Former Aviation Minister, Chief Osita Chidoka, has urged Nigerians to reject the call for any form of military intervention and fight for the deepening of democracy in Nigeria.
Chidoka, who disclosed this in a statement signed and made available to Journalists in Awka on Wednesday by his media aide, Ikechukwu Okafor, insisted that military intervention would not augur well for the country.
“I was a young student activist and attended some of the meetings where the decision to support a military intervention in 1993 was canvassed. After Abacha came to power and the struggle to reinstate democracy started, mayhem was let loose on civil society and politicians. I located Fred Eno, Abiola’s Personal Assistant, in Enugu Prison months after he was arrested without any information. Our late Chancellor at Eastern Mandate Union, Dr Arthur Nwankwo, and Prof Udenta were in detention when Gen. Abacha died. All those who supported the military intervention in 1993 paid dearly for it.” Chidoka recounted.
“Democracy is our best option. Nigerians should reject calls for military intervention as it would not augur well for the country,” the former Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) Corps Marshal said. Adding that military rule delivered economic retrogression and led to the “lost decade” of the 1990s.
According to him, “By 1999, our foreign reserves stood at $3 billion, economic growth averaged two percent, and we were a pariah nation and highly indebted to foreign lenders. After eight years of President Obasanjo, our foreign reserve was over $60 billion, and our balance sheet was clean after an unprecedented debt relief and economic growth at the rate of 6% annually. Chidoka explained.
Chidoka, who was Minister of Aviation under President Goodluck Jonathan, said that economic growth under the Jonathan administration was strong at over 7% and delivered positive economic outcomes across various sectors.
“The military delivered death, killing Kudirat Abiola, Ken Saro-Wiwa, Alfred Rewane, and many others. They muzzled the press and destroyed our national institutions like NLC, NANS, and religious organisations. Their record of economic outcomes was abysmal and set the stage for poverty in the land.
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