FIFTY-six years after independence, calls for
the restructuring of the country have dominated national discourse. It has
generated a lot of interest and passion.
Stakeholders are laying emphasis on the
entrenchment of fiscal federalism, resource control, state police, equity,
justice and fairness. The issue became topical, following the drastic reduction
in the nation’s earnings, with the slump of the price of crude oil and the
return of militancy to the Niger Delta, the growing menace of Fulani herdsmen
and the bid to review the constitution.
Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar stirred
the hornet’s nest at the launch of a book written by a writer and political analyst,
Chido Onumah, titled: We are all Biafrans. Atiku’s remark at the occasion
ignited a fresh debate on the issue. The six geo-political zones are at the
centre of the debate, which pitched the north against the south.
In view of the divergent views over
restructuring, the argument is likely to linger. Experts say the refusal to
restructure has compounded the cost of governance and that this is the time to
nip the problem in the bud.
Atiku said whether Nigeria liked it or not,
restructuring has become inevitable. He explained that, as long as the Federal
Government continued to lord it over states in all matters of national
interest, there would continue to be agitation for restructuring.
He said: “I suggest we resolve today to
support calls for the restructuring of the Nigeria’s federalism to strengthen
its unity and stabilise its democracy.
“I believe that restructuring will eventually
happen whether we like it or not. The question is whether it happens around the
conference table, in a direction influenced by us and whether we will be equal
partners in the process.”
The former Vice President explained that he
was not trying to be a messenger of doom, but only trying to draw attention to
the seriousness of the issue. He maintained that there is serious need to
diversify the economy, to make it less dependent on oil.
Stakeholders agree that avoiding
restructuring will do more damage than it intends to solve. Nobel laureate
Prof. Wole Soyinka threw his weight behind the proponents of restructuring, when
he said Nigeria’s sovereignty is negotiable. He added that it was wrong for
previous administrations to insist that the country does not require
restructuring.
Soyinka stressed that he was on the side of
those who say the country must do everything possible to avoid disintegration
by addressing the specific needs of those crying of injustice and
marginalisation.
He said: “I am on the side of those who say
we must do everything to avoid disintegration. That language I understand. I
don’t understand ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo’s language. I don’t understand
President Muhammadu Buhari’s language and all the predecessors, saying the
sovereignty of this nation is non-negotiable.
“It’s bloody well negotiable and we had
better negotiate it. We better negotiate it; not even at meetings, not at
conference, but every day in our conduct towards one another.”
Soyinka said the call is not an idle cry. He
said the Pro-National Conference Organisation (PRONACO) was the rallying point
for restructuring after the return to civilian rule in 1999. He faulted
Obasanjo’s opposition to the issue, when said it was an act of treason for
people to come out together to fashion a new constitution.
Soyinka said: “I remember the policeman who
said if we met, that would amount to treason; I was not a member of PRONACO at
the time. That is why I joined PRONACO. If you are saying to me, I am a second
class citizen, I cannot sit down and discuss the articles, breaking the
protocols of staying together and you are trying to bully me, I won’t accept
it.”
The playwright said the centralisation of
government led to the proliferation of states during the military era, adding
that it was time the country established state police, in view of the positive
impact on the polity.
He added: “I know that people get nervous
about the expression. If you go to a place like England, you sometimes see two,
three or four police officers, just walking casually unarmed, but they are
observing everything.”
Many observers say the way the country is
being run would stifle development. For instance, they maintain that each state
ought to maintain some measure of autonomy to be able to perform. They allude
to the glorious days of the First Republic, when there was healthy rivalry and
competition among the regions. Under the current dispensation, states simply go
to Abuja monthly to collect handouts and spend it without recourse to the fact
that they need to invest on their economies.
Prof. Itse Sagay said Nigeria has deviated
from fiscal federalism because of over centralisation of power. He said: “It is
wrong to centralise institution such as the Independent National Electoral
Commission (INEC), Nigeria Police, Nigeria Port Authority (NPA) and others.
Chief Obafemi Awolowo was right to have said Nigeria is not a nation, but a
mere geographical expression.”
Faulting the warped federal structure, rights
activist Mr. Femi Falana observed that the local government has been
bastardised. He denounced a system which makes the state to muscle the local governments
by the controlling its accounts. Falana said most local governments have not
been able to grow because of the grip the states have over them. He said the
constitution of Nigeria specifies the roles of the tiers of government, but
that of the council were tied to the apron strings of the states.
He said: “We need political and economic
restructuring to make all the entity to exist in ambient environment. Nigeria’s
economy is in few people’s hands. If the oil blocks were given to states or
councils they will be able to pay salaries.”
Experts say the call for restructuring is a
sign that the country’s resources have not been well managed and that it has
become expedient to rise up to the challenges.
But, the Executive Director of African
Leadership Initiative, Prof. Iyorwuese Hagher, disagreed, saying those calling
for restricting are playing politics. According to him, many are frustrated by
the Nigerian project and feel that the country needs to break up before they
can realise their personal or collective ambition.
He said: “Others are just mischievous and
insincere by the calls. The cry for restructuring is a strategy for power
sharing. But, incidentally we have been restructuring since independence.
“The difference constitutions brought in new
structures. We were a parliamentarian democracy before we became unitary
republic without federating units under the late General Thomas Aguiyi-Ironsi. Nigeria will never stop
restructuring.
“Even in the world’s most celebrated
democracy, the United States of America, the federating units get jolted from
time to time. Several states signed petitions to pull out of the US federation,
when Barack Obama was elected president eight years ago.
“The Federal Government must create space for
free expression by all Nigerians. A culture of peaceful demonstration must be
tolerated and enhanced, so that democracy can grow.”
Defending government position in the new call
for restructure, Minister for Labour and Employment, Dr. Chris Ngige, assured
Nigerians that Buhari will look at the political restructuring of the country
at the appropriate time. He explained that the President has already started
the restructuring of the country through its economic blueprint.
He said: “Nigerians have positively changed
their ways of doing things for the country to be better and have become more
prudent and judicious in their spending pattern. It is one after the other;
government will look at the issues. After economic restructuring to reposition
the country, the Buhari administration will embark political restructuring and
will set the modalities for the exercise.”
The National Secretary of the All
Progressives Congress (APC), Mai Mala Buni, said Buhari is focused in his bid
to restore Nigeria’s economic growth.
The scribe said: “In spite of the Peoples
Democratic Party’s (PDP) orchestrated and feeble attempt to blackmail the
current administration, the reality remains that the prevailing socio-economic
hardship being faced by Nigerian is a direct consequence of the mismanagement
of the economy and unprecedented looting of the treasury under the PDP.
“Restructuring would be achieved through
well-thought out economic policies, fiscal discipline and socio-political
reforms. To this end, President Buhari is aggressively formulating and
implementing policies aimed at delivering Nigeria from the grip of mono-economy,
by boosting agriculture, mining and manufacturing.”
Those against the call for restructuring
opined that it is diversionary and capable of heating the polity. They
expressed misgivings that the new call is not popular, claiming that the
agitators were prophets of doom. Senator Ali Ndume said the call is unnecessary
and misplaced. He said what the country needs now is good governance, good
leadership and not restructuring.
He maintained that it would be wrong for a
few individuals to use the media to champion their individual views in the
guise of public opinions. “The calling for restructuring at this critical stage
of our nationhood and enormous challenges, ranging from economy to security is
the missing point,” he added.
Despite the views expressed from different
quarters, former Secretary General of the Commonwealth, Chief Emeka Anyaoku,
said he has been calling for the resolution of the same issue since 2005. He
canvassed for the return to regional government, arguing that the six geo-political
zones should form the federating units.
Anyaoku explained that the current 36
states-structure is very expensive. He said: “The present governance
arrangement we have with 36 non viable states, most of which cannot pay the
salaries of their teachers and civil servants, is not the best. We should
return to an arrangement, where the six regions will form six federating
units.”
Elder statesman and former Political Adviser
to former President Shehu Shagari, Alhaji Tanko Yakassai, said restructuring
the country would not solve the nation’s problems, if certain issues were not
adequately tackled.
He said: “I think the call did not start with
Atiku; it has been going on for many years, dating back to the time when the
late Chief Anthony Enahoro formed his National Reformation Council under the
administration of Obasanjo.
“His argument was that Nigeria should be made
six republics, not regions and not states. The six republics will contribute to
the central authority on equal basis. They are to contribute the same number of
soldiers to the national army.”
Former House of Representatives member Dr.
Junaid Mohammed said that justice and security should be the basis for
restructure. He noted that the restructuring which ensures that citizens are
given access to quality education, healthcare, good roads, and regular pension
for retiree is what Nigerians are longing for. “If they are calling for a
return to the regional government, which we had in the past, let them come out
and say so,” he said.
The call has not abated and stakeholders
believe it will not stop, even when the restructuring is carried out. They
insist that the only restructuring that Nigeria actually needs is for the
people to be patriotic, love one another and shun economic sabotage like
blowing up of pipelines, kidnapping and act of terrorism.
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