence. Between the ages of 10 and 18, you will easily  see people in that category engage in violence. But at  above 18, you will start developing the rebellious spirit that  ‘I can be on my own, I don’t want to be to taught again, I think I can stand on my own’, peer influence and all sorts of advice from bad fellowship. So it  pretty much has to do with the formative years and it really has to be carefully guided.
What do you say about people being under the impression that violence is profitable and and maybe somehow government is encouraging it?  
Ooni Ogunwusi I don’t believe in that school of thought that violence is profitable You can spin violence in different ways. You can spin it in a positive or negative way. One is very productive, the other  is counterproductive. When you spin violence in a negative manner, then it becomes very destructive, When you spin violence in a very positive manner, you become  constructive. If you look at the pioneers of this country, they were not violent but they stood up to save this country and they were young men. The  likes of Awolowo, Ahmadu Bello and Azikiwe among others. So my point is that violence cannot be called any other name than violence if is destructive. In Nigeria today, over 70 percent of the youths  are jobless. Nothing is moving for them, so they intend to look for the easiest way out by saying that if I decide to go against the law, I will make quick money and I can oppress other people. It is a systemic thing, you don’t just probably think violence is profitable. If they had alternatives, I don’t think they will embrace violence. I don’t belong to that school of thought, my school of thought is let the system  work, let the system  run, then we can separate the grain from the chaff.
Do you think government is actually doing enough to discourage this trend because, sometimes, we have seen government trying to go into negotiations with kidnappers, Boko Haram terrorists, hijackers, blackmailers and other criminal elements?
It is neither here nor there. When such a situation comes up, you look at the overall interest and what is the overall interest? National security. Any time national security comes in, that is when government may try negotiating because the country is bigger than all of us but violence is simply bad. What is bad is bad. The truth is that things are not working. I think we can spin it in a different way. And the way we can spin it is for the youths to take things upon themselves and be more responsible, we should not put everything to government. We should stand up like a united force. If we have good leadership in terms of youth associations, I think government will  listen, but if we say we want to put everything to government by saying they are doing less,  you can’t satisfy 70 percent of 180 million people. The rate at which our population has grown over the last 20 to 30 years is in geometric progression and there has not been much plan and much provision for that rapid population growth. So it is important for us to rise to the occasion. Once we rise up to that occasion, it can reduce on  gradual basis.

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