RABIU Kwankwaso, vice-presidential candidate of the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC), has said that the north and south-east geopolitical zones share a longstanding bond that should be strengthened in the interest of national unity and political inclusion.
News Point Nigeria reports that Kwankwaso made the remarks in an interview published by BBC Igbo on Wednesday, where he stressed that Nigeria’s political leaders had, over the years, demonstrated the importance of reconciliation and inclusion following the civil war.
“We have to forgive ourselves. We have to work together as a family. South-east has been our ally, our friends, over the years,” Kwankwaso said.
The former governor of Kano State cited the alliance between the Northern People’s Congress (NPC) and the National Council of Nigerian Citizens (NCNC) during the First Republic, noting that the partnership involved prominent leaders such as Nnamdi Azikiwe.
According to him, political leaders in the Second Republic, including former President Shehu Shagari and other leaders of the National Party of Nigeria (NPN), also maintained close political ties with the south-east.
“During our own time, or the time of our fathers, grandfathers in politics — in the first republic — you could see the NPC then, which is mainly a northern political party, had an alliance with the NCNC, headed by Nnamdi Azikiwe,” the former minister said.
“Even in the second republic, you could see our leaders, Shagari and co, of course, went coincidentally to the south-east and even Anambra state, even Azikiwe himself from Anambra state, and so on and so forth. So our leaders had foresight.
“The civil war was finished in 1970. In 1978 and 1979, when democracy came back, the first thing they said was, ‘Look, they are not our enemies. Let’s prove to them. Let’s bring them. Let’s work together.’
“Our leaders of the first republic worked together with them, and that’s how they brought Alex Ekwueme to be the vice president.”
Kwankwaso described the late former Vice-President Alex Ekwueme as a friend of the north, recalling that he attended his burial in Oko, Anambra State.
“I went to Oko, the hometown. I was there during Alex Ekwueme’s burial. Throughout his life, he was our friend. It’s only that democracy was truncated,” he said.
The NDC vice-presidential candidate also referenced the return of former Biafran leader, Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, from exile and his subsequent participation in Nigeria’s political process.
“The NPN, a mainly northern party, had to invite Ojukwu to come back. He came back, contested for a senate seat and lost. But despite the fact that he was the leader of Biafra at that particular time, our leaders decided to forgive themselves and forge ahead,” Kwankwaso stated.
He emphasised the need for forgiveness and reconciliation among Nigerians, regardless of differing perspectives on historical events.
“We cannot be in the same country and start fighting. We have to have the spirit of forgiveness, whoever offended the other. It depends on who is giving the story.
“We are so happy that we in the north have decided to go back to history to work with the south-east. That’s not to say we are fighting the south-west or any zone in this country. No, we are all friends.”
Kwankwaso further argued that politics at the national level cannot be built around religious, ethnic or regional divisions.
“You can’t play politics in this country alone—politics of Muslims, or Christians, or north, or south — not at this level,” he said.
Kwankwaso, who is from Kano State in northern Nigeria, is the running mate to Peter Obi, a south-easterner from Anambra State, in the Nigeria Democratic Congress ticket for the 2027 presidential election.

