State Creation: Anioma people proudly Igbos, will be 6th South-East state – Ned Nwoko
The lawmaker representing Delta North in the Nigerian Senate, Ned Nwoko, has maintained that the people of Anioma in Delta State are proudly Igbos and would become the 6th state of the South East.
Appearing on Channels Television’s Wednesday’s edition of Politics Today, Nwoko pointed out that the South East has been marginalised, especially in that regard, being that the region only has 5 states.
The lawmaker was confident that the Federal Government would certainly create another state, which according to him, would come out of Delta State either to give the South South a 7th or a 6th for the South East.
According to Nwoko, this was the only way the federal government could assuage the Igbo.
“The creation of Anioma State is very possible. The need is for self-determination. Let me tell you this, I represent 9 local government areas.
“My constituency is made up of 9 local government areas. Out of this 9 lgas, 6 of them are oil and gas producing. We’re predominantly agricultural people. Some of it has been devastated by oil pollution.
But to have a state is something we have been clamoring for for over 50 years. We the Aniomas are proudly Igbos.
“We’ll be the 6th Ndigbo State. The fact is that the Federal Government is going to create one State. They’re going to create the state to assuage the Igbo because they’ve been marginalised.
“South East is the only part of Nigeria that is marginalised. South East is the zone in Nigeria with just 5 states. Others have 6 states except for North West that has seven.
“You don’t call that being marginalised? And if you listen to the youths who are agitating in IPOB or ESN, what are clamoring for?
“They’re talking about being marginalised. And one of the ways they’re being marginalised is having fewer states than others.
“And we, the Igbos from the other side of the river, they call us Bendel or Western Igbo, if we have a state that could become the 6th state in the South East or seventh state in the South South, the fact is that an average Igbo person will feel, ‘okay, something has been done for us’.”