A former Governor of Abia State, Orji Uzor Kalu, has taken 
the campaign for an Igbo to become Nigerian president to the United 
Kingdom.
In his speech delivered to the British House of Commons, Kalu stated that the Igbo were being discriminated against and prevented from becoming President.
Kalu told the lower House of the British legislature that Njiko Igbo,
 an organisation, he coordinates, was “dedicated to the struggle for the
 ascent of a citizen of Igbo extraction to the presidency of Nigeria in 
2015.”
He said the group was formed because of evidence of 
anti-Igbo bias in the way the political architecture of the country was 
constructed.
He said, “We are neither supportive nor opposed to 
any political party or the aspirations of any individual politician. Our
 primary mission is to enlighten and mobilise the Igbo population, both 
at home and in the Diaspora, to stand firm and unite in the pursuit of 
our collective goal. Our secondary duty is to connect with and persuade 
the rest of the Nigerian population about the justice of our cause.
“Our
 methods will be conciliatory, unaggressive, solicitous and flexible but
 without being amenable to the easy compromises and defensiveness that 
reinforced prejudicial assumptions about us as a people.
We shall 
seek to accomplish our mission in a manner and style deferential to 
elders, respectful of the sensibilities of other tribal groups and 
faiths, attentive to criticisms and open to disputations.”
Kalu 
insisted that the group campaign was not based on the practice of zoning
 the presidency, which was made popular by the Peoples Democratic Party.
To
 buttress his argument, Kalu noted that the South-East geopolitical zone
 populated by the Igbo, had the least number of states, local 
governments, federal constituencies and senatorial districts.
A 
chart he presented to the British legislators showed that while the 
North-West has seven states, 186 local government areas, 92 federal 
constituencies and 21 senatorial districts, the South-East has five 
states, 95 local government areas, 43 federal constituencies, and 15 
senatorial districts.
Kalu also listed over 12 massacres of the 
Igbo in the North, beginning with the Jos massacre in 1945, the Kano 
massacre in 1953, to the recent Boko Haram attacks.
He said a disproportionate percentage of the victims were Igbo.

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