Eight years after, facts have emerged on how the
Deputy President of the Senate, Ike Ekweremadu, nominated the late President
Musa Yar’Adua for the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize.
The letter titled: ‘Nomination for the 2010 Nobel
Peace Prize: Re: Alhaji Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, President, Federal Republic of
Nigeria’ and dated January 6, 2009, was addressed to the Norwegian Nobel
Committee, Oslo, Norway.
Ekweremadu predicated Yar’Adua’s nomination on the
late president’s inclination for peace and justice for all, noting that
although Yar’Adua had the option of full military operation in the Niger Delta,
he chose the dialogue and amnesty option in resolving the militancy challenge
in the region.
He wrote in part: “President Umaru Yar’Adua is a
man with natural inclination for peace and justice. He has demonstrated an
uncommon ability for achieving peace in his capacities as the President of
Nigeria and the Chairman of the Authority of Heads of State and Government,
Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).
“Situations in the Niger Delta region had already
assumed monumentally grave proportions bordering on insurgency at the time the
President assumed leadership of Nigeria on May 29, 2007.
“The youths of the region had mobilised into the
creeks and taken up arms in their tens of thousands under different fronts to
wrest the control of their resources from the Federal Government of Nigeria,
kidnapping oil workers, and sabotaging foreign oil interests with direct impact
on oil productions and revenues.
“Although the president had the usual option of
total military engagement to dislodge the militants, with attendant
humanitarian consequences in the Niger Delta, he chose the peaceful options of
dialogue and unconditional amnesty to all the militants.
“This has been nationally and globally acclaimed as
an uncommon masterstroke and a huge success. Over 30,000 militants embraced the
olive branch, denounced violence, and turned in their weapons. They are
currently quartered in rehabilitation camps where they are also undergoing
vocational trainings.
“Furthermore, the president has undertaken robust
policy initiatives to deliver physical and human capital development in the
region. He has practically committed billions of naira towards this in addition
to the mandate of the existing Niger Delta Development Commission and a
distinct Ministry of Niger Delta, which he created to directly oversee and
speed up development in the Niger Delta area. This has resulted in calm, safety
of lives and property in the Niger Delta and the Gulf of Guinea.”
When contacted, the Special Adviser on Media to the
Deputy President of Senate, Mr. Uche Anichukwu, who confirmed the authenticity
of the letter, however, revealed that the former president did not know about
it before his death.
However, a copy of the acknowledgement letter from
Nobel Prize Committee was eventually transmitted to his widow, Hajiya Turai
Yar’Adua.
“Even though the prize was ultimately clinched by Liu
Xiaobo, Ekweremadu was nevertheless happy that the former president’s name had
gone down in history as a man naturally inclined to peace and justice and
indeed a father to all,” he said. Yar'Adua died on May 5, 2010, after a
protracted illness.
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