From Okwe Obi, Abuja
The Inter -Party Advisory Council (IPAC), has said that the Senate president should be zoned to either the South-South or South-East, for the sake fairness.
IPAC also demanded more appointments of women and youth in government which it said would be the most vibrant demographic groups in the country.
Its National Chairman, Yabaji Sani in a statement yesterday said: “The Inter Party Advisory Council (IPAC) held its General Assembly meeting on crucial national issues that will further consolidate the nation’s participatory democracy and resolved as follows:
“To ensure federal character as enshrined in the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999, as amended, and ethno-religious balancing, the Senate President should be zoned to the South-East or South-South geo-political zone.
“The candidate that will emerge will address the required ethno-religious balancing in view of the fact that the All Progressives Congress (APC) National Chairman, Senator Abdullahi Adamu, President-elect, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, Vice President-elect, Alhaji Kashim Shettima and the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Hon. Justice Olukayode Ariwoola are all of the same faith.
“This will help to restore confidence of the people from the South-East and South-South geo-political zones and indeed all Nigerians in the unity of the country.
“Also, the historic precedence is the example of Chief Olusegun Obasanjo’s PDP Government in 1999 when it deliberately zoned the Senate Presidency to the South-East and ensured that every zone was accommodated in the power sharing equation thereby helping to calm frayed nerves and peace throughout his eight years administration.
“IPAC calls on all relevant stakeholders to embark on deliberate actions that will help to reconcile, heal and unite the nation.
“This will eliminate the winner takes all syndrome and further ethno-religious inclusivity and a strong, virile, united, progressive, prosperous, equitable and just democratic nation.
“This is without prejudice to the ongoing Election Petitions at Various Election Petition Tribunals in the country.
“IPAC was deeply concerned by the ethno-religious sentiments that characterized the 2023 general election nomination of Presidential candidates and campaigns, which adversely polarized the nation and undermined issues-based campaigns that would have strengthened our frail electoral process.
“Nigerians witnessed the worst campaign since 1999 when democracy was restored in the country.
“Council is strongly determined to stop the dastardly do-or-die politics, garrison politics, ethno-religious profiling and stomach infrastructure that have impeded our hard-earned democracy and impoverished the masses who sold their votes for a mess of electoral porridge.
“IPAC demands more appointments of women and youth in government as the most vibrant demographic groups in the country.
“The continued marginalization of women and youth in the previous and incumbent governments must stop forthwith. No nation makes progress without the active participation of women and youth.
“Their involvement in the 2023 general election was an eloquent testimony of their preparedness to serve the fatherland and should be given the opportunity to do so.
“Council urges all the key stakeholders to be proactive and run an inclusive government. This is the only way to carry Nigerians along in governance and provide the essential dividends of democracy.
“As the umbrella body of all the registered political parties in Nigeria, IPAC will always be in the vanguard for sustainable democracy and good governance in Nigeria.”

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