Rabiu Kwankwaso, presidential candidate of the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) in the 2023 election, has accused Lagos, a veiled reference to Bola Tinubu, of plotting to “colonise” Northern Nigeria.
Speaking during the convocation ceremony at Skyline University in Kano, the former Kano State governor alleged that Lagos played a significant role in the ongoing emirate tussle in the state.
“Let me note our situation here in Kano and indeed northern Nigeria. Today, we can see clearly that there's a lot of effort from the Lagos axis to colonise this part of the country," he said.
Today, Lagos wouldn’t allow us to choose an emir. Lagos has to come to the centre of Kano to put their own emir.”
The leader of the Kwankwassiya Movement further raised concerns about tax collection and economic centralisation, accusing Lagos of siphoning resources from Kano and other northern states.
“Today, we are aware that the Lagos young men are working so hard to impose taxes and take away our taxes from Kano and this part of the country to Lagos. Even the telephones that we make or register here in Kano, efforts are there to take all the taxes to Lagos," he alleged, in probable reference to Tinubu's tax bills.
“Even our sons and daughters who have brought factories—many of them here in Kano and northern Nigeria—and even banks, somehow, they are forced to take their headquarters to Lagos because taxes will now have to go to Lagos.”
The NNPP leader also decried the widening gap between the rich and the poor, describing the situation as perilous for the nation.
“We have seen the efforts of some people to make the poor poorer and the rich richer, and I believe this is more dangerous,” he added.
Kwankwaso urged northern lawmakers to remain vigilant and resist policies that might disadvantage the region.
“At this moment, I would like to call all our National Assembly members to keep their eyes open so that they don’t do anything that would cheat the people of northern Nigeria, especially here, Kano,” he said.
Reflecting on past legislative decisions, he alleged that lawmakers were once bribed to pass laws that significantly harmed the economy of the northern region and other states.
“We are witnesses to what happened during the first term, 1999 to 2000, where our members of the National Assembly were bribed, were treated into collecting huge sums of money to support offshore in this country. That law put a huge blow into our economy not only here in northern Nigeria but all other states,” Kwankwaso affirmed
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