- The federal government recently announced that it has acquired a radio licence to broadcast to Fulani - The government says will help in reaching out to the herders with the message of peace, unity, tolerance and education - The Oodua Peoples Congress has described the move as questionable and not acceptable Foremost Yoruba nationalist organization, Oodua People’s Congress (OPC) on Thursday, May 23, kicked against the establishment of a Fulani radio station by the federal government. The group described the motive behind such establishment for a section of the country as questionable and not acceptable. In a press statement issued by its publicity secretary, Barrister Yinka Oguntimehin, and sent to journalists the group flayed the federal government’s decision, saying it was not in any way sincere about it. “We need to be wary of the actions coming from the federal government these days, especially, on the issuance of a licence to the Fulani for the establishment of a Fulani ra...
Course material, Research Work from chapter 1- 5, Publishing, News, Entertainment, Sport, School Gist.