Arewa Consultative Youth and Women Forum (ACYWF) has distanced itself from the criticism and protest in some quarters over the relocation of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) from Abuja to Lagos.
The Forum, comprising over 50 Arewa Groups, rather appraised recent efforts by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration in the aviation sector, including the relocation of FAAN to Lagos, adding that they were satisfied with the developments.
This was even as the Northern Forum sent a strong message to the immediate past Minister of Aviation, Senator Hadi Sirika, to stay off President Tinubu’s government and allow the administration to propel the policies and programmes it deems necessary to renew and reform the ministries, departments, and agencies of government.
ACYWF, in a statement signed on Tuesday by the National President, Alhaji Adamu Mohammed Matazu, and made available to Tribune Online, commended the bold step taken by President Tinubu in relocating FAAN. According to Mohammed Matazu, it does not matter where the office is located, provided that efficiency and productivity are not compromised.
“We read with total shock how some of our people have decided to trivialise issues of national importance like the relocation of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria office to Lagos.
What we have not yet understood is what they stand to gain from all of these. We have a plethora of issues begging for regional emergency and attention.
We are faced with insecurity, banditry, kidnapping, and insurgency across our land. We have countless IDP centres that should rather bother us with how to relocate them to their ancestral homes.
“It would have been a good discourse if our Northern elders were talking to the President about how to relocate these IDPs, create rehabilitation centres for the victims of attacks, bring humanitarian interventions to the people, create more empowerment for the people, and get some of the moribund cottage industries and factories in the north to work again.
“The last time we checked, Lagos was still part of Nigeria, and most of the government infrastructure domiciled in Lagos is doing well. It would have been a different thing if FAAN was moved to the Benin Republic or Niger.
“If moving FAAN to Lagos will bring the desired reform and change the face of the aviation industry for the betterment of all Nigerians, we, the youths and women leaders from the North, are fully in support of it.
We believe in one Nigeria, and we believe in the progress and development of this nation. We don’t have two countries.
Some of us haven’t gone out of this country before, not to mention acquiring two citizenship. So, we must believe in Nigeria and support the Nigeria project.
“The recent increase in kidnappings in the city centre of the Federal Capital Territory should be of great concern to everyone.
If kidnappers could visit the Army Estate in Abuja and conveniently kidnap their victims, then they could attack anywhere in Abuja.
This is why some multinational companies are contemplating relocating their offices and foreign embassies to Lagos, where security is guaranteed.”
The Forum, however, cautioned former Aviation Minister Senator Sirika and others to stop the blackmailing efforts of the Tinubu administration.
“Sirika wasted the opportunity to write his name in gold. Ordinarily, he should be cooling off somewhere by now but has resolved to sponsor all manner of blackmail against this government, which is totally wrong.
“Sirika is yet to explain how he allegedly swindled the Federal Government in the Air Nigeria project, not to mention how he spent N12 billion to purchase 10 fire trucks, meaning that each truck cost N1.2 billion. Or how he spent $600,000 on logo design, contracted to a Bahraini company before the project was suspended?”
The Forum, while declaring its support for Tinubu’s government, says no amount of blackmail would deter them from praying for the President to succeed in his quest to renew the hope of Nigerians, northerners included.