THE
16-point demands of leaders of the Niger Delta region to the Federal Government
on Wednesday highlight the fundamental fallacy underpinning the Nigerian state.
While some of the demands appear even-handed and altruistic, the perceptive
observer would detect the selfishness that binds the country’s elite and their
failure to forge a diverse polity that can deliver greatness. Nigeria’s crisis
of development, however, is located firmly in its distorted federalism;
correcting it is the only guarantee of lasting peace.
Nigeria’s
fiscal system identifies it as a unitary state pretending to be a federation.
The reality is stark. Leaders of the Niger Delta under the aegis of the
Pan-Niger Delta Forum met with President Muhammadu Buhari and his deputy, Yemi
Osinbajo, in an effort to end the devastating vandalism and sabotage of oil and
gas and power infrastructure in the region. Criminal elements, latching on to
regional grievances, have bombed, cut and torched production facilities, oil
and gas pipelines and power infrastructure. According to the government, its
losses amounted to N2.1 trillion between January and October this year alone.
Before that, Osinbajo had revealed how the country’s oil production had slipped
dangerously to between 900,000 barrels per day and 1.1 million bpd. Power
supply has dipped dangerously due to vandalism. For a country in the midst of a
recession, and dependent on oil and gas whose prices have fallen by 50 per
cent, for 90 per cent of government revenues, the impact of militant gangs
blowing up production facilities has brought the economy to its knees. The
criminal activities have conflated with politics, corruption and the divisive
tendencies of the key ethnic segments of the state. In the Niger Delta region, for example, the
International Crisis Group, a non-profit, identifies widespread alienation of
the people from the centre as providing a fertile ground for violent militants
to operate.
Having
so far failed to put down the militancy after 16 years of military action and
eight years of an amnesty programme, the dialogue option was an opportunity for
both sides to correctly diagnose the root causes of the problem and proffer
lasting solutions. The golden key, fiscal federalism, was treated
perfunctorily. “The region supports the call for true federalism and urges that
the Federal Government should treat the matter expeditiously” was only one
line. Like the five other geopolitical regions, the Niger Delta lacks visionary
leaders. Their emphasis on allocation of
oil blocks and oil and gas assets, “economic development and empowerment,”
restructuring and funding of the Ministry of Niger Delta Affairs and the Niger Delta Development
Commission, are self-serving. Cleaning up the Ogoni area and oil-damaged areas,
resettlement of the Bakassi communities, catering for internally displaced
persons and providing critical infrastructure are just demands. But the
government has over the years been equally ineffective in every other part of
the country. The demand for a maritime university is curious; why not the
implementation of the decision to upgrade the Maritime Academy in Oron, Akwa
Ibom State, to a degree awarding institution?
No
country is crime-free, but Nigeria has found itself faced with a national
crisis anytime gangs of criminals take on the state, hiding behind regional
agitation. The first wave of insurgency
in the Niger Delta region 2000-2007 featured bombings, kidnapping, robberies
and pitched battles between militants and security forces and between rival
gangs. The then President Umaru Yar’Adua offered the militants a choice:
Surrender your arms, accept an amnesty programme, be trained and rewarded with
stipends.
The
truce collapsed shortly after Goodluck Jonathan lost the 2015 presidential
election to Buhari. Several regional leaders and militants hosted by Governor
Seriake Dickson in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, had threatened war if Jonathan was
voted out of office. The indictment of some ex-militant warlords then provided
the spark for a return to militancy.
There
can be no end to this cycle unless Nigeria is run as a proper federation.
Fiscal federalism is the solution, not an aside, as the forum appeared to
suggest. Giving oil producing states only 13 per cent of revenues as derivation
is unjust and no longer sustainable. The 1963 Constitution that was discarded
by military intervention in 1966 rightly used 50 per cent as derivation, with
30 per cent shared among all the then four regions and 20 per cent reserved for
the centre. Every part, every state in Nigeria, has minerals, agricultural land
and abundant human resources. The Nigerian state no longer has the luxury of
taking resources from one part of the country and dispensing crumbs to the
indigenes.
The
militants will not have sympathy from the local populace if the bulk of
revenues from resources on their soil and waters are domiciled locally. This is
the main demand the Niger Delta leaders should have made. Asking that troops be
withdrawn is unreasonable. Government cannot fold its arms while heavily armed
criminals are unleashing violence and terror on lives and property. The state has to enforce its writ.
We
also deplore the insinuations that persons who have looted the public treasury
and have cases to answer in the courts be let off simply because they hail from
a particular region. Such notions of entitlement ruined the NDDC and its
forerunner, OMPADEC, laid low the Niger Delta ministry and even the amnesty programme.
All became cesspools of corruption and waste that created a few billionaires
and left the mass of the people further pauperised. The same illusion of
entitlement led to the failure to utilise the opportunity provided by the
Jonathan Presidency to reverse the infrastructure imbalance, environmental
degradation, poverty and unjust derivation principle. Instead, mass looting and
alienation of other parts of the country took centre stage. Regional leaders
should have persuaded Jonathan to do what they are now asking Buhari to do.
Other
federations, such as Canada, the United States, Australia, India, Malaysia,
Switzerland, Belgium, Brazil and the United Arab Emirates, provide worthy
templates of resource control that we should emulate. Every region and state
should join the clamour for fiscal federalism to avert bloody conflagration in
our increasingly wobbly federal contraption.
PUNCH
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