Ondo State Governor Rotimi Akeredolu, has said that the Presidency of Nigeria must come to the South in 2023 in honour of the unwritten power rotation arrangement in the country.
The governor insisted that nothing must be done to change the power rotation agreement in the country since the return to civil rule in 1999, while speaking on Wednesday at the one-year remembrance of Prof. Bankole Oke of the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Ibadan,
Akeredolu, noted that the presidential candidate of the Labour Party, Peter Obi, is right to contest next year’s election because he is from the southern part of Nigeria.
“A party that picked somebody from the North as its presidential candidate is not doing so in the country’s interest. (Peter) Obi has the right to contest because he is from the South,” Akeredolu said.
“We are ready to give it whatever it takes to make sure power returns to the South in 2023.
“There appears to be an understanding that power must rotate between the North and the South. This understanding witnessed the contest of two candidates from the South-West for the Presidency. It was part of the unwritten agreement that the power equation must be balanced to allay the fear of domination harboured by the people of the South.
There is a conscious attempt not to disrupt the extant agreement. There has been a seamless transition from one civilian regime to another since 1999, the longest in the political history of the country.
“The current political permutations raise strong suspicions on an undeclared motive to thwart the arrangement that has been working for the country. The rotation of the office of the President is between the North and the South since the inception of the Fourth Republic.”