Sunday, June 28, 2026
FB X LI YT
Breaking
Alaafin to Be Honoured in Bahia, Brazil as UNESCO Recognises OYO: The City of Yoruba Cultural Heritage as a World Heritage Site Adeboye to US: “Terrorism Has Reached My Doorstep” – Urges Stronger Nigeria Partnership BREAKING: FG Announces ‘World-Class’ Discovery of Platinum, Lithium, Rare Earth Minerals in Kaduna CRACKDOWN πŸ‡³πŸ‡¬πŸ”«: Plateau Illegal Arms Makers Confess They Sold Locally Made Guns to Fulani Militias Because They Paid More, Nigerian Military Reveals. Trump Claims US Military Action Stopped Killings of Christians in Nigeria, But Nigerian Forces Led the Ground Fight BREAKING πŸ‡³πŸ‡¬πŸ“±: NCC Board Chairman Idris Olorunnimbe Pledges to Seek Presidential Incentives for Investors Willing to Establish Smartphone Manufacturing Factories in Nigeria. BREAKING πŸ‡³πŸ‡¬πŸš”: Nigeria Police in Lagos and Ogun Launch Operation Kosaye, a Joint Security Initiative to Tackle Kidnapping, Armed Robbery and Other Criminal Activities Across Both States. πŸŽ“πŸ”₯ LASU Sets IED 302 Question on Sheikh Hamad Labeeb’s Western vs Islamic Education Remarks.
NEWS

Yoruba group advocates for regional Government in Nigeria

November 11, 2024 2 min read

November 11, 2024

By Samuel Ogunsona

The Yoruba Conservative Union has called for a paradigm shift in Nigeria’s Governmental system, advocating for the replacement of the current Unitary system.

This was contained in a video published by TVC monitored by The Yoruba Times on Monday, November 11, 2024.

According to the demonstrators, its aimed at empowering each region to control its resources and pay royalties to the Federal Government.

At a rally in Abeokuta, the group’s National Coordinator, Ayodeji Optimist, emphasized that this system would foster competition among regions, driving development and growth.

He said, β€œThere would be a competition, every region would want to develop, the resources of each region would remain there and the token, like 20% will be taken to the Federal, so it won’t be a case of Monkey dey work, Baboon dey chop,”

Supporters of the movement, like Ibraheem Bashir, believe that regional Government would help develop local governments and cater to diverse regional needs.

β€œIf we adopt the regional system, our revenues stay in the region, and we would be able to improve our country better,” Bashir noted.

Nigeria’s complex ethnic landscape, with over 250 ethnic groups and 800 dialects, has often been cited as a challenge to its democratic stability.

The country’s history of regional rivalry and ethnic tensions has led to calls for a more decentralized system of Government.