The Senator representing Rivers South-East senatorial
district in the National Assembly, Magnus Ngei Abe, on Sunday mourned the death of
the former Chairman of Andoni Local Government Area and others who lost their
lives in the ‘needless’ orgy of violence that marred Rivers State, warning
politicians to avoid spilling human blood.
Abe in a statement he personally signed last
Saturday warned against playing politics of bitterness and spilling of blood.
He stated that politics must grow beyond primitive
level, even as he called for the arrest and prosecution of those behind the
heinous murders of innocent Rivers men and women.
According to the statement, “It is unbelievable
that my friend and longtime associate, Hon. Mowan Etete, and other innocent
Rivers people are dead today (Saturday) simply because they came out to answer
the call of their country and perform their civic obligation.
“I had warned repeatedly that we should not stoke
the drums of war and Rivers people should no longer forgive any politician no
matter how highly placed that is culpable in the orgy of violence that has
characterised our recent past.
"Our politics must begin to move beyond the
primitive stage. No politician should continue to claim the power to deliver
any unit not to talk of a ward, a local government or a state.
"We must imbibe the true spirit of democracy
which means that the vote of the governor, the vote of the minister, the vote
of the senator, commissioner and that of the chairman will have the same value
as that of the bricklayer, driver, nurse and the unemployed youth.
“No one should have the power to promise or
guarantee the vote of one Nigerian to a third party.
"If you are good to your people, you can appeal
to them but you must respect their wishes where it differs from your own,” he
stated.
The statement further said the murder of Mowan and
other men and women must be treated as the heinous crime that it is. “It is not
just the gunmen but those behind the scenes who planned and orchestrated that
violence must also be brought to book,” the senator stated.
He maintained that Rivers State must grow beyond
the politics of blood, saying: “We can no longer allow our dear state to be a
byword for electoral violence and bloodshed in the comity of states.
“As we speak, we are yet to ascertain the exact number
of Rivers men and women who were murdered in the name of elections. We have to confront the situation as a
community and put a stop to it. No perpetrator should go unpunished.”
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