Why June 12 Historic, Deserves To Be Celebrated – Peter Obi

The Presidential candidate of Mr. Peter Obi has described June 12 as a historic day that deserves to be celebrated by Nigerians. 

Mr. Obi urged Nigerians to let the spirit of June 12 is celebrated as Democracy Day in Nigeria inspiring us to correct the errors of the 25th of February, as the surest root to restoring and deepening our democracy.

Obi in a Democracy Day message to Nigerians said that “ the challenge of June 12 and a dedicated Democracy Day is to inspire us to correct the errors of our recent elections.

On that day in 1993, we the people of Nigeria stated our unreserved preference for true democracy. Though under military rule, we freely chose a transparent voting method. Our votes reflected our true choice as a people. Our choice on that day defied divisions of ethnicity, religion, and region.

‘It is these qualities that added up to make June 12 special in our search for true democracy.

‘Our collective choice of late Chief M. K.O AbIola as a worthy leader for nation was saluted by Nigerians and governments and peoples across the world.

‘Therefore, June 12 underpins our long collective journey to nationhood as a true democracy.’

Read Also: PEPC: Obi Tenders, Plays Video Evidence At Tribunal

‘However, the current state of our politics tells a different story. Our democracy is deeply troubled while our nation’s destiny remains uncertain and precarious.

‘We remain a nation in search of solutions to too many basic problems. One of these is the search for a credible electoral system that would command the trust, confidence and belief of ALL Nigerians just like June 12 did.

‘We should, therefore, use the commemoration of June 12 as an occasion to return to the true virtues of a truly democratic nation. We achieved that feat on June 12, 1993.

‘In the spirit of June 12, therefore, we need to emplace an electoral system that commands the trust of the people. This is in recognition of the tenets and core values of democracy, which rests on respect for the wishes of the people as expressed in their ballots.

‘Above all, government must respect and protect the institutions of the democratic state by respecting the social contract with the people by meeting their needs, obeying their wishes and fulfilling the responsibilities of responsible governance as contained in the constitution. A cardinal responsibility of government in this regard is respect for the rule off law.

‘Regrettably, we are now in an era where these foundational pillars of democracy are undermined by prevalent impunity and pervasive violence and bloodletting.

‘The trust deficit between the leaders and Nigerians continues to expand. The deficits of trust and efficiency in our last elections demonstrate this malady quite boldly.

Africa Today News, New York

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *