Professors may work in Togo bakeries if Nigeria breaks up, Lai warns elites
The Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, has warned elite in the country against fuelling the agitation for secession.
Mohammed noted that it is in the best interest of the elite for the country try to remain one indivisible entity.
The minister stated this today when he featured on a NAN flagship interview programme, NAN Forum.
He noted that once the country is no longer together the elite might be stripped of certain privileges they are enjoying in the present state as many would leave the shores of the country in droves to the neighbouring country for survival.
According to him, some elite who have attained professorial status may be left with no option but to work in bakeries in neighbouring Togo just to survive.
“Our challenge is more with the elites, not with the common people. Go to the remotest part of Nigeria today, you will see Nigerians from different tribes, culture and religion living together peacefully,” he said.
“Elites ought to take the lead in cementing the unity of the country. But when the elites start preaching tribal hatred, people believe them because they think they know better.
“Nigeria accounts for 70 percent of West Africa’s population, and if Nigeria should disintegrate today, we are going to overrun Benin Republic, Togo, Niger and other neighbouring countries.
“The elites will suffer more because some professors could be working in bakeries in Togo just to survive. We saw it happen when the Liberians came here during their civil war.
“It is in their own enlightened interest that they should work to fix Nigeria. Many of them have more than one passport — American, British, Irish — and at the first crack of trouble, they are gone.”