Nigeria: Afe Babalola Speaks On Distribution of Palliatives By Govt

"Those complaining about hunger and protesting, are doing so sincerely. They are hungry. A hungry man can go to any length to show his anger. The protest was genuine and the government should listen to them," Afe Babalola said.

The founder of the Afe Babalola University Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD), Afe Babalola, on Thursday, declared that the Federal Government palliatives have reduced the people to beggars, and is also leading them to poverty.

The legal luminary stated this when the Prestige Sisters League paid him a 'Thank You' visit at the ABUAD campus.

He noted that those protesting against hunger were doing so genuinely because everyone knows there is hunger in the country.

"Those who are complaining about hunger are doing so sincerely. They are hungry. A hungry man can go to any length to show his anger. We do not need anybody to tell us that there is hunger in the country. The protest was genuine and the government should listen to them.

"The duty of the government is the welfare of the people. The problem we have now is that people cannot move freely. They have abandoned the farms. People are being killed in their farms and everybody wants to stay where they are safe. It is because the government has failed in this regard that we have hunger," he said.

Mr Babalola noted that it was wrong for the government to be sharing garri, beans and rice as palliatives, stating that they were turning the people to beggars.

"The government that is giving the people rice and beans is leading us to poverty. The government is discouraging people from working, whereas, the duty of the government is to provide the people with an enabling environment to work and feed themselves," he added.

Mr Babalola made the comments just as he declared support for The Patriots, led by the former Secretary General of the Commonwealth, Emeka Anyaoku, in pleading with President Bola Tinubu to, as a matter of urgency, consider enactment of a new constitution.

"I read the publication of the Patriots visiting President Tinubu and I am in full agreement with them. We need a new constitution. But I do not agree that we should go through any constitutional conference.

"Recently, you are aware that President Bola Tinubu asked us to go back to the old National Anthem; there was no conference for it before it was passed by the National Assembly and assented by the President. The 1963 constitution was the one made by all of us. By the same token, the parliament should bring back the 1963 constitution and reenact it," he advised.

Speaking on behalf of the Prestige Sisters, the President, Adeboyejo B. O., described Mr Babalola's kind gesture to them over three and half decades ago as an intervention that transformed their lives.

"Thirty-five years ago, the Prestige Sisters League with forty members then, wrote a letter to you to be our Life Patron and you gladly accepted and hosted us in your residence.

"You gave us fatherly advice, prayed for us and then gave us One thousand (N1,000) naira. You told us we should not share the money, that we should use the money to start a Cooperative Society, and that was the beginning of the success, elevation, unity and love in the Prestige Sisters League! We are here today to share the success story," she said.

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