Tag: citizenship

  • FG processes 170 foreign applications for citizenship

    FG processes 170 foreign applications for citizenship

    The Federal Government is processing 170 applications from individuals across the world who applied to become Nigerian citizens. 

    The Minister of Interior, Dr. Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo,  disclosed this in Abuja during a review meeting of Advisory Committee on Nigerian Citizenship, (ACNC).

    Tunji-Ojo, who chairs the Committee, described Nigerian Citizenship as a privilege that must be earned by people of proven integrity and character. 

    He said the applications would be thoroughly scrutinised by the Committee before it is taken to Mr President for approval. 

     He charged members of the committee to diligently vet every application and ensure that only individuals of proven integrity and good character are considered worthy of Nigerian citizenship.

    “Anyone who holds the citizenship of our great country must be a person of strong character and impeccable integrity, reflecting the true values of Nigeria,” the Minister said. 

    Read Also: Nigerians prefer foreign recognition over local talent- Erigga

    Tunji-Ojo further stressed that legal migration must be respected, noting that his administration will not tolerate any attempt to obtain Nigerian citizenship or naturalization through illegal means.

    Reaffirming President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda, the Minister highlighted the committee’s work directly supports the government’s vision of national integrity, security, and prosperity.

    He added that citizenship cannot be granted to individuals who pose potential security threats, urging members of the committee to uphold the trust placed in them and ensure that only the most deserving applicants are approved

    “Nigeria remains the greatest asset to its citizens, ”Tunji-Ojo said, calling on all stakeholders to safeguard the nation’s integrity and greatness.

    A statement from Deputy Director of Press in the Ministry, Madam Mary Ali,  later confirmed membership of the Advisory Committee on Nigerian Citizenship as the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Interior; representatives of the Ministries of Foreign Affairs and Justice; representatives of the State Security Service (SSS) and the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS); as well as the Directors of Citizenship and Business and Legal Services of the Ministry of Interior.

  • Five countries where Nigerians can acquire citizenship in under one year

    Five countries where Nigerians can acquire citizenship in under one year

    For many Nigerians considering relocation, the time it takes to acquire citizenship is a crucial factor. With growing economic challenges, limited job prospects, and rising security concerns at home, many are drawn to destinations that offer quicker, more accessible naturalisation processes.

    Fortunately, several countries around the world provide some of the fastest routes to citizenship, often in less than a year, whether through investment programmes or simplified legal pathways.

    Here are five countries where you can become a citizen in under 12 months:

    1. Vanuatu

    Tucked away in the South Pacific, Vanuatu offers one of the fastest routes to citizenship, often completed in as little as one to four months. The country’s peaceful environment, natural beauty, and efficient process make it an appealing choice for those seeking a tropical escape with minimal bureaucratic delays.

    2. Grenada

    Grenada grants citizenship in approximately three to four months, making it one of the fastest options in the Caribbean. Beyond its efficient processing, Grenada boasts beautiful scenery and a passport that allows visa-free travel to numerous countries, including China and the Schengen Area.

    3.  Antigua & Barbuda

    Citizenship in Antigua & Barbuda typically takes around three to four months. The country is known for its stunning beaches, English-speaking population, and simple application process. With a minimal physical presence requirement of just five days in five years, it offers flexibility for those who want options without relocation pressure.

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    4. Turkey

    For those looking toward Europe, Turkey provides a fast-track route to citizenship in three to six months, mainly through property investment or capital deposits. Blending Eastern tradition with Western infrastructure, Turkey is culturally vibrant and geographically strategic. Its citizenship program is especially appealing for investors and families.

    5. St. Kitts & Nevis

    This twin-island nation in the Caribbean offers citizenship in about two to nine months. Known for its political stability, English-speaking population, and favourable tax regime, St. Kitts & Nevis is especially attractive to those seeking a quiet, well-connected lifestyle. Its citizenship-by-investment program is among the oldest and most trusted globally.

  • Kara ram market and contestation over citizenship

    Kara ram market and contestation over citizenship

    Last Thursday, I spent two hours between Kara Bridge cattle market and Berger bus stop, a distance of about two kilometres as a result of activities of ram sellers and ram buyers. On Friday, motorists and other road users were stranded in the Kara traffic gridlock for hours with some residents of Isheri North in Lagos State and those of Mowe, Ibafo, and Arepo in Ogun State choosing to put up with friends for the night in Omole Estate. With the traffic build-up stretching as far back as the Third Mainland Bridge from early hours of Saturday, it was a nightmare for motorists and residents who were forced to spend several hours in the gridlock.

    By “Sunday (Eid day), the situation according to Punch newspaper report “became worse with a loaded truck falling to its side on the Otedola Bridge area of the expressway and spilling its contents on the road with a similar incident along the Long Bridge section”. Added to this was the plight of outside-bound travellers and Muslims on last minute rush to buy rams at cheaper rate. Unfortunately, the presence of men of the Rapid Response Squad, (RRS), complemented by men of the Federal Road Safety Commission, (FRSC) brought little relief to Nigerians.

    The Kara ram market tragedy is cyclical as it is re-enacted during every Muslim ‘IIeya’ season. As successive governors of Ogun and Lagos states, neck deep in ‘politics of cow and ram’ writhe their hands in helplessness over the odious comparison as to who between cows and humans should enjoy citizenship status, our politicians especially the over-paid lawmakers in Abuja are playing the ostrich pretending not to know the difference between citizenship rights and privileges and animals right.

     In fact ex-President Buhari’s Attorney General, Abubakar Malami, to drive home his crooked syllogism, tried to equate the rights of Ibo traders in the northern cities to those of marauding cows in the reserved forests of Ondo State, protected by AK-47 wielding immigrant criminal herders. On the same page with Malami was President Buhari’s first Defence Minister, Mansur Mohammed Dan Ali. He once asked a rhetorical question “if you block the old grazing routes for cows, what do you expect” as a reaction to the murder of over 90 farmers by herders in Benue State. Their crooked logic was that cows and human beings have similar citizenship rights in Nigeria.

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    They were not alone.  In the eighth assemblies, some northern lawmakers spoke of consequences of shooting down the laws that would have allowed cows to graze freely on the farmlands of farmers in the federating states. And as late as last week, during the passage for second reading of  “A Bill to Establish a National  Husbandry and Ranches Commission for the Regulation and Control of Ranches  sponsored by Senator Titus Zam, Senate President Godswill Akpabio had to remind Senator Aliero who was opposed to the bill, that “cows are no citizens of Nigeria”.

    But back to Kara ram market where successive Ogun State governors have been playing ‘politics of ram and cow’, apparently to be in the good books of powerful northern politicians. Governor Gbenga Daniel had an opportunity to relocate the Kara ram market some 21 years back during Obasanjo’s presidency. But Daniel chose to serve his own personal interest. He deployed huge resources to sand-fill a portion of the Kara swamp, paved the roads and erected structures he called ‘Journalists Rendezvous’ which collapsed after his tenure. By his admission during his recent interview with Channels TV, he founded his own newspapers to fight Aremo Olusegun Osoba, his predecessor and a veteran journalist believed to have the sympathy of the media following the way he was rigged out of office by Obasanjo and Tony Anenih’s rigging machine that secured for him more votes than the total registered Ogun voters.

    Governor Ibikunle Amosun, with his one-metre long cap was also at Kara ram market for a road show after his election some 13 years back. He was said to have given the ram sellers an ultimatum to relocate to an alternative place, a directive which was ignored all through his eight years in office while cows enjoyed more privileges than his Ogun State citizens. It is also on record that Governor Dapo Abiodun threatened fire and brimstone to uphold the rights of his Ogun State people over cows when he first assumed office in 2019. Five years on, his besieged Ogun State citizens and motorists are still at the mercy of cows and rams at Kara market.

    Many have wondered if self-proclaiming Yoruba politicians whose only claim to “Awoism” is adorning his cap, created time to read some of his books or understudy his economic management blueprint which focused on development of human capital, through free education up to primary school in 1952, extended to secondary school by UPN that in 1979 “ran free education and free health programmes, created industrial and residential estates, and established universities, etc.”?

    And this only calls to question the preparedness of successive Yoruba governors since the beginning of the fourth republic. Their forebears starting with Obafemi Awolowo, the sage, his lieutenants including Bisi Onabanjo, Adekunle Ajasin, Bola Ige, Lateef Jakande and Ambrose Alli, set a pattern to follow with their citizen-centred policies.

    And their legacies ‘were in the areas of education, agriculture and food security, industrialization, employment generation, and massive physical and social infrastructures development’. The ill-advised balkanization of the region led to the ceding of some companies including the Odua Textiles, Okitipupa Oil Palm Limited, etc. to Ondo State, while Western Livestock Company, among other agricultural projects, went to Oyo State with Ogun State inheriting Apoje and Lomiro Oil palms, as well as Ilushin and Ikenne rubber plantations etc.

    But “regrettably”, as observed by a concerned Ogun citizen at a time, “none of the professed ‘Awoists’ that governed the state during the last two decades took any concrete steps to save Apoje, Lomiro, Ilushin and Ikenne plantations from destructive exploitation and progressive deterioration. It is the hope and fervent prayers of the good people of Ogun State that Governor Amosun would take proactive and measurable steps to resuscitate all Awo’s agro-economic legacies”.

    How can new inheritors of power in a region whose economic management revolved around the production of human capital, which found expression in the introduction of “free education up to the primary school level as far back as 1952 and extended to the secondary school level under the Unity Party of Nigeria, that in 1979, introduced education support at tertiary level, introduced free health programmes, created industrial and residential estates, established universities in Edo, Ondo, Ogun and Lagos be playing games with citizenship  in 2024?

    How can the governors defend the fact that a region which once had an elaborate “agriculture infrastructure including the Cooperative Bank (WEMA Bank) that provided credit facilities to farmers during planting seasons through agricultural cooperative societies and the marketing boards that  provided facilities for the sale of produce through marketing cooperatives” depend on rice, beans, millet, yam, tomato, pepper from other regions while consuming 10,000 cows daily without producing one?

    While federating member states are at liberty to confer citizenship on cows in their own areas, I think the current crop of Yoruba governors must re-event themselves. It is hoped their recent joint meeting would go beyond singing of Yoruba item to a more productive endeavour along the paradigm set by their illustrious forebears.

  • Duty and citizenship – the Social Contract

    Duty and citizenship – the Social Contract

    • By Babatunde Raji Fashola

    In spite of difficult economic challenges of the time, like the Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP) which affected the price of the Naira to the Dollar, which increased the cost of living and feeding on campus at the time; and in spite of the reign of terror unleashed on this city by the notorious armed robber, Lawrence Anini, I still lack the full complement of words to describe how pleasant my memories of UNIBEN and Benin were.

    I would not have gone to any other University; and when I was posted back to the then Bendel State and Benin City for my NYSC service year and primary assignment, my joy was boundlessly immeasurable.

    I was here about three decades ago when the first Idigbe memorial lecture was delivered by no less a personage than the Honorable Kayode Eso of the Supreme Court in 1985, and I sat where many of you are seating today listening with rapt attention to every word and made sure I did not leave the hall until I got a printed copy of the lecture which I am sure I still have, but cannot currently find.

    This is part of the context that underpins my delight to be here today as lecturer in honour of a truly outstanding Nigerian, jurist and patriot, the late Justice Chukwunweike Idigbe, who sadly left us on 31st July 1983, about 43 years ago.

    What then was it about this Nigerian whose legacy is imperishable?

    Indeed, it was many things, from a family that continues to celebrate him, to colleagues whose professional trust and respect he earned, to success as a professional and I dare say he was fairly rewarded as a legal practitioner so he was not poor.

    But perhaps the reason for his reverence and celebration in life and in death was his service and sense of duty to Nigeria and his fellow citizens.

    That is why I have exercised the latitude given to me to choose my topic, to title my speech: “Duty and Citizenship – The Social Contract.”

    Justice Chukwunweike C. Idigbe, JSC was a dutiful citizen and worthy Nigerian patriot.

    When I was invited to intervene at his memorial lecture earlier this year, I was asked to review his judgement in the case of Bucknor-MacLean vs Inlaks report in (1980) 8 11 SC 1.

    That case for me demonstrated Justice Idigbe’s humanity, compassion, sense of justice and fairness to his fellow citizens.

    On the face of it, it looked like just another case about the interpretation of Section 14 the Registration of Titles Act, and the matter seemed foreclosed because the Supreme Court had decided cases like Shell BP Petroleum Company v Jammal Engineering Nigeria Ltd 1974 (1 ALL NLR 542) and Owunmi v Paterson Zochonis & Co Nigeria Ltd 1974 (1 ALL NLR 107.)

    These cases had decided that any transfer of title under the Registration of Titles Act must use the Forms prescribed under the Act to be valid.

    I can only imagine what Justice Idigbe was thinking? The people who came to challenge the validity of the interest created in land under the Act, were successors of the person who created the interest.

    In other words, they sought to nullify an interest they had created by relying on a non-compliance that they had been part of after collecting money.

    It smelt of fraud at the worst and inequity at its fairest.

    Justice Idigbe would have none of it and proceeded to persuade a full panel of the Supreme Court to reverse their previous decisions which were binding precedents and constraints to doing justice in the case under consideration.

    Needless to say, all his brother Justices unanimously agreed with him.

    Idigbe, JSC enforced the law by using the law and this is one of our duties as citizens; and I will talk about this later.

    It can be tempting for some to think about when another Idigbe will come and also to think that probably they don’t make them like that anymore.

    As an optimist those thoughts don’t find a place with me. In the faces I see in this hall, many more Idigbes and indeed better versions of him will emerge for the sake of Nigeria.

    How then does all this connect with the topic of Duty, Citizenship and the Social Contract?

    I believe that many of us are familiar with the concept of the social contract first propounded by a Swiss philosopher, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, sometime in 1762 about the relationship between the state, and the Government on one hand, and the citizen on the other hand.

    That contract implied confers certain expectations and benefits on citizens in exchange for certain service to be performed by the state in the conduct of their affairs.  These expectations and benefits are expressed as rights, some of which are classified as fundamental and set out in the case of Nigeria, in Chapter 4 Section 24 of the 1999 Constitution as amended.

    Those rights which are fundamental, are expressly conferred on “every person” as listed in Sections 33, 34,35,36,38,39,40 while there are other rights, which inure to the benefit of citizens of Nigeria only, which are conferred on “Every Citizen” as distinct from “Every Person” are to be found in:

    A)   Section 37, which guarantees and protects citizens of the privacy of their homes, correspondence, telephone, conversations and telegraphic communications;

    B)  Section 41 (1) which entitles citizens to move freely throughout Nigeria, to reside in any part thereof and assures them of full protection from being expelled from Nigeria or being refused entry into Nigeria subject to the qualification in sub-section (2) about laws which are justified in a democracy to impose restrictions of movement on suspects of crime;

    C)   Section 42 (1) and (2) which protects the citizen from discrimination;

    D)   Section 43, which confers the right to own immoveable property on citizens.

    The point to make at this stage about these rights is that they are enforceable in the same way as those other fundamental rights, except with the added bonus that Section 46 (4) (b) also confers additional benefits on citizens only, where they are indigent, to get financial assistance to engage a legal practitioner.

    Now let me state in an advisory way that if the University of Benin has not incorporated citizenship and the duties that pertain to that status in her constitutional law class, it would be helpful to do so without further delay in the interest of national development.

    This is the heart and matter of the social contract. Citizens enjoying certain rights over and above every person, as I have shown earlier. But those rights do not come alone, they come with duties, spelt out in Section 24.

    My constitutional law curriculum did not teach me citizenship and was silent about my duties.

    Happily, it left me in no doubt about what my rights were, and limitations on them prescribed in Chapter IV (Fundamental Rights) of the constitution.

    But large sections of Nigerians have asserted their rights which is good, but sometimes without the understanding that they had duties, and sometimes without the awareness that those rights are not absolute.

    This has not been helped by the rapidly multiplying tribe of so called “constitutional lawyers” and experts whose knowledge of the constitution probably does not extend beyond the sections pertaining to Rights in the Constitution.

    This is not helpful for our National Development, and I will attempt to demonstrate this shortly.

    But permit me to quickly pivot to the issue of citizenship.

    I will adopt for my purpose, the definition contained on Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary which defines a citizen as a: “native or naturalised person who owes allegiance to a government and is entitled to protection from it.”

    As can be seen from the definition, it envisages a two-way relationship, as I postulated about the social contract.

    The definition says that a citizen as a native or naturalised person “owes” a debt or duty of allegiance, which entitles the person, to a right of protection.

    Very interestingly, the definition puts the “allegiance” or “duty/debt” before the “protection” or “right.”

    This is the first impact on National Development that I alluded to.

    The question to ask in our relationship as citizens, is whether we have consciously acknowledged that we owe a debt/duty of allegiance to Nigeria in our relationship with her when we assert our rights?

    Have we asked for our rights first instead of discharging our allegiance?

    Indeed, what constitutes our allegiance to our country?

    But before I proceed further, let me highlight a few examples of some of the protection that citizenship has afforded us in recent times.

    During the Covid-19 pandemic, we all recall that the Nigerian Government closed the international borders to all traffic as many other Governments did in their countries in order to contain the pandemic.

    But I recall vividly that whilst some countries, for fear of spreading the virus further, refused entry to their own citizens, Nigeria’s government granted entry to Nigerian citizens who were returning home even at the risk of bringing in the virus to the country.

    That was, for me, a profound expression of citizen protection offered by our country, in contrast to the seeming status of statelessness other countries dealt to their citizens when they refused them entry at that time of extreme vulnerability.

    During the outbreak of war between Russia/Ukraine, Nigeria arranged the evacuation and return to Nigeria of her citizens caught in the war. She had no business with citizens of other countries.

    But did this and many similar acts resonate with us?

    Or were they just what was expected of our country and government?

    Put differently, were we more focused on those instances where government and the state dropped the ball, and there are such instances, that we missed the significance of those instances where government protected us?

    On the domestic front, how many of us have been saved from criminals, by law enforcement, or have had the fire brigade come to put out fire in our homes or places of business, or benefited from healthcare in a government facility?

    These are instances of government offering its protection in exchange for our allegiance, even if admittedly there is scope for improvement.

    The question is whether we understand that these acts are acts of protection because we are citizens, and are we aware of our allegiance when we get these services?

    Ladies and gentlemen, permit me to then proceed to what makes us citizens.

    The answer is to be found in the provisions of Sections 25-32 of the constitution as amended in 2023; and I must repeat my advice that this should be taught in constitutional law class, and I dare say from primary school in a manner that people of that level can understand it.

    As we have seen from our Merriam-Webster’s definition of citizenship there are two broad types of citizens; native and naturalised. This is largely applicable in many countries of the world where citizenship is conferred on people who are naturalised citizens, and the Nigerian constitution also provides for naturalised citizenship as is provided for in Section 27 of the constitution.

    While this class of citizenship does not derive from being a native and has some limitations for example such persons cannot be President of Nigeria under Section 131(a) of the constitution, their duty of allegiance is no less than those of native citizens.

    It is therefore about native citizens I wish to speak, but before I do so, the limitation that naturalised citizens have, is itself another subject of education that commands the teaching of the broad subject in all our schools.

    Going back to native citizens, there are two broad classes on the subject, classified under the Latin phrases jus soli and jus  sanguinis.

    The former refers to citizens by birth acquired from being born in the territory of the state or country while the latter refers to citizenship of birth by having one or both parents who are native to that state or country.

    Nigeria has adopted the sanguinis route in 25 (1)(a)(b) about people born before 1960, the date of independence, such that if you were born in Nigeria before that date with parents or grandparents who belonged to a community indigenous to Nigeria you were automatically a Nigerian citizen by birth.

    And in section 25(1)©, the sanguinis right to citizenship by birth is reinforced by providing that even if you were born outside Nigeria to at least one parent who is Nigerian, you were a Nigerian citizen by birth.

    This explains why under the 1999 Constitution, Nigerians, for the first time, could have dual citizenship under Section 28(1) of the constitution because they may have been born in countries where the jus soli applies to Nigerian parents.

    But this protection of dual citizenship is not afforded to those who acquired citizenship of Nigeria by registration or naturalisation; on the contrary only citizens by birth, jus sanguinis, can be dual citizens under our constitution.

    Having discussed some of the rights of citizens, the basis and nature of citizenship albeit very briefly, I now proceed to examine our duties as citizens.

    These are set out in the provisions of section 24(a) – (f) of the constitution.

    But before I examine them, I wish to point out two things which appear instructive to me.

    The first is the similarity between the definition of a citizen by Merriam-Webster’s dictionary where it speaks of “allegiance” before it refers to “protection.”

    For some reason, the drafters of the constitution have similarly set out our duties first in Section 24, before proclaiming our rights by way of protection in the latter parts of the constitution in Sections 33 – 46.

    The second instructive point is that whereas between sections 33 – 46 there are 14 (FOURTEEN) provisions of the constitution dealing with rights and how to benefit from them, Section 24 (a)-(f) which deals with our duties only asks us to do 6 (SIX) things.

    Now what are those 6 (SIX) things that Section 24 ask of citizens of Nigeria:

    (a) abide by this Constitution, respect its ideals and its institutions, the National Flag, the National Anthem, the National Pledge, and legitimate authorities;

    (b) help to enhance the power, prestige and good name of Nigeria, defend Nigeria and render such national service as may be required;

    (c) respect the dignity of other citizens and the rights and legitimate interests of others and live in unity and harmony and in the spirit of common brotherhood;

    (d) make positive and useful contribution to the advancement, progress and well-being of the community where he resides;

    (e) render assistance to appropriate and lawful agencies in the maintenance of law and order; and

    (f) declare his income honestly to appropriate and lawful agencies and pay his tax promptly.

    A public presentation of this nature that is limited by time does not permit an exhaustive analysis of each of these duties, and this perhaps reinforces the suggestion I made earlier for this to be a part of our educational curriculum.

    Nevertheless, I will briefly undertake an examination of each duty and attempt to utilise real time examples of how we have complied and where the room for improvement lies.

    OUR FLAG AND OUR ANTHEM

    With regard to section 24(a), I will focus only on the part dealing with the National Flag and the National Anthem and our respect for them, by advocating that we all adhere strictly to the colours of green, white and green on the national flag.

    I have seen many flags purporting to be Nigeria’s flag, even in Government offices with a coat of arms placed in the white portion of the flag. This is not the Nigerian flag; on the contrary it is a desecration of our flag and disrespect for it.

    Similarly, I have seen attempts to attach colourful frills and embroidery to the flag. Again, in my view, this desecrates rather than respect the flag as we are duty bound under the constitution.

    Without offering advertisements on their behalf, I know that the National Orientation Agency (NOA), with offices in all the states of the country, produce and sell authentic Nigerian flags.

    The National Anthem is another vexed issue. The best that I can say is that it is the expression of our sovereign might and this is why we will see that at global events, especially sporting events, the anthems of participating or victorious nations are rendered.

    While this is a good forum to urgently appeal to the National Assembly to enact legislation to delimit events and occasions at which the national anthem can be rendered, it is my humble view that the National Anthem as the expression of our sovereign presence, should not be rendered for Governors or Ministers as has been the practice, or for the President when he is not performing a state function.

    As for what would qualify as a state function, this will be a matter for some consultation, but I do not think that weekly FEC meetings, symposia, and those kinds of events qualify.

    POWER,PRESTIGE AND GOOD NAME OF NIGERIA

    Perhaps the place with the greatest improvement in the performance of our duties to Nigeria, lies with regard to section 24(b) which invites us as citizens to “help to enhance the power prestige and good name of Nigeria…”

    I say this because I am of the opinion that the most derogatory things about Nigeria have been said by us as citizens rather by than by non-Nigerians, we have described our country in the most negative of terms; and undervalued it by the negative conduct of some of us.

    At every occasion when some officials of government have made public appeals for us to stop “demarketing Nigeria” some of the perceptions in response are cynical and misunderstood that government is defending its inefficiency.

    The point I make is that we can be angry with our government and with representatives of government, we can condemn them in the strongest of words, after all that is a right to expression subject to the limits of the law of defamation. However, our disagreements, discontent or displeasure with government is no reason to scandalise Nigeria.

    Nigeria has not offended us; let me accept that our Governments and office holders may have more to do in making us happy.

    No person who seeks greatness throws stones at their home.

    Some of the grievance has been expressed in words so the effect that “Nigeria is not a nation.” While I respect the rights of those who hold that view, I hold a different view.

    My view is that perhaps we conflate nationhood with the idea of a country.

    Nigeria is many nations that perhaps need to be forged into one country. Those nationalities are ethnic as they are tribal or religious. They are matters of identity rather than an idea or dream.

    It is my view that what we need urgently is to forge from those nationalities, a country built on a creed, away from tribe, ethnicity, language or religion.

    This would not be easy but it can certainly be done. Can all of that diversity converge around an idea or shared dream that supplants our diverse ethnic, tribal, language and religious identities without extinguishing them?

    The question to ask is what is the Nigerian creed?

    This is a subject for another day, but it seems to me that we must stop valorising the modest successes of other countries while not even acknowledging ours.

    Why are the dreams of others bigger than our dreams when there are scores of grass to grace and rags to riches stories around us?

    I am of the view that unless we begin to own and amplify our stories instead of those of other countries that are even smaller than some of our states, for that long do we fail in our duty “to enhance the power, prestige and good name of Nigeria” for after all, international reputation is public relations from the home front.

    RESPECT THE DIGNITY OF OTHER CITIZENS

    As for the duty to respect the dignity of other citizens and the rights and legitimate interests of others and live in unity and harmony and in the spirit of common brotherhood, I would use what now goes on some social media platforms in the name of freedom of expression as the barometer to assess our performance of this duty.

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    As children, there were some people whose company we kept that our parents disapproved of, and as a parent I have had course to express similar concerns and I believe and it is the experience of many in the gathering as children and parents.

    Parents disapproval were often expressed in words like: “I don’t want to see you with that person,” or “I don’t want that person to come to this house.”

    Children often responded by saying to their parents: “But they are my friends,” to which parents will retort: “What do you know about friendship?”

    This must sound familiar in homes where parents were attempting to pass on the right societal values of behaviour and conduct as distinct from homes where there may have been a total lack of breeding.

    I have news for all of us and I regret that it is not good news.

    Those parents were right then when they scrutinised the companies we kept and they are right today.

    Those children they admonished us to keep away from have grown up and their numbers have increased.

    They have found an identity on social media platforms, and their identity is anonymity.

    With that identity they concoct the most bizarre of stories in the vilest of languages and dare us to do what we can because they are “trending.”

    This is a big platform to breach the duty to respect the dignity of other citizens; this is where they threaten our unity and harmony, and do violence to the spirit of common brotherhood.

    But let me be clear, the social media platform is not of itself the problem, it is the family from where they came, and this is where the reform must start to optimise the benefits that social media offers our civilization.

    POSITIVE CONTRIBUTION TO THE…COMMUNITY

    As far as our duty under section 24(d) is concerned about making “positive and useful contribution to the advancement, progress and well-being of the community where we reside,” the preliminary observation to make is that the well-being of our communities is connected to our individual well-being and that of our whole communities.

    Communities help to shape conduct and behaviour of those within it and ultimately defines their quality of life.

    It is no surprise therefore that the constitution demands of us the duty to usefully contribute to the well-being of our community; because in the way that poverty, disease and squalor can be propagated from within a community, so can prosperity, wellness and cleanliness be created from communities.

    It is no secret that many Community Development Associations (CDAs) have been formed across the nation to harness the power of citizens for the common good and it is in our interest and indeed a matter of constitutional imperative to take them more seriously.

    From within those communities, we can improve our personal and collective security and safety, we can manage refuse and pollution and we can support ourselves without necessarily waiting for the officialdom of government.

    Let me pause here to share some of my experiences with you, regarding the Lagos State Environmental Sanitation Law with you. That law was enacted by the State House of Assembly in the undoubted exercise of their constitutional powers.

    Parts of the law restricted the movement of residents/citizens for a few hours up till 12 Noon or thereabouts once every month, for the purpose of ensuring that we cleaned our homes and communities to ensure public sanitation and by extension promote public and communal health.

    At the time that I was Governor, a European Prime Minister visited Lagos to understudy how this law operated and also how our Government was getting residents to pay taxes.

    An African President sought our help by writing to request that we send our refuse and sanitation team to help train their own.

    Another African President that some of our people have now found very attractive, sought to meet with me to learn about this sanitation law.

    Like the proverbial prophet that has no value at home, the sanitation law and its public health benefit was seen by some only in the limitation to their “rights” of free movement.

    Off they went to court in the famous exercise of their rights, seeking to declare the law unconstitutional because it offended their rights under Section 41 (1) which provides that “Every citizen of Nigeria is entitled to move freely throughout Nigeria…”

    Clearly, they did not read Section 45 (1) which says that “Nothing in Section…41 of this constitution shall invalidate any law that is reasonably justifiable in a democratic society in the interest of…public health…”

    Sadly, the court of first instance agreed with them, but happily the Court of Appeal has reversed the decision and upheld the law.

    This is how it should be. Individual rights sometimes have to be subjected to the overall interest of our community and nothing is unconstitutional about that if it is reasonable. That is part of the essence of the social contract.

    As is to be expected, these protagonists of “rights only” are not done. They have gone to the Supreme Court as they are entitled to do, and we all await the outcome.

    RENDER ASSISTANCE TO…IN THE MAINTENANCE OF LAW AND ORDER

    This takes me to the duty prescribed by Section 24(e) to “render assistance to appropriate and lawful agencies in the maintenance of law and order;”

    This duty is clear enough and perhaps requires no further explanation

    One of the most shocking breaches of this duty was reported in the news sometime last year when some members of a community reportedly attacked officers of the Nigerian Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) who were trying to effect the arrest of a drug suspect.

    If we understand the damage that those who peddle illicit drugs do to our society by way of wealth without real work to undermine the societal value and virtue of industry, or by way of damage to our young people who become dependent and addicted and unable to contribute to national development, then such attacks on law enforcement as reported must outrage us.

    Perhaps more pertinent is the impact of successful law enforcement on our collective safety.

    The capacity of law enforcement to protect us, our families, businesses and communities depends on their investigative capacities and the support we give to them.

    As a much younger lawyer when I was involved in criminal litigation, I used to visit the Force CID Alagbon to interview clients who had been apprehended on suspicion of crime, I was fascinated by a plaque placed on a conspicuous wall in one of their offices. It read “Nigeria Police: In God we trust, everybody else we investigate.”

    The relevance to our subject is to highlight the investigative aspect of the work of law enforcement, in contradistinction with their powers of arrest, which has been alluded to in the NDLEA attack earlier referred to.

    The efficiency of investigation depends on what we as citizens offer. Did we see something, hear something or know something?

    Are we ready to offer statements and information about what we saw, heard or know in order to assist with law enforcement?

    This is what gives teeth to investigation and crime prevention for our collective safety.

    In other jurisdictions, law enforcement has made advances by criminalising and severely punishing those who not only refuse to offer information to resolve crime, but also those who give false information.

    These rigorous punishments have become strong foundations for enlisting citizen support for law enforcement agencies.

    They have proven to be very useful in helping law enforcement apprehend, prosecute and confine those who threaten the safety and security of law-abiding people.

    Our duty under the social contract to assist law enforcement agencies shows that it is a two-way relationship. If we assist them, they can protect us.

    Investigation is not a mystery. It is the ability to obtain information from those who know something, saw something, heard something or who did something.

    DECLARE OUR INCOME…PAY TAX PROMPTLY

    The final duty imposed on us as citizens is prescribed in section 24(f) which obligates us to “declare his (our) income honestly to appropriate and lawful agencies and pay his (our) tax promptly.”

    I don’t know how many of us realise that payment of tax is a constitutional duty not just one imposed by any ordinary legislation. The highest law of the land compels it, and I am not sure whether we are aware that a deadline of 31st of March every year has been set by another law, in order to enable us understand what “prompt” payment of our taxes actually means.

    These are collateral matters to what I wish to address about this duty.

    Like the other duties that I have discussed, it underlies a two-way relationship between Government and citizens which is the heart of the social contract.

    In essence nothing is free. Government has no money of its own except that which it collects from citizens directly or on their behalf.

    So, when government offers a free service like health or education, or subsidises a service or product like petroleum, it may be free to the recipients, but somebody is paying somewhere.

    I understand that money is hard to make and much harder to part with, but our quality of life is impacted by how much we pay as taxes to give government the resources to serve us and how easy or expensive it is for government to collect from those who do not want to pay at all, or who do not do so promptly.

    There is enough evidence to show that even in West Africa we have one of the lowest if not the lowest tax to GDP ratio.

    Our huge debt profile cannot be totally disconnected from our low tax collection base and the unforgiving demand by all of us for the provision of services by Government.

    I am not by this advocating an increase in tax rates, which may well become necessary but instead, I am canvassing that more of those who do not pay at all and those who pay less than what is due should do the right thing.

    Shortly after I was declared Governor in 2007, one of the opposition parties who lost in the election mounted a campaign against our Government asking residents not to pay taxes.

    It was a foolish campaign to say the least about it; it was criminal in the worst.

    I chose a public forum to reply him by telling him that payment of taxes was a stipulation of Law and that his statement amounted to instigating people to break the Law.

    I then said that if he dared to repeat the statement again, I would ask the Attorney General to consider prosecuting him for inciting people to commit a crime.

    That was the last we heard of him about the matter and Government’s revenue from taxes grew in leaps and bounds peaking at N21 Billion monthly when I left.

    Our system of government is a representative one and this supports the saying that “it is taxation and representation.”

    Having dealt with ‘rights’, ‘citizenship’ and ‘duties’ in that order let me now go to what I think is the purpose of it all.

    This is the promise of the government or the state. What we were taught is that these provisions are not justiciable; in other words they’re not enforceable in a court of law against the state, as our rights are.

    That is the current state of the law and it is good teaching.

    But there is more to Chapter II, the fundamental objectives and directive principles of state policy beyond enforceability in a court of law.

    There are things in there that ennoble us. Perhaps there are things that can become the creed of our country, the common dreams we can all share, valorise and continue to hope upon.

    The things for which we want to be citizens, the things for which we wish to project the good name of Nigeria, the things for which we will support law enforcement and the things for which we will pay our taxes promptly.

    These things which are provided in 11 (ELEVEN) items under sections 13 – 23 preceding the sections on citizenship, duties and rights, constitutes the 4th (FOURTH) quadrant of the social contract.

     It is here that the duties of the states/country are set out along with the ‘powers’ (not-rights and duties) of the citizens.

    The most important of those powers is that of sovereignty in Section 14(2)(a) which says that Government will derive its authority from us, and Section 14 (2)(b) which says that our security and welfare, shall be the primary purpose of Government.

    I have spoken earlier about the need to develop a creed for our country as an idea or dream different from our ethnic, language, tribal or religious identity.

    The ingredients for this identity are generously provided in sections 13 -23 of the constitution.

    Only a proper class can teach these provisions in addition to those I have urged earlier. My suggestion is that the curriculum be taught not just as lectures but as projects and tasks for teams of students to be challenged with in developing ideas and “dreams” for Nigeria.

    There is an amazing lot to work with here.

    From the provisions that seek to ensure that, there shall be “no predominance of persons from a few states or from a few ethnic or sectional groups in government..” in Section 14(3), to “loyalty to the nation shall override sectional loyalties…” in section 15(4), to the economic objectives in pursuit of an “efficient dynamic and self-reliant economy…”  in Section 16 (1)(a) and of course “… , the maximum welfare, freedom and happiness of every citizen on the basis of social justice and equality of status and opportunity…” in section 16 (1)(b ), you will agree that there is a lot here around which the ideals and dreams of a country can be propagated.

    Ladies and gentlemen, before I conclude, let me place on record my thoughts about section 14(2)(b) of the Constitution which provides that “the security and welfare of the people shall be the primary purpose of government;”

    This has often been understood or dare I say misunderstood as suggesting that this is the responsibility of a particular level of Government.

    The first point I wish to make about this section and the way some of us have perhaps chosen to misunderstand it is that the word “government” used in that section is a small ‘g’ not in capitals.

    While this is not a discussion on interpretation of statutes for lawyers, it is helpful to the general public to point out that “government” used in that section refers to all levels of Government and not one level.

    Further readings of the responsibilities of Governments set out in the second and fourth schedules of the constitution for Federal, State and Local Governments will show that no particular one of them bears responsibility for “security,” although the Federal Government has responsibility for the Army, Police and Arms.

    This is not the same as having sole responsibility for security.

    I expect that this point will be further examined in constitutional law classes for the benefit of all of us.

    Having reviewed these provisions of the constitution relating to the promise of our state, our duties, our entitlement to citizenship and our rights, I think it must be eminently clear that the social contract is an offer of duties by us, in exchange for the protection of the state and not the other way around.

    If I may say so, the country that some of us choose to denigrate with our words and actions really owes us nothing because there is no social contract if we offer no duties.

    A food for thought to those citizens by birth who dislike Nigeria is to bring to their attention the fact that citizens of other countries have preferred to call Nigeria their home and treat her with the respect she deserves, and they perform their duties in exchange for Nigeria’s protection.

    Almost on a yearly basis, Presidents of Nigeria approve these requests for citizenship by registration or naturalization from citizens of different countries of the world including from those countries that our citizens rank higher than Nigeria.

    I know these because as a former Minister I had the privilege of sitting in Federal Executive Council meetings where these requests are considered, debated and approved in their hundreds every year.

    This is an example if any is needed that our glass is half full and not half empty.

    This is what must commend the life and times of Hon. Justice Chukwunweike Idigbe of blessed and noble memory, to us as citizens.

    Like him we must offer service and duty in private and public capacities to Nigeria first, before we can expect protections and assertion of rights.

    This is the proper order for the working of the social contract.

    Thank you for listening.

    Babatunde Raji Fashola, SAN

    Wednesday 1st November 2023

    •Text of the 19th Justice Idigbe Memorial Lecture, delivered by Babatunde Raji Fashola, SAN, on November 1, 2023, at University of Benin.

  • Ambode lauds Zenith Bank’s corporate citizenship

    Ambode lauds Zenith Bank’s corporate citizenship

    Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode has lauded the Management of Zenith Bank Plc on its commitment to corporate citizenship initiatives.

    The governor gave the commendation at the inauguration of the Serenity Park and Gardens – a corporate social responsibility project undertaken by Zenith Bank Plc in collaboration with Iru-Victoria Island Local Council Development Area (LCDA)— at the Eko Hotel Roundabout, Victoria Island, Lagos at the weekend.

    Ambode, who was represented by Commissioner for the Environment Dr. Babatunde Adejare, commended the bank for reconstructing the lay bys and improving the aesthetics of the Ajose Adeogun/Eko Hotel environs.

    The reconstruction of the Ajose Adeogun Street has remained a role model for good corporate citizenship in the country, in addition to the annual decoration and light-up of the street at Christmas season.

    Group Managing Director/CEO of Zenith Bank Plc, Mr. Peter Amangbo, said the bank remained committed to supporting and partnering the government’s vision and efforts to make the state a mega city in furtherance of its disposition to support a state that has been so conducive for the pursuit of enterprise.

    Sole Administrator of Iru-Victoria Island LCDA, Princess Aderemi Adebowale, expressed delight that the project, which will serve as a relaxation and fun spot, was undertaken during her tenure. She commended the bank for collaborating with her administration and urged the in coming administration to give priority to the maintenance of the facility.

  • Citizenship and nation-building

    Citizenship generally refers to the right conferred by law or custom on an individual as a member of a state. It is usually denoted in the form of reciprocity or social exchange between the citizen and the state.

    Its origin was a major concern of social contract theorists- Thomas Hobbes and Jean Rousseau and it is intricately linked to the theory on the evolution of modern states. They had characterized the conditions of primeval man in the state of nature as that of ‘war of man against man’.

    At a point, man in that state of nature, got fed up with the lawlessness of that order and decided to surrender some of his rights to a sovereign, who will in turn, provide him with some form of protection- thus the twin concepts of state and citizenship.  It involves rights on the one hand, duties and obligations on the other.  By this reciprocity, the citizen owes the state certain duties and obligations and in return claims some rights from it.

    Nation-building which is closely linked to the former, involves conscious efforts to inculcate in the citizens a sense of common identity as a member of a given state. It is a psychological process of mind reconstruction to elicit in the citizens attitudes and dispositions that make for the good health of the state.

    It seeks for instance, to make Nigerians out of the various ethnic, religious and cultural groups that make up that political entity, in the same way leaders of the emergent state of Israel deployed the kibbutz system to inculcate the twin ideologies of socialism and Zionism in their people.

    That accounts for the strong attachment the average Israeli citizen has with his home state in the same manner Americans are very proud of their country. Success in nation-building will then make the Igbo, Hausa and Yoruba ethnic nationalities etc to see themselves as Nigerians rather than from the current narrow primordial prism.

    Nation-building bears positive relationship with the foundation of modern states especially ones in which people of different ethnic, cultural and religious groups were lumped together to form a state by a former colonial power.

    Given the very manner these groups were lumped together by colonial Britain coupled with its policy of divide and rule, mutual suspicion and mistrust had arisen even before independence. Matters were not remedied by disparities in the level of education and development.

    Thus, bitter competition reared its ugly head as these inclusive units struggled with one another to take advantage in the affairs of and institutions owned by the federal government. The imminent departure of the colonial masters coupled with some of the strategies adopted by our nationalists while campaigning for their exit succeeded in alienating the people from the government.

    With the advent of military rule, things took a turn for the worse as the command and regimentation system of the military, led to the centralization and concentration of virtually all powers of the state at the federal level. The federal government thus became omnipotent and omnipresent dispensing almost entirely, the means of life and death.

    This in turn, accentuated bitter competition among the various ethnic groups for the control of the centre so as to take advantage of the enormous resources at its disposal.  That accounts in the main, for the scandalous level of corruption that has wrestled this country to the ground.

    Today, these primordial cleavages are in stiff competition to control the centre and all efforts to restructure the country, diffuse the debilitating rivalry and unleash the creative energies of the population for rapid development are being resisted by interests that profit from the decadent order. It is a pipe dream to nurse the idea that we can possibly make Nigerians out of these competing interests the way things stand.

    Peter Eke in his theory of the two publics, made a distinction between the primordial and civic publics which have different standards of morality.  He contended that though these two are different, politicians operate in both the primordial and civic publics and the problems of African politics are traceable to the defective moral bearing that accompanies the civic public.

    The relationship of the people with the civic public is characterized by an amoral linkage while there is a high level of moral attachment to issues that impinge on the primordial realm. Thus, while one is seen as an avenue to be impoverished or even incapacitated (civic public) the other (primordial realm) is conceived as one that needs to be cared for and protected.

    This has been the reason for the constant competition between primordial tendencies and the central government for the soul and loyalty of the citizens. Nearly 56 years after independence, centrifugal tendencies have continued to impose the greatest obstacles to nationhood.

    You are considered smart if you steal from the coffers of the government because that government is thought to belong to nobody and could be conveniently incapacitated by members of the various ethnic groups for themselves and members of their inner groups. Foremost political scientist Richard Joseph dubbed this prebendalism- politics for the benefit of one’s immediate families and ethnic groups.

    It is therefore neigh impossible for nation-building to take root in such a fragmented, disoriented and dysfunctional political environment. What we get instead is the ascendancy of primordial and parochial tendencies to an all time high. Separatist tendencies denoted by communal violence, agitations for self determination, sectarian and religious fundamentalism have had the combined effect of whittling down any prospects for nation building.

    Today, the nation is still battling the Boko Haram insurgency in the north-east part of the country; militancy in the Niger Delta region is again in an upsurge. Agitations for the independence of the sovereign state of Biafra have also resonated with great ferocity while the insurgency of the Fulani herdsmen has taken a dramatic but dangerous dimension.

    All these fissiparous tendencies cannot allow the psychological reconstruction of the mind for a common national identity which nation building requires to flourish. Matters are not helped by the increasing disposition of the government to the notion that military might is all that is needed to wield this country together. Coercion may succeed in quelling dissent or outright rebellion but it is of very limited value when it comes to nation-building as has been clearly shown by the resurging centrifugal tendencies. We need a rethink; new approaches to festering challenges.

    For this country to make real progress in nation-building we must first, restructure the polity; reduce the over-concentration of the powers of life and death at the federal level. Fiscal federalism will whittle down the concentration of all the finances of the government at the centre and reduce the unbridled competition for its control by the competing primordial cleavages.

    The mind-bugging looting of public funds, illustrates the amorality that is associated with the affairs of the civic public. There is no way nation-building can take root in a clime replete with these negative attitudinal tendencies.

    It will require very serious and conscious efforts at social re-engineering and mind reconstruction to elicit trust in the capacity of those in authority to be just, fair and equitable to the federating units before the brand of citizens that will be easily amenable to nation-building can emerge.

  • Police have no concept of citizenship

    Police have no concept of citizenship

    In the matter of Femi Owolabi, the journalist cruelly and needlessly tortured by policemen of the State Department of Criminal Investigations (SDCI), Yaba, The Punch has brought to the fore again the crisis bedeviling law enforcement in Nigeria. Mr Owolabi in company with about 30 club goers in Festac, Lagos had been arrested at random by policemen and subjected to degrading treatment. Though he eventually regained his freedom, the publication of the story prompted the Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Solomon Arase, to order the Lagos State Commissioner of Police, Fatai Owoseni, to conduct an investigation into the matter. On a weekly and sometimes daily basis, stories of cruel and degrading treatment inflicted on citizens by policemen, not to talk of extra-judicial killings, are published. These stories and the occasional punishment meted out to errant policemen have not curbed the malady. The malady, and the bad image it gives to Nigeria, will not be addressed until something deeply structural and fundamental has been done about policing in Nigeria.

    The publication raises a few disturbing facts about the state of policing. Of the about 30 people Mr Owolabi reported were randomly arrested and tortured, the police claimed not to have the names of about 16 of them, including the chief complainant. So, how are police stations run? Unprofessionally, whimsically, without records, or with poor records? Has discipline so completely broken down in police stations, and has the camaraderie between officers and men so obfuscated the differences in rank that no one is really accountable to anyone? If the investigations ordered by the IGP are thorough, Mr Owoseni should be able to unearth exactly what happened to those arrested, how many were involved, and in particular, how Mr Owolabi’s name got missing from the list. The IGP will not come down to Lagos to do Mr Owoseni’s job for him. If he is thorough, Nigerians may begin to get clues as to how some missing persons supposedly arrested by the police disappear completely.

    Second, and very crucially, given this story and many others like it, it appears the training of policemen is horribly defective. It is time to examine the curriculum of police training schools, and the quality and competence of the trainers. Do they have a proper understanding of the concept of citizenship? That concept may be warped in the United States because of racism; in Nigeria it is indefensible for policemen to engage in the barbarous practice of instinctive torture and brutality. Just like soldiers who in Lagos drive on BRT lanes, policemen give the impression they are above the law, and can lie expertly to cover their atrocities. They all give the impression that there is both no law in the country and, worse, no government. These horrifying practices are not difficult to curb if there is discipline and proper understanding of the concept of citizenship at the police, military and federal government levels. As a former Burkinabe leader, Thomas Sankara, once said, a soldier (in this case, a policeman) without political education is a potential criminal.

    Both the IGP and the Lagos police commissioner have admittedly laboured to attend to the malfeasances of some of their incorrigible men, and many such offending policemen have been shown the way out of the force. But the better option is to reduce these malfeasances to the barest minimum. So far, little is being done beyond punishing those who can’t lie their way through their crimes or cover their atrocious tracks. If Mr Arase, himself a lawyer, hopes to leave a befitting legacy, if he does not wish to be undermined by errant policemen and officers, he must conduct a thorough shake-up of police operational guidelines. It will not be easy, for the police have ossified over the years as they sank deeper into impunity and undisciplined behaviour.

    As a long-standing and qualified police officer, Mr Arase will recall that many times in the past, Amnesty International, the global human rights watchdog, had reported unhealthy practices in the Nigeria Police, chief of which were the routine and almost absent-minded use of torture, extra-judicial killings and indiscriminate misuse of detention and deliberate incrimination of suspects. The Nigeria Police story in fact appears to be that of a police establishment run riot. Every time Amnesty came out with a situation report, the police routinely challenged them and resorted to abuse. In their many responses to Amnesty reports, not only were police officers lying to themselves, there is hardly a Nigerian who doubts the damning reports. After all, dozens of cases are reported in the media virtually weekly. In 2009, Boko Haram leader, Mohammed Yusuf, was extra-judicially murdered in police custody, adding fuel to an already bad situation, and accentuating a crisis that has led to the killing of tens of thousands of people and destruction of properties worth billions.

    If Mr Arase is not to leave office uncelebrated, he must do substantially well to affect the fortunes and image of the police. The Owolabi case presents him an opportunity to issue fresh guidelines to his officers. He must hold his officers accountable, and in turn his officers must hold their men most scrupulously accountable. The officers must banish the chumminess between them and their men, a relationship sometimes based unscrupulously on pecuniary considerations. It is in fact deeply mortifying that in a police establishment structured into sound and practical reporting layers of Deputy Inspector-General, Assistant Inspector-General, State Commissioner of Police, Area Commander, and Divisional Police Officer, it still needed the intervention of the IGP to tackle the errancy of policemen run amok in its Yaba department.

  • Resolving the Jos citizenship crisis

    Resolving the Jos citizenship crisis

    The struggle between the predominately Christian Berom/Anaguta/Afizere (BAA) ‘indigenous’ groups and the overwhelmingly Muslim Hausa-Fulani ‘settler’ group over the right of ownership of – or control over – land, power and resources has been the major driver of the Jos crisis. Scarce resources have generated fierce competition and, no thanks to unbridled and self-centred politicisation, cyclical violence. The latter has been defined and worsened by both local and national dynamics. Because of the country-wide indigene-settler question, inter-communal conflicts have tended to take on national character and expression. The Jos crisis, precisely because it is more a national than a local issue, will most likely be resolved only when the citizenship of all Nigerians is constitutionally guaranteed and faithfully implemented.

    Since 1994, Jos, a foremost ethnic melting point in Nigeria with its attractive year-round semi-temperate weather, has been rampaged – along with much of Plateau State – by identity politics overtly encapsulated by both ethnic affiliation and religious confession. The city’s long-standing and enviable cosmopolitanism which had, for decades, evinced a culture of intimate cross-cultural relations, including marriages, between Christians and Muslims lies, today, in tatters. Due to its apparent interminable cycle, violence has become tellingly more frequent and deadlier since September 2001 when the first major episode of inter-communal violence broke out.

    At the origin of the indigene-settler dispute in Jos are the claims and counter-claims to the ownership of the city on the basis of first migration arrival. Indigene-settler conflicts have appeared fiercer and more endemic in Jos because of the historic and bitter struggle between the two groups. Memories of deprivation, subordination and exploitation since the slave raids, between the 16th and the 18th centuries, by the Emirate North on the Middle Belt remain evergreen in the region.

    The BAA groups have been further aggrieved not only by the spirited attempts of the Hausa-Fulani group to subjugate them through the early 19th century, Usman dan Fodio-driven Jihad but by the perceived support of the Hausa-Fulani politico-religious elite by the British colonial authorities to establish its hegemony over the Middle Belt. Reclaiming their rights, as the indigenous peoples of Plateau State, has been the dominant narrative that runs through the BAA’s contemporary politics of reverse discrimination against their perceived ancient oppressors. Conversely, the Hausa-Fulani community has been aggrieved about its lack of access to power despite being the majority in Jos North, the city’s biggest, richest and most contentious local council. They also decry their disenfranchisement and perceived lack of political inclusion in Plateau State.

    The maiden 1994 crisis, during which long-standing disagreements over land and chieftaincy titles, stoked violence, pales into relative obscurity in comparison to large-scale inter-communal violence in 2001, 2004, 2008 and 2010. The uptick in bomb attacks, suicide bombings and bomb plantings since December 2010, a manifest indication of Boko Haram’s infiltration of the ancient tin city, has exacerbated existing inter-communal tensions. Increasingly well-trained militants, loosely organized along religious and ethnic lines, have proliferated. The internecine conflict has often been very bitter precisely because privileges and entitlements, guaranteed and under-written by the issuance and possession of the certificate of indigeneity, are a zero–sum game: the gain of one group is the loss of the other. Like other ‘settler’ groups across the country, the Hausa-Fulani community, bereft of this certificate, is deprived of meaningful citizenship. It suffers discrimination in recruitment into federal institutions, admission to most of the federal universities and education at military academies and access to schools and jobs. The door to effective participation in local politics is virtually shut against its members.

    Poor governance at all levels of government; economic deregulation (that hurts all save the thieving ruling elite and its objective and subjective allies) and rampant corruption have compounded ethnic, religious and regional fault-lines in Nigeria. The notion of national citizenship and its material manifestation on the ground, appear to have been largely abridged by both ethnicity and ancestry. By, thus far, demonstrating political weakness and unwillingness to holistically and decisively address this problem, the federal government and the Plateau State governments appear to sanction the perception, in informed quarters, that there is an elite conspiracy against peace on the Plateau and elsewhere. Yet, government alone, no matter how well-intentioned, cannot find a permanent solution to the crisis.

    Nigerian leaders – political, traditional, religious, civil society, community and others – working in tandem with informal peacemakers like elders, youth and women groups should urgently devise a calibrated response to the various challenges posed by Jos’ indigene-settler conflict. The onus is on the political elite to set the pace, tone and tenor both in general and specific terms. Their class interest – as well as common sense – should egg them on.

    At the general level, urgently needed is the construction of a template for proper, transparent and accountable management of public funds in Nigeria. There is the need to put to good social use, the country’s daily oil receipts, foreign reserves and the excess crude account. This will stymie the current practice of allowing a few villainous public officials to squander the billions of dollars involved. Governments at all levels have the responsibility to reverse “the notorious phenomenon of Nigeria being immensely endowed yet having one of the poorest citizens in the world”, as a Nigerian editorialist recently lamented. The governments should fully embrace genuine democratic ethos, reduce the physical, emotional and policy gap between them and the people and carry on in a manner that will convince Nigerians that their core interests – security and welfare, according to the 1999 constitution – matter to their leaders. They should develop, use and mobilize the country’s rich human capital and articulate and implement policies capable of enhancing equality, reciprocity and social justice across the board.

    At the specific level, the first thing the federal government should do, working with the Plateau State government, is to begin to reverse the entrenched impunity in the Jos crisis. It can do this by naming, shaming, prosecuting and jailing instigators and perpetrators of violence. Many of them – individuals and groups – have already been identified by the judicial and other commissions of inquiry set up in the past by both governments. Trials should duly observe the rule of law and be informed by the need for deterrence. The governments should bolster law and order without embracing an exclusivist physical security agenda. Operation Rainbow (OR)’s unique human security agenda on the Plateau, at the instance of that state’s government, needs and deserves all the funding and encouragement it can muster.

    An inclusive political system is arguably the best antidote to entrenched reciprocal fears between the two antagonistic communities in Jos – as well as in other parts of the country. Peaceful means should be used to promote political inclusion. Rights and duties should be allocated on the basis of social justice.

    The federal government should work with the National Assembly to give Nigeria’s acute settler problem a constitutional solution by replacing the moribund indigene provisions in the constitution with a common citizenship for all Nigerians based on residency. The National Assembly should quickly revise and pass into law the Residency Rights Bill sponsored in 2004 by a group of senators. Thereafter, the federal government should organize and fund a nation-wide civic education programme that would inculcate in Nigerians the significance and virtue of a common notion of citizenship, based on respect of ethnic and religious diversity, national unity and cohesion. All of the above should be capped by sustained political and cultural work in the many communities already torn apart by the indigene-settler dispute.

    • Professor Amuwo, a governance, conflict and development consultant, contributed this piece from Dakar, Senegal.

     

  • We need citizenship education

    We need citizenship education

    SIR: Over half of the entire populace of the country are not grounded in the nation’s ideals. A therapy for this ailment is the introduction of the study of Citizenship education in our institutions of learning.

    As the family plays its part in building veritable citizens, so should the schools and institutions of learning play their part for things to work well together. Of importance should be the secondary schools because this is when the individual’s formation of character begins. I was filled with satisfaction when a secondary school approached me to see him through his assignment on the subject. It is a step in the right direction. If such an attitude is sustained, it will be good for our nation.

    Section 23 of 1999 Constitution which states that “The national ethics shall be Discipline, Integrity, Dignity of Labour, Social Justice, Religious Tolerance, Self-reliance and Patriotism” should be the foundation, which can be followed by upholding the contents of Section 24 and other similar sections.

    Nigerians stand to gain a lot with the inclusion of this scheme to the curriculum of different institutions of learning.

     

    • Ekpo Uduakobong,

    LagosState.