The Vice President speaking in his keynote address
at the 10th Memorial Anniversary of Late Justice P. O. E. Bassey, held at the
International Conference Center of the University of Calabar on Thursday, that the new government will place more importance to merit system before the existing federal character in its bid to appoint ministers.
With the theme of the memorial lecture; “Social Virtues and
the Nigerian Renaissance”, the Vice President extolled the values of respect
for merit in the country; the principles of integrity and trust as well as the
need for social justice to be institutionalised.
As he puts it, “If we take government seriously, we must as
Nigerians take merit before federal character.”
However, he explained that the government will not ignore
Federal Character but that merit must come first during consideration.
The Memorial lecture attended by the governor of Cross River
State Prof. Ben Ayade also had two guest speakers, Mr. Donald Duke, former
governor of Cross River State and Dr. Oby Ezekwesili, former federal cabinet
minister.
Duke in his address reiterated the essence of a strong
judicial system that would define the societal values and ensure discipline
where necessary. He said in the inter-workings of the arms of governments: the
Executive, the legislature and the Judiciary, the Rule of Law should not be a
political slogan but a norm. “the executive and the judiciary should ensure
discipline and punishment where and whenever necessary”.
Dr. Oby Ezekwesili on her part spoke on the core values that
enable safeguard against instabilities in a country. According to her, a
government fails when it refuses to promote clear shared values which underpin
the way the society should be.
She identified values such as merit, integrity, trust and
hard work. Noting that we have had governments and systems that turn to often
reward bad and punish good instead of rewarding good and punishing bad.
“We fail because citizens were not mobilized to embrace the
core values of a society. Nigerians should arise and shape a national identity
because a rallying unity of purpose begets a national vision.


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