As reactions continue to trail former Minister of Aviation, Chief
Femi Fani-Kayode’s three part essay that followed the deportation of
some destitute of Igbo extraction from Lagos to Anambra State, the
controversial former minister has once more stressed that he was
misunderstood.
In an interview with LEADERSHIP Sunday
yesterday in Abuja, Fani-Kayode said his true intentions as expressed
in one of the articles, “The Bitter Truth About The Igbo”, was
misconstrued by Nigerians especially the Igbos.
According to him, “It was never my intention to hurt anybody or to in
anyway disparage the Igbos, just in the same way that I felt that my
brother and friend Orji Uzor Kalu’s comment about Lagos being ‘no man’s
land’ and that 55% of the revenue generated in Lagos and businesses in
Lagos belong to the Igbos. I didn’t take offense personally and I didn’t
think the Yoruba people did, but we disagreed with him. And in the same
way, I didn’t feel my own analysis about the Igbos would upset the Igbo
people, they may disagree but I really didn’t realise that it would
upset them to this extent. So, it is regrettable that anything I had
said would have made anybody fell uncomfortable. It certainly wasn’t my
intention to hurt anybody,
“I can’t apologise for my expressions in my essay. What I can say I
regret is the reactions that it elicited among people. My historical
expressions have not been in any way refuted, there are historical facts
and am not going to pretend and say that I was not accurate. So, I
can’t apologise for historical facts that I enunciated, but what I can
say however, that has been much of big regret for me is that my
intentions were misconstrued by members of the Igbo community in this
country. I have absolutely nothing against Igbos.
“As a matter of fact I have very strong ties with the Igbo people,
myself and my family for three or four generations we have very strong
ties with the Igbos. So, for anybody to say that am anti-Igbo that means
I have been misunderstood which is regrettable. This is only an
intellectual debate; it doesn’t go deep with me. It is an intellectual
exercise,” he stressed.
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