Tag: military rule

  • Military rule, civil war  destroyed federalism- Atiku

    Military rule, civil war destroyed federalism- Atiku

    Military incursion and the 30- month civil war led to the steady erosion of the nation’s federal structure, former Vice President Atiku Abubakar said yesterday.

    The federal structure, he noted, was erected by founding fathers to ensure national cohesion.

    Atiku said only a comprehensive restructuring of the country and devolution of power will restore national cohesion and good governance.

    Speaking at the 3rd Policy Monitoring Dialogue Series on National Unity, Integration and Devolution of Power/Restructuring”, the former Vice President said the increasing centralisation of power and concentration of resources at the federal level weakened the states and relatively impoverished them.

    Atiku, who has been a strong advocate of restructuring, argued devolving more powers and transferring more resources to states will decongest the centre and enhance greater manageability, efficiency and accountability.

    He said: “Military rule and the civil war led to the steady erosion of our federal structure.

    “The increasing centralisation of power and concentration of resources at the federal level in the context of rising oil revenues and neglect of other revenue sources weakened and relatively impoverished the states.

    “As Vice President and Chairman of the National Privatization Council, I saw firsthand what an overly centralized federal government can do wrong.

    “Having confiscated the bulk of national revenues, the federal government proceeded to insert itself in a dominant manner in virtually every aspect of our national life, including the economy where it became an investor in all manner of businesses rather than facilitating the emergence of a vibrant and thriving private sector.

    “Although we have succeeded in privatizing many public enterprises, we still engage in what I call institutional escapism and duplication/ multiplication.

    “Rather than fix existing challenges in existing ministries and departments, we create new ones to carry out the same functions as the existing ones.

    He emphasised people have a constitutional right to peacefully agitate for restructuring.

    According to Atiku:  “We should try to understand the basis for the agitations and calls for a new compact rather than vilify the agitators.

    “It is disingenuous to accuse everyone who calls for restructuring as trying to break up the county.

    “Yes restructuring may mean different things to different people. Like all things with political and economic implications, those calling for restructuring have varying positions, which is not a bad thing.

    “But we won’t really find out how close our positions are to those of others until we sit down with them and start to talk and negotiate.”

     

  • No place for military rule in Nigeria, says Boroffice

    No place for military rule in Nigeria, says Boroffice

    The Chairman, Senate Committee on Science and Technology, Prof. Ajayi Boroffice, has said the President Muhammadu Buhari administration has succeeded in securing the country and fighting corruption.

    He felicitated with Nigerians on this year’s Democracy Day and urged them to protect democracy.

    Boroffice said the alarm by the Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai that politicians approached soldiers for political reasons, was a matter of serious concern.

    His words: “Indeed, if there is any clandestine plot to interrupt civilian administration, it will fail because the world will unite to defeat such plot.

    “The exponents of such plot should know that military rule is no longer fashionable. It is unacceptable to the world. Democracy has come to stay.

    “Nigerians should not allow anyone or group to reverse the gains of 18 years of uninterrupted civilian rule. No person or group should be indulged to arrest the freedom of expression of Nigerians. People must defend the regime of accountability against invasion, intrusion and attack.”

     

     

     

     

     

  • Tinubu warns military rule advocates: don’t try it

    Tinubu warns military rule advocates: don’t try it

    Deputy speaker, ex-AIG: no room for anti-democratic action

    THOSE secretly pushing for a military solution to Nigeria’s problems yesterday got a piece of advice – forget the idea.

    All Progressives Congress (APC) stalwart Asiwaju Bola Tinubu warned that any attempt to break the nation’s nascent democracy would be resisted.

    Chief of Army Staff Lt. Gen. Tukur Buratai had raised the alarm about some politicians meeting military officers for political reasons.

    Tinubu, who spoke at a joint parliamentary session organised by the Lagos State House of Assembly as part of activities to mark the State’s Golden Jubilee celebration, said the nation had gone too far to allow a military coup to happen again, adding that such a move would be resisted at all cost.

    “Amidst the celebration, I will not fail to sound a caution to us all; the precious thing we have, the  democracy that we are now trying to perfect is not guaranteed to us. We must sweat hard, yet think wisely if we are to keep it,” Tinubu said, adding:

    “There will always be some people who want to undermine democracy. These people gain more from the government in the dark. Just a few days ago, we had a warning that some people were trying to entice the military out of the barracks. I say don’t try it. I want to add my voice to that warning. Those who think they can break the democracy so many of us laboured and for which too many people died, sacrificed their lives, they are sure mistaken.

    “Nigeria has come too far for such a thing to happen. Those people behind such idea will find no fertile ground to plant their seed in Lagos. We will not buy their sad product; whatever they want to sell is a bad product and we are going to reject it.”

    “ We tell them, ‘move away from here because Lagos State will resist it’. Lagos State is saying move away from it, don’t think about it, we are all staying together to grow our democracy,” he said.

    To the frontline politician, Lagos at 50 is worth celebrating, considering the state’s achievements in the last 50 years.

    But, amid the revelry, said Tinubu, it is important to emphasise the need to create more opportunities for the people.

    “We also have realised that we need to do more in order to create more opportunities, better education, improved housing and more jobs for many of our people so that all can witness the full blossom of growth and prosperity,” the former governor said, adding:

    “As a state,  we have shown we can do great things to enhance the lives of our people. We have so much more to do we need to do more to create great opportunities, better education and numerous business opportunities in the state.”

    Tinubu said achieving this objective requires cooperation between the legislature and the executive, adding that  during his tenure as governor, the interface between his administration and the House was very cordial.

    “We succeeded in taking Lagos to an enviable height. We set the agenda for progress and today that progress is being felt because the executive and legislature cooperated. This has continued from Fashola to Ambode. This cooperation does not erode on your oversight responsibility,” he said.

    Governor  Akinwunmi Ambode, in his opening remark, said since creation, the state had been a shining example and critical hub of socio-economic and political development.

    The harmonious relationship between the three arms of government, which is reflective in the governance model of Lagos State, promoted the interest and welfare of the people, he said.

    “Today, we are celebrating the contributions of the Lagos State House of Assembly, particularly the 8th Assembly in the last two years, to the true principles of democratic governance through passage of bills that advance the principle of governance and promotion of social welfare of the people within the ambits of the Law.

    “It is on record that military incursion into governance has always made the legislature its first victim by suspending the constitution with all powers against the wishes of our people. Therefore, the legislature can be said to be the most exposed in governance model in the current democratic dispensation, if we have to give its true meaning and relevance in a representative government.”

    Ambode added that the first to 8th Assemblies had been the benchmark for assessing legislative business in Nigeria, stressing that the 8th Assembly, in particular, had been highly responsive and innovative in fulfilling its constitutional obligations and meeting the aspirations of the people for the dividends of democracy.

    “The superlative performance, in his view, “can be attributed to the quality of leadership that has been produced through a mature and democratic process with the purpose of providing a democratic process that would benefit our people”.

    “Over the years, the Legislative arm of government in Lagos State has been a shining beacon of democratic independence and responsiveness. It has never shirked its assigned role or responsibility even in the face of provocation. It has continuously engaged the electorate in the process of making laws through interactive engagements and contributions to the making of Laws,” he said.

    Ambode stated that the synergy between the three arms of government, particularly the Executive and the Legislature had become the benchmark of the democratic process in Nigeria. He noted that as the government celebrated the last 50 years of the creation of Lagos State, it had laid the building blocks for the next 50 years.

    House Speaker Mudashiru Obasa, in his opening remark, said  it was important to celebrate, considering the various contributions of the parliament towards the state’ssuccess story of the state.

    House of Representatives Majority Leader  Femi Gbajabiamila said: It is easy to see an absentee legislator easily win election in the country today because the constituents are more concerned with the largesse from such a politician rather than one with a robust idea that will shape the future of the society.”

  • Nigerians won’t tolerate military rule anymore, says retired AIG

    A retired Assistant Inspector-General of Police, Mr. Felix Ogbaudu, said yesterday that military rule is no longer acceptable anywhere in the world.

    Ogbaudu spoke to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) against the backdrop of the alarm raised by Chief of Army Staff Lt. Gen. Tukur Buratai.

    “There is nothing wrong with the statement made by the Chief of Army Staff and as far as I am concerned, it was made in good faith.

    “There is nothing wrong in him advising them not to meddle in politics. If you have been following events, you will see what is happening in Cote d’Ivoire.

    “Military rule anywhere in the world is an abnormal situation. Nobody will even tolerate a military rule in this country any more. So the statement is a good advice and a very timely one.

    “Again, saying that, it is absolutely wrong to deploy soldiers to provide security for politicians.

    “That again speaks volumes that soldiers are guarding politicians in a democratic dispensation. It is abnormal to attach military personnel to politicians.

    “It also means that they have lost faith in the regular security personnel.

    “It means that we have to address the inadequacies that are making them to repose more confidence in the military to provide security for them in a democratic dispensation,’’ he said.

     

     

  • Military era, bane of Police inefficiency in Nigeria – Oba Akiolu

    Military era, bane of Police inefficiency in Nigeria – Oba Akiolu

    Oba of Lagos, Oba Rilwan Akiolu, Monday said the long years of military rule contributed immensely to why the Police Force is struggling with efficiency and performance stating categorically that, “It was the military that killed the efficiency and performance of police”.

    Akiolu spoke at the opening ceremony of a two-day Stakeholder’s Summit organized by the Lagos State Ministry of Justice at the Eko Hotels and Suites in Lagos, where keynote address was delivered by the Acting President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo (SAN), who was represented by the Minister of Justice and Attorney- General of the Federation, Mr. Abubakar Malami (SAN).

    The traditional ruler who recalled that he was the head of the police fighting force for years, however, urged President Buhari to ensure he worked with serious and open minded people who would give the Inspector- General of Police free hand to run the Force.

    This is as he said that the call to have community policing established in the country requires dedication, funds and men who were prepared to work.

    Also, he said the issue of police barracks collapsing could only be addressed through adequate funding by the Federal Government.

    “I have listened with rapt attention the argument of the Acting President who was represented by the AGF. And let me tell you the truth. It was the military that killed the efficiency and performance of police.

    “I was the head of the police fighting force for years. I am happy that at this time we have someone who is willing and prepared to assist the Nigerian police.

    “I want to urge the President to work with serious and open minded people who will give the IG free hand to run the force.

    “We are clamouring for community policing at the moment but I must tell you that it requires dedication, funds and men who are prepared to work.

    The reason for police barrack collapsing is that the Federal Government needs to release funds to rehabilitate the barracks in order for the DPO and others top police officers to live within the community they have been assigned to work,” the monarch said.

    Speaking further, Oba Akiolu, while denouncing the Police Service Commission (PSC), describing it is a toothless bulldog, said, it was unfair for someone to sit at the PS and determine who retires from the police.

    The Oba, who said he was a victim, pointed out that that was not how to run a very efficient police force, even as he disclosed that he had asked the officers who took the Federal Government to court over their premature retirement to withdraw the suit and go and claim their benefits.

    “For someone to sit at the Police Service Commission and determine who retires from the police is unfair. This is not how to run a very efficient police force.

    “I remember that I was a victim of that circumstance; then Atiku, Daura and others sat down and advised the president (Obasanjo) that if he wants to win Lagos in 2003, I must be removed. It was written on paper.

    “And in fairness to President Obasanjo, he argued that he knows nothing about it. And he had to send for the IG because the then Chief of Staff challenged the plan to retire me.

    “Also, what they wanted to use former IG, Tafa Balogun for at the end of the day. And that is why Alhaji Gambo is still bitter because he wanted Balogun to disclose what the PDP wanted him to do in 2003.

    “And all those money they alleged he was possessing, it was some of the governors that contributed that money to him. The PSC is a toothless bulldog. I have asked the officers who took the government to court to withdraw the suit and go and claim their benefits,” he said.

  • War Lord Democracy

    War Lord Democracy

    As military rule mercifully recedes into remote and distant memory in Nigeria, it is profoundly ironic that the democratic process continues to manifest some of the ungainly features of repressive autocracies. For example, there is the continuing militarization of the polity and the weaponization of politics itself to the point that it has become a game of political warlords. This much was evident in the last days of the last regime.  Only a balance of terror and the watchful eyes of the international community prevented Nigeria from tipping over into the abyss.

    But so soon thereafter, we are at it again as it is customary for a country with a legendary reputation for permanently camping at the edge of the abyss and for flirting with suicide.  Under the spreading chestnut tree, I sold you, and you sold me, as George Orwell famously noted. Politics in Nigeria is a game of multiple treachery and multivalent betrayal.  Yet it is only those who consider politics however dangerous hair-raising as a mere game that would fail to see the delinquent seizure of the machinery of the senate by some rogue senators in all its dangerous and destabilizing import.

    Once again, something new comes out of Nigeria. This one goes beyond the established norm of political normlessness. As we shall see, it strikes a deadly blow at the change mantra of the current regime. It casts the senate in dissident dissonance and disharmony with the executive and possibly with the judicial arm. It sets the stage for a crippling administrative disorder and possible disintegration. A hybrid senate leadership is a hybridized monster which is unknown in the history of modern democracy and one with a capacity to destroy even its own. It is a peculiar mess, a typically Nigerian peculiar mess at that.

    Having said that, it is important for those who have invested intellectual, strategic, political, economic and even ethnic capital in the project of change and the possibility of national redemption not to despair or throw up their arms in frustration. Democratic change cannot and does not occur overnight. It is always easier for forces of reaction to regroup and reassemble at short notice because they know the economic price of everybody but the political value of nothing.

    It is too early in the day to consign the Buhari administration to the trashcan of history. Nigerians, both mighty and low, must learn the virtue of patience. A people without any demonstrative capacity for collective revolutionary initiative must also not add the vice of impatience to their baggage. This is not the time to further inflame passions. It is not the time for wild speculations and unrestrained tirades. Without sacrificing party supremacy, APC must engage its dissident members. Bukola Saraki is a wasp perched on the most delicate part of the human anatomy.

    It has been a typically Nigerian coup, full of intrigues, double dealing, double crossing and ambush within ambush reminiscent of the exploits of Nigeria’s aging coup maestros. There is also a hint of self-coup, or what the Latin Americans call Autogolpe. An Autogolpe is a conscious coup against one’s self. But this one is probably unconscious.  When Mohammadu Buhari tersely but awkwardly noted that “a constitutional process has somewhat occurred”, we say with the retired general that it is actually a constitutional autogolpe that has somewhat occurred.

    The Nigerian president must now be helped out of the awful mess he has partly created. But he will need to change tack. He must avoid the Ben Bella Syndrome. Ahmed Ben Bella was a great hero of the Algerian war of independence against the French. It was a nasty and cruel contention whose echoes reverberate till date. When Ben Bella finally assumed office, he had become so physically, psychologically and emotionally drained that he could only spend time trifling with extant structures until his colleagues put him out of his miseries.

    There are extenuating circumstances for the presidential faux pas. As a born again democrat who has deliberately and strenuously purged himself of the autocratic mind-set of his military career, Buhari is anxious to be seen as a man who values consensus, a man is willing to marry messianism with the multiplicity of contrary views, and a man not willing to be seen as disrupting the seamless web of governmental harmony among the executive, the judiciary and the legislature.

    This can only work in advanced climes where people have learnt from bitter experience to live for the greater good of the greater society. But in a society teeming with political sharks and vultures, it is a manual for political martyrdom. It is up to the retired general to find a golden mean between the obsessive and obtrusive meddlesomeness of his military predecessor in civilian office and the hardy and alert proactiveness necessary to do the job at hard. The Nigerian presidency is not a habitat for secular saints.

    In Latin America after they had almost killed themselves off due to incessant and tempestuous coups, the generals decided on a simple method of eliminating the perennial bloodfest.  Whenever a coup is in the offing, they would do a simple troops’ audit and since God marches on the side of the greater battalion, the general with the highest number of battalions  on his side carried the day.

    On Tuesday, Bukola Saraki did a troops’ audit. But as a veteran power pragmatist who knows that there is no party as such but alliances of inconvenience, he simply called for help from battle hardened adversarial combatants itching for a pound of flesh. The old warriors of reaction and ethnic revanchists still nursing the wounds of their ouster from the federal Toll Gate simply rallied.

    It is a foul and unethical thing to do reeking of betrayal and perfidy, but it reveals the monumental hollowness that lies at the heart of the current democratic process in Nigeria. There is no party as such only amalgams of mutually contradictory and violently incompatible tendencies that have refused or are probably incapable of congealing and coalescing into an organic whole. It is a dialectical mirror image of Nigeria itself.  You cannot plant cassava and expect to harvest yam. It is a symptom in search of a disease and the nearest diagnosis we can come up with is democratic warlordism.

    In the event, the defeated and disorganized PDP showed greater cohesion and dynamic mobility than the ruling party. They have claimed that they were also benefitting from the phenomenon of Tambuwalism, which is akin to an invasion of enemy territory even before the commencement of proper hostilities. It is rumoured that the veteran Tambuwal himself also played a stirring role in this one. It is in the nature of cut-throat politics, and there are no permanent allies but present interests.

    The APC has received its baptism of fire. It should now go back to the drawing board. It should immediately put in place a rigorous mechanism for party conflict resolution through the three Cs: conciliation, compromise and consensus.  It is obvious that the party has suffered grievously due to lack of internal cohesion and as a result of excessive vanity and obsession with the spoils of office.

    When all else fails, it is only the presidency that can wield the big stick. The failure of the president to wade in much earlier and to do so in a decisive manner when he was eventually roused to act has resulted in a political black eye for the party. It is a curious irony that Buhari would seem to be encouraging political warlordism in his own party when the electoral revolt that swept him to power is a stinging disavowal of the same phenomenon in the larger Nigerian polity. The Nigerian senate is the surviving stronghold of our last political Shoguns.

    Having acquired teeth and muscle, this senatorial Shogunate is going to try President Buhari’s will and iron resolve to reform and sanitize the Nigerian polity to the snapping point in the next few months. It is going to be a battle royale the likes of which has never been witnessed in these climes. If the president wilts and withers away, it is all but guaranteed that his presidency will end as a colossal failure, unable to make a dent in the monumental rot that has stifled the nation. As we have previously advised, it is going to be a game of will and wits and the president will need all his political savvy and street wisdom.

    A lot is going to depend on his party and its principal partners. A few columns back, we had commended the tragic fate of the inchoate and incongruous alliance which ended authoritarian misrule in Kenya to the APC. Going forward to a fresh election, the party disintegrated into its political components and ethnic particularities. The result was a brief civil war which shook Kenya to its foundation and from which the country is yet to properly recover.

    It is not a question of whether one likes President Buhari or not. The Change Project which the retired general has courageously spearheaded in collusion with many patriotic Nigerians and which has resonated spectacularly with our compatriots both at home and abroad is the last chance to redeem this country and put it on the path of rectitude and righteousness.  If it fails, it is going to be goodbye to Nigeria as we know it.