 The movement for survival of its own ethnic nationality in Niger Delta says the agitation for self-rule by the people of the Niger Delta will continue as long as the imbalance in the National Assembly is yet to be corrected. The group made this known during the 54th Bori Day Anniversary which was commemorated in Balsa, Delta and River State with a theme on locking potentials for liberation. Correspondent Jesse C. completes this report. The sons and daughters of his own nation marching and singing in remembrance of their late hero, Isaac Jasper Boro, the founder of the Just Struggle. Many years after his death, his people say the federal government is here to address issues that made him take up arms against the state. The movement for survival of his own ethnic nationality in the Niger Delta most end says the 1999 constitution and other imbalances in governance are responsible for continuous agitations in the region. We're going to liaise with Ninas, we're going to all talk with other ethnic nationalities across Nigeria. As we speak, election is, election is some months away from now, but nobody talks about resource restructuring anymore, it has fizzled out, nobody's talking about it, and it cannot go anywhere because you take the numerical strength of the National Assembly to be able to realise that, and in an assembly where you don't have a balance, you don't have a numerical balance, it is as good as dead on arrival. So therefore, what is difficult for the government to call for a referendum? Boro's influence on the people is a strong one, other Niger Delta stakeholders maintain he fought selflessly to give his people a sense of belonging. We are together, and what we have laid down in the Niger Delta, we also have federal ethnic nationality in the Niger Delta too, we have the same feeling, the same goal, and the same thinking. And no matter how the Niger Delta government manipulates and then tries to cause divide and root parties against the Niger Delta, we don't care, but what we believe, the spirit always puts us together when the time comes like this. We were fought for the same struggle in the Niger Delta people, and for the establishment of a progressive state to be a state in the faith ratio. The federal government is not sincere, our leaders are not sincere, the problem of the Niger Delta people is caused by our leaders and the cost of their insincerity. We have fought a great battle for the people of Niger Delta to speak and receive our set goal, because there are lots of things that we are facing in the Niger Delta, which our communities and our youth are suffering from. The late Boro is said to have resorted to armed struggle when he declared the Niger Delta Republic in February 23, 1966, but used advice to employ other non-violent means of agitations in getting the central government's attention for the region. Just CSE for Plus TV News.