A former military Head of State, General Abdulsalami Abubakar, has called on state governors to guard the utterances.
Abubakar said that their words were capable of inciting communal clashes in the country.
The Chairman of the National Peace Committee, spoke on Thursday morning on “The Morning Show,” a programme on Arise TV.
He said it was painful that Nigerians had yet to learn from past mistakes of inter-tribal wars.
He, therefore, called on members of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum to take full responsibility for securing life and property as well as embrace dialogue.
According to him: “The governors have found themselves in a difficult situation. It is their responsibility to guard their states regardless of who and who is in their states.
“Ethnic disharmony is rearing itself all over the place. You could see where the herders are being chased from some of parts of the Southern states and their cattle are being killed. Certainly, this (has) heightened tension in the country.
“Some people are also migrating from one part of the country back to their states where they feel safer. God forbid this is taking us back to the 1960 where we had a problem that resulted in the civil war.
“That is why myself and the peace committee are calling for caution so that we do not go back to that road.”
Asked what the governors must do to quell the tension in the country at the moment, Abubakar said: “They must make sure there is law and order in their states and they should watch their utterances because what they say, people will take it as an order.
“They as governors should be aware of what they say; they should not say anything that will be misread that they are fighting people who are not of their state origin.
“Having said that, there must be dialogue between the people who they feel are committing crimes in their areas. Certainly, if some people commit crimes, they should be arrested and prosecuted. It is their responsibility to save livmfe and property of all Nigerians living in their states.”
Recall that some governors in the country including Bauchi State Governor, Bala Mohammed; and his Ondo State counterpart, Rotimi Akeredolu, had disagreed in recent times over the use of AK-47 rifles by herdsmen.
While Mohammed said the herders bore arms to protect their cattle from being rustled by bandits, Akeredolu disagreed, saying the statement of the Bauchi governor could usher Nigerians “into the next level on the path to anarchy.”
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