Tag: restructuring

  • Restructuring and the  president’s speech

    Restructuring and the president’s speech

    WHY President Muhammadu Buhari felt burdened to respond to the restructuring debate in his New Year’s Day speech will remain a mystery to the rest of the country except his speechwriters and close aides. His view on the controversial subject is well known, including how rather simple and cursory that view is, and how obstinately he opposes the restructuring panacea that has intrigued and energised the rest of the country. Before he needlessly exhumed the controversy, the country was already becoming reconciled, in a frustrating way, to tolerating the leader of a party that promised devolution of powers in its manifesto so dead set against restructuring. Despite the APC’s open acknowledgement of the country’s misshapen structure, and its promise to begin to effect crucial repairs; and regardless of empanelling a group headed by the Kaduna State governor, Nasir el-Rufai, to examine the debate and make recommendations, the party’s number one citizen has jumped the gun and set his face and that of his party irrevocably against restructuring.

    President Buhari may be bold and assertive, and his understanding of the issues surrounding restructuring obfuscated by his background as a military man and northerner; it is nonetheless still curious why a matter that should profit from some evasiveness close to an election year managed to attract such unmitigated display of candour. The people always knew he squirmed over restructuring, a deportment that seemed to draw the whimsical support of his northern base; but the passage of time and his own reticence over the subject had started to lessen the impact of his party’s disavowal of restructuring or even devolution, neither of which the ruling party has shown any appetite to implement or tolerate. There was nothing he said about his distaste for restructuring that he had not said before. All he did on January 1, 2018 was to restate his opposition, nay, throw that opposition in the face of his southern supporters who, in electing him into office, naively reposed hope in his altruism and nationalist credential.

    In reiterating his opposition to restructuring, when he should have left his party to formally and finally come out with a compromise position, the president once again showed his inability to comprehend the major dynamics of politics, a failing that led him to three previous major electoral defeats since 2003. He is also proving once again that the idiosyncrasies that undermined his return to office for so long are still potent enough to undermine or at least vitiate his success in office. By now, he ought to have learnt from his years in the wilderness that it is not enough to just oppose a concept or panacea, he must also prove that his opposition is grounded on a visionary perception of what is best for the country. Some parts of the North may oppose restructuring for what they fear might be the consequences of the implementation of restructuring, but neither they nor the president, nor anyone else in the country, can suggest that that opposition will bode well for a country beset by intractable and multidimensional problems.

    If the All Progressives Congress (APC) hopes to make the electoral impact they expect in 2019, they must not only gently coax their president away from his antipathy towards restructuring and inclusive politics, they must also sensibly and aggressively cobble together a healthy and futuristic change agenda that would restore the country to real stability, peace and progress. If their president can’t seem to read the signs of the times in the multiple and ubiquitous upheavals engulfing the country, if he can’t understand that these upheavals suggest much more than the communal crises the Inspector-General of Police, Ibrahim Idris, simplistically talked about in his analysis of the killings in Benue State, then they have a responsibility as a party to steer both the discussions and recommendations surrounding restructuring away from the triteness and parochialism some APC members seem enamoured of. Far more than that, they have an obligation to ensure that the El-Rufai restructuring committee report does not simply reflect the imprecise, opaque and manipulative tendencies of the governor or a narrow group within the party.

    In his January 1 address, the president, for the first time, gave a glimpse of his misty political thoughts. The country’s problem, he said emphatically, was not that of structure, but one of process. “When all the aggregates of nationwide opinions are considered,” he said without indicating whether that aggregation had been done and he had read the summary, “my firm view is that our problems are more to do with process than structure.” The president, as this column has repeatedly indicated, is a conservative man and politician, if not an arch-conservative. No one who has studied the Nigerian problem in detail, and who has done so without the corrupting influences of ethnic and religious considerations, can fail to appreciate the complexity of the problem, its many-sidedness, and its irresponsiveness to general political anodynes. To now reduce such a complex problem to a simple one of process beggars belief. The most charitable view of the president’s diagnosis is that he is simply misinformed.

    It is worse when he goes on to belabour the matter in terms of the tangential argument about what system to adopt in place of the amalgam in use today. “We tried the Parliamentary system: we jettisoned it,” he argued. “Now there are shrill cries for a return to the parliamentary structure. In older democracies these systems took centuries to evolve. So, we cannot expect a copied system to fit neatly our purposes. We must give a long period of trial and improvement before the system we have adopted is anywhere near fit for purpose.” It is obvious the president has not taken time to examine the country’s structure and the system of government in operation. It should have been clear to him that the country is politically unstructured, and the system of government neither parliamentary nor presidential. It is an imitation of presidentialism, a concoction so bastardised by dangerous and myopic influences that it has no pretext whatsoever to be described as a borrowed political system, not to talk of presidential system, from America.

    There were other misconceived notions and conclusions in the address. Apparently worried that many nefarious influences could upend the next general elections, the president warned the country to beware of ethnic and religious manipulations, and concluded that the Southwest’s handling of these supposedly negative influences was salutary. Where he got that puzzling conclusion is hard to say. Perhaps it was the conclusion made by someone in his inner circle with an overly optimistic reading of political and cultural developments in the Yoruba country. “As the electioneering season approaches,” counselled the president with unaccustomed optimism, “politicians must avoid exploiting ethnicity and religion by linking ethnicity with religion and religion with politics. Such must be avoided at all costs if we are to live in harmony.” Then he adds the surprising clincher: “In this respect the rest of Nigeria could learn from the south-western states who have successfully internalised religion, ethnicity and politics.”

    In the first instance, the word ‘internalised’ was misapplied. Internalisation is the adoption of other people’s beliefs, values and attitudes, consciously or unconsciously. Nothing of that nature has happened in the Southwest. The Yoruba, by virtue of their long relationship with secularist principles and democratic values, as exampled by their colourful political history, have learnt to accommodate and tolerate (not internalise) other people’s values, beliefs and attitudes. That accommodating approach to politics and other people’s differences can of course be recommended. But even then, the president still misread current developments in the Southwest. The Yoruba were inured to religious differences and welcomed people of other stocks and beliefs. But today, assailed by the festering theocratic veneer in the North, and forced to rethink their openness by the parochialism of some parts of the South, they have begun to regress dangerously to the disreputable national mean.

    In the past, the Yoruba embraced political tickets in their states that boasted the same religion — Muslim-Muslim or Christian-Christian — and were indifferent to national tickets whose candidates and running mates were Muslim-Muslim. Regrettably, they no longer do so. Their history has been disembowelled by the fanaticism and close-mindedness promoted by the rest of the country. Even their welcoming culture of defending and promoting the welfare and safety of strangers is being altered in earthshaking ways. No, Mr President, the Southwest never internalised anything of the kind you spoke of. And worse, they are almost now indistinguishable from the rest of the country. But if the president feels beguiled by that general notion of the Yoruba’s accommodating culture and inurement to religious and ethnic differences, the president must ask himself to what extent he had done or said anything to promote that culture in a country that repudiated him thrice and now gave him the chance to show just how deep his ideological or perhaps personal transformation is.

    The president is wrong to foreclose restructuring, for that is what he has done despite talking evasively of being receptive to ideas that would improve governance and aid peace and stability. He is even wronger to foreclose a matter that his party, through its manifesto, has not dared to address with such numbing definitiveness. The country will of course be restructured, if not in the immediate future, then sometime in the medium run. Any visionary can see that. That the president cannot see it, and has unadvisedly promoted process, with all its nebulousness and ordinariness, over the deeper and more fundamental issue of restructuring is like sailing near the wind. If he doesn’t see the risk he is taking, and can’t see how critically he endangers his party’s electoral success in 2019, his party has an obligation to compel him to rethink history before panic sets in.

  • IYC to Buhari: we want restructuring

    IYC to Buhari: we want restructuring

    The Eric Omare-led Ijaw Youth Council (IYC) Worldwide, yesterday told President Muhammadu Buhari to stop foot-dragging and take steps to restructure the country.

    It lamented the stance of the President on issues of restructuring contained in his New Year address, describing it as insensitive, discouraging and depressing.

    The spokesman, Mr. Henry Ayalla, said in a statement that the Ijaw nation disagreed with the assertion of Buhari that Nigeria’s problem was more of process than structure.

    He said: “We disagree, when the president said ‘our problems are more to do with process than structure’ because without a proper structure there will not exist any process.

    “Having kept a close watch on the ongoing debate on restructuring, one would expect that the President would seek a process for the amendment of the constitution in line with the principles of true federalism, with immediate effect.

    “The country cannot make any progress with the kind of constitution we operate at present, which is seen as a quasi-unitary system of government, because power is over concentrated at the centre.

    “Section 2(2) of the 1999 Constitution (as amended) states that Nigeria shall be a federation consisting of states and a Federal Capital Territory.

    “This means that Nigeria operates a federal system of government, which also suggests states should have control and management of their resources and pay royalty to the centre. This is what we see as restructuring in line with true federalism.”

    Ayalla appealed to Buhari and the National Assembly to tinker with the Exclusive List and decentralise power contained on the list.

    “We urge the President and National Assembly to put in motion plans of devolving power from the Exclusive Legislative List, which has 68 items on the Concurrent Legislative List, which only has 30 items, as this will be a good step towards restructuring the country in line with true fiscal federalism.

    “A restructured Nigeria will be considered as the bedrock for lasting peace within the Niger Delta. Anything to the contrary will be seen as living in the past.”

    He faulted the aspect of the President’s speech where he averred that “we Nigerians can be very impatient and want to improve our conditions faster than may be possible, considering our resources and capabilities.”

    Ayalla said: “We want to state categorically that Niger Delta people in whose land nearly all mineral resources that feed the country are derived, are not impatient but have been patient despite constant neglect, embezzlement of our God given resources, environmental degradation, pollution and abject poverty.”

  • Buhari misunderstood restructuring, says NBA chief

    Buhari misunderstood restructuring, says NBA chief

    Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) Second Vice President Monday Ubani yesterday said President Muhammadu Buhari must have misunderstood Nigerians’ demand for restructuring.

    The lawyer said an aspect of the restructuring Nigerians seek is the devolution of power from the Federal Government to the states.

    According to him, the President appeared to understand restructuring to strictly mean a return to the Parliamentary system of government.

    The President said: “We tried the Parliamentary system: we jettisoned it. Now there are shrill cries for a return to the Parliamentary structure. In older democracies these systems took centuries to evolve so we cannot expect a copied system to fit neatly our purposes. We must give a long period of trial and improvement before the system we have adopted is anywhere near fit for purpose.”

    Ubani said: “Maybe he misunderstood what restructuring really means.  The restructuring we’re talking about is removing most of the things being handled by the Federal Government. Let them be decentralised.

    “States should share some of these duties in order to ensure good governance, proper structure and a well-run federation.”

    Ubani said the President’s New Year speech was otherwise inspiring, and urged him to match words with action.

    “Every other thing he said is very inspiring and I’m very happy that the government is making some level of progress, such as in agriculture and stabilising the naira.

    “A lot of things he said really inspires hope, especially in the development of basic infrastructure. He mentioned the railways, electricity, and other key infrastructure suffering some level of deficiency.

    “Those are important in restarting the economy, especially power. So I urge him to match his words with action.”

    Lagos lawyer and University of Lagos (UNILAG), Mr Wahab Shittu, described the speech as balanced.

    He said: “President Buhari’s address is the last opportunity to deliver change to Nigerians by affirmative actions.

    “The speech is both an acknowledgment of concerns being raised by the citizenry as well as commitments to deliver on railways, roads, power projects, employment, security, enterprise, fair elections and the political challenges of the country.

    “Addressing huge infrastructural deficits is the central theme with marginal issues being political stability and other issues including cost of governance and appreciation to Nigerians for concerns raised during the period of his health challenges.

    “The speech set specific targets and objectives in the context of economic recovery and growth plan strategy of the administration.

    “Overall the speech reflected the concerns of Nigerians as well as firm commitments to address them mainly through the power, works and housing ministry, Federal Roads Maintenance Agency (FERMA), etc, utilising diversification into agriculture, solid minerals, manufacturing, enterprise and job creation tools as driving force for the realisation of set objectives.

    “lt is a balanced address which also recognised the challenges of energy crisis, power outage, security threats, derelict infrastructure and citizen disenchantment arising mainly from poverty and lingering fuel crisis which marred the Christmas and New Year holidays.

    “Nigeria will hold the president on his word to fish out those responsible for the blackmail resulting in the artificial fuel scarcity inspite of efforts of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) in making products available.”

    Former member Ogun State Judicial Service Commission, Mr Abayomi Omoyinmi, said the speech was hope-inspiring.

    “My general impression of the President’s broadcast is that the speech has given hope to the people of the country in that there is continuity in the process of development of infrastructure by his government that will turn around the economy.

    “The infrastructure that has for a long time been neglected my previous administration. The fact that he recognises the problems staring the people of Nigeria in the face and consistently gives assurances of better things to come rather than pretending that those problems do not exist portends hope rather than hopelessness.

    “The broadcast is a reaffirmation of the Buhari government’s commitment to rebuilding the country for a better tomorrow,” Omoyinmi said.

  • What Buhari said on restructuring

    What Buhari said on restructuring

    In respect of political developments, I have kept a close watch on the on-going debate about ‘Restructuring’.

    “No human law or edifice is perfect. Whatever structure we develop must periodically be perfected according to changing circumstances and the country’s socio-economic developments.

    “We Nigerians can be very impatient and want to improve our conditions faster than may be possible considering our resources and capabilities.

    “When all the aggregates of nationwide opinions are considered, my firm view is that our problems are more to do with process than structure.

    “We tried the Parliamentary system: we jettisoned it. Now there are shrill cries for a return to the parliamentary structure.

    “In older democracies these systems took centuries to evolve. So, we cannot expect a copied system to fit neatly our purposes. We must give a long period of trial and improvement before the system we have adopted is anywhere near fit for purpose.

    “However, there is a strong case for a closer look at the cost of government and for the public services long used to extravagance, waste and corruption to change for the better.

    “I assure you that government is ever receptive to ideas which will improve governance and contribute to the country’s peace and stability.

    “As the electioneering season approaches politicians must avoid exploiting ethnicity and religion by linking ethnicity with religion and religion with politics. Such must be avoided at all costs if we are to live in harmony.

    “In this respect the rest of Nigeria could learn from the South Western States who have successfully internalised religion, ethnicity and politics.

    “Political discourse should be conducted with civility, decorum and in a constitutional manner. We all have a collective responsibility to strengthen our democracy and entrench the rule of law.”

     

     

     

     

     

  • Restructuring: Panacea for development, cohesion

    Restructuring: Panacea for development, cohesion

    Text of a paper presented by The Nation Editorial Board Chairman, Mr. Sam Omatseye, at the annual Law Week of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Jos branch.

    Structuralists however got into a snag because many scholars started doubting the importance of structure. Everyone can be its own structure and function, and that led to such movements as post-structuralism and post modernism. We have had a lot of confusion since or what Christ described as “distress of nations and perplexity.” I hope that we do not get to s ate where we cannot have a structure.

    But nowhere is this confusion more revealing than in allowing the big names of nation to say it in their own words. So, we hear from Tanko Yakassai, we also hear from Wole Soyinka, and we also hear from Emir of kano Lamido Sanusi. The voices of Femi Okurounmu, Mallam AdamuCiroma, Atiku Abubakar, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Alex Ekwueme, Rotimi Amaechi, Paul Unongo, Ben Nwabueze, Edwin Kiagbodo Clark, Ango Abdullahi, Obong Victor Attah. The irony is that all agree something is wrong. They don’t know or agree on what is right.

    It is interesting to see how all of these people are patriots or claim to be patriots but they look at patriotism through different lenses. The ambiguity of their submissions is enough to make the average Nigerian observer wonder. More so when their aversion of ill will is only counterbalanced by their profession of love for their fellow citizens of a different faith and tribe. They seem to be saying: “I love you, but I love myself more. But I love you all the same. If you don’t love me as much as I want you to love me then I will withdraw my love for you. And then, maybe, we can head for the boxing ring.”

    It recalls to mind the lines of the late Arab poet Mahmud Darwish: “Don’t ask of me, my love/the love I once had for you.”

    Yet in the voices of these men, and they are all men, the temperaments are not the same. A TankoYakassai declaims with an unmistakable truculence only counterpoised with an Nwabueze whose fidelity to restructuring bears the underlying angst of Biafra. A hard-charging Ango Abdullahi clearly enjoys his tirades. A Wole Soyinka, with syntactic rebellion, makes no bones about the negotiability of the Nigeria state and society.

    For instance, Edwin Clark comes across as an economist of inequality and guardian of the treasures of oil. Adamu Ciroma unveils a persona that agrees that Nigeria is not sustainable in its present state. There are a few very profound offerings. They include the writings of Lamido Sanusi, Paul Nnongo and Atiku Abubakar.

    One sapient point that has been missed in the cacophony was the point that the western region under Awolowo and the eastern region of the First Republic were at peace with the centre. The centre was not always a scarecrow. It was a desirable thing. As Sanusi reminds us, so good was the centre that when Awolowo was done as premier of the western region, he decided it was time to take the centre. From being a regionalist, he was taking a crack at the centre. When Awolowo was at the centre with Gowon, he never raised a finger for federalism.

    The southeast also loved the centre.  They were not taking a crack at the centre. They dominated the civil service and had the best core of the officer corps of the Nigerian army before the civil war. But they changed when the centre cracked. What Sanusi did not say, was that things changed because the military took over on behalf of the northern power bloc, and de-democratised the centre. It began to work for the north and not the west or east or Niger Delta, culminating in June 12. The quest for restructuring began, it shows that no one gives away power and you must take it. The centre allowed violence and the violent took it by force.

    Oil played a big part on this role reversal. We can trace this to the pre-independence era when oil was still a small factor in the economy. The British recommended that regions that enjoyed mineral resources should have 50 percent of the resources. The federal could garner only 30 percent. If we look at the country today, virtually every state has mineral resources whether it is bauxite or kaolin or limestone or gold that can turn them into vibrant economies rather than the entities that bear bowls in hand to the centre for monthly bailouts.

    The army changed all that, but that was because the cabal ahead of the army represented an oil-free region. The wealth of the Niger Delta became free only for those who had the guns pointed and ready to shoot. Nigeria had changed in the 1960’s from a state with an army to an army with a state. At one time, the regions only had 1.5 percent, including during the Shagari years. It was during Abacha’s regime that a decision of a token 13 per cent was taken for the region. Conversations about it has hit paralysis ever since.

    Before the jackboot, the different regions had agriculture in high gear. Those were the years of the groundnut pyramid, when Cocoa boomed as export and built a landmark edifice in Ibadan, when we taught a western nation how to make prosperity out of palm produce and our rubber was elite business in the world. Oil was a backdrop then and it was only in drops. When it became a flood, it submerged everything else. We became greasy with wealth. But we occluded a path not only to development but the army made us lose the path to cohesion.

    That was why the call for fiscal federalism started to resonate among the disenfranchised. Part of it was because Abiola won an election that was taken from him.The most strident voice over the course of the year came from an unusual source: the man Nnamdi Kanu. But the paradox was he did not call for restructuring. He wanted outright severance. In my columns I called him an ethnic entrepreneur who peddled hate. Yet he had followers, including those not associated usually with cant or extremism. So why would an Nwabueze or a Soludo speak so gleefully about an upstart whose biography did not celebrate industry or even Igbo patriotism to the extent that mere utterances from his lips paralysed the streets of the east?

    That is the conundrum made even more trenchant by the assertion by president Buhari that the nation is not negotiable. But Nigeria was not negotiated into being. It was a diktat from a foreign power. Now that we are together, it is important that some voices are saying they are not getting the right shakes in the system, that some part of the country seem to be sovereign while others are glorified subjects. The centre, they say, cannot hold when only one part of the country is at peace with the present arrangement when others are not. As of today, only the northwest has had voices that say the system is good the way it is.

    The only voice that spoke with some fire for justice has been Lamido Sanusi, but many in the northwest see his voice as a maverick, not representing the inner core of the region. But the Governor of Sokoto State, Aminu Tambuwal, whose progressive credentials are palpable, had to lend his voice eventually. Hear him:  “The idea that the north is against restructuring because it benefits most from the current state of things is circumscribed and patently false,” he noted.

    “The fact that some people continue to parrot such a lie only helps to give credence to the flawed argument. Let us be clear: the north wants restructuring as much as anyone else. “However, as a people we do not easily jump unto the bandwagon because we are always there for the long haul. We believe that any decision we take must be inclusive and respect procedures and processes so that the outcome is sustainable.” “I think we should first, as a country, agree on a mutual definition of the term restructuring. “In my view, if restructuring means taking stock of our arrangement to ensure that no state takes a disproportionate amount of the resources, or most of the available space in the education or job sector, or subjugate the others’ culture or religion. “Or lord it over the other so that the number of the poor and uneducated, whose future is circumscribed by their circumstance is shared proportionately, then we are game.

    “We all want a country where there is peace and progress, where justice is given, where all lives are safe and people can pursue their legitimate livelihoods wherever they choose. I believe each state in this country has areas of comparative advantage and life is a cycle so that what was once the largest revenue earner can in time become less so while something else takes ascendancy. “As a country we must look to the future and agree on what in the long run will benefit us all.”

    What the governor said is quite at odds with the caterwauling of a TankoYakassai.

    Another voice that has weighed in is the Sultan of Sokoto Abubakar Saad111.

    He says: “It is good to sit down and dialogue but there must be respect. I must respect you and you must respect me. And the greatest thing we can do for this country is always reflect on our history.

    “Because we didn’t fall from the sky, we came from somewhere. We became Nigeria in 1914 through amalgamation. People are shouting that our coming together as a country in 1914 was mistake, but God doesn’t make mistakes. If God doesn’t want such a thing as Nigeria to happen, nobody could ever have made it happen.”

    He goes further:  “I know that many of these groups from the North, West, Southsouth and Southeast agitating for this or that have their positions.

    “But despite the realities at present, no group has the right to tell anybody you must leave this place or that place if we still live in this country called Nigeria. I say, instead of talking about devolution of power, let’s talk about devolution of economy,” he added.

    The voices of Governor Tambuwal and the Sultan are conciliatory and open the door to bring together a concatenation of ideas. It is good men for conversation.

    But these voices have to come to terms with others voices. For instance that Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    The former governor of Lagos State called for a return to the ideals of the 1963 Constitution, which he said guaranteed fiscal federalism, regional autonomy, regional constitutions, and progressive competition among the federating units.

    Tinubu said, “Many of the 68 items on the Exclusive Legislative List should be transferred to the Residual Legislative List,” explaining, “This would be in harmony with the 1963 Constitution, again an instance of reaching back to revive something old yet more likely to give us a better Nigeria. That prior constitution granted vast powers to the regions, enabling them to carry out their immense responsibilities as they saw fit.”

    Tinubu said, “We cannot become a better Nigeria with an undue concentration of power at the federal level. Competition for federal office will be too intense, akin to a winner-takes-all duel. Those who lose will bristle at the lack of power in the periphery they occupy.

    “They will scheme to pester and undermine the strong executive because that is where they want to be. The executive will become so engaged in deflecting their antics that it will not devote its great powers to the issues of progressive governance for which such powers were bestowed.”

    He said if Nigeria continued in the current pseudo-federal path, it “will be in a constant state of disequilibrium and irritation. Such a situation augurs toward the maintenance of an unsatisfactory status quo in the political economy. It augurs against reform.” He stressed that the country must restructure “to attain the correct balance between our collective purpose, on one hand, and our separate grassroots realities, on the other.”

    What Governor Tambuwal and the Sultan called for is civility. But the counter question is that we never get things done with civility. It is when we roar and bang the table that the other side hears you.

    The reality, however, is that we need to go to the table. The key here lies with the president who has not shifted ground on the point that our unity is non-negotiable. Even husbands and wives negotiate their relationships every day. As the philosopher said, those who deserve freedom are those who are ready to fight for it every day.”

    It is not easy to give up power. No one gives it up without getting something back or without its back to the wall. What it means is that if the unfairness in the Nigerian state continues, the agitation will grow, and no one can predict what nature it will take. I love Nigeria, but I don’t agree that it is not negotiable. It is desirable when all get their due.

    We cannot get by mere institutions without content. Nigeria’s different endeavours at national unity are clear. They include the National Youth Service Corps, to tailor university graduates into the appreciation of the other by spending a year in a “strange” land.

    Over four decades of its founding, rather than harmony, the nation is tearing at its ethnic seams. We don’t even have the resources to guarantee a decent living for them in their areas of primary postings. There are other efforts at unity. They include unity schools, Federal Character Commission, the special case for the Niger delta like the formations of NDDB, OMPADEC and presently NDDC. The derivation policy, ministry of Niger Delta, and presidential amnesty programme. In spite of these, suspicions make relationships sour. The herdsmen crisis continues to create tensions with stories of slayings. A philosopher noted that in a true federalism the biggest part of a country is not better than the smallest part of it.

    The greatest problem is lack of trust. Trust does not come freely today. there is an African proverb that says, “be careful when a naked person offers you a shirt.” We have to move from there and abide by Ernest Hemmingway’s words, “The best way to find out if you can trust somebody is to trust them.”

    That is the model to follow and that is the challenge before us today.

     

     

  • Yoruba youths to hold town hall meeting on restructuring

    The Yoruba Youth Council will hold a town hall meeting on restructuring  tomorrow at the House of Chiefs in the Parliament Building, Ibadan, Oyo State.

    According to a statement  by the youth group, the meeting will make the position of Yoruba youths known on the restructuring of the country. According to the National President of YYC, Eric Oluwole, said the meeting is geared towards ensuring that Nigerian youths reclaim their pride of place in national affairs.

    A renowned legal practitioner Opeyemi Agbaje is the lead speaker with the theme, “Nigeria pre and post-independence: The critical paradigm of Yoruba youth as motivator of regional restructuring.” Co-speakers include Sheikh Mohammed Taofeek Afikeusola, a United Nation youth ambassador Dayo Isreal, Chief Tola Adeniyi, Chief Adeniyi Akintola (SAN), and Comrade Laoye Sanda.

    Also expected is the Alaafin of Oyo, His Imperial Majesty, Oba Lamidi Olayiwola Adeyemi as the royal father of the day. Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi will be the chief host. Other distinguished guests expected  include Prof Banji Akintoye, Prof Adeyemi Aderibigbe, Dr. Tokunbo Awolowo Dosumu , Dr. Frederick Fasehun, the  Aare Onakakakanfo of Yorubaland Gani Adams, Dr Kunle Olajide, Prince Ajibola Atanda, among other leaders.

  • Restructuring: panacea for development, cohesion

    Restructuring: panacea for development, cohesion

    Text of a paper presented by The Nation Editorial Board Chairman Mr. Sam Omatseye at the annual law week of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Jos Branch.

    When I was told that the topic of this address was Restructuring: A panacea For Nigeria’s development and cohesion, I mused on the word sequence of the second part of the topic. That is, development and cohesion. I thought the word order needed to be redeveloped to make sentence cohere. I thought it should have been reversed. Cohesion before development. How do we develop without cohesion? As Amos said in the Bible, Can two walk together unless they be agreed?

    We shall go into this later, but suffice to say that the reason this year’s hallmark of discourse and tempest of controversy have smoldered without let or remission is that those who advocate restructuring believe that without it Nigeria will be mired in the 20th century without a foot forward. Those who have been known to oppose it are those who are irritated that the opponents are not allowing them to make the progress that the present dispensation has guaranteed. It is a contest between paralysis and paralysis.

    I wonder why the word panacea was thrown into the topic. It made my mind travel back to earlier in the year when I was giving a talk at the University of Ibadan and a young female student asked the question, “sir, if we have restructuring,” she began, “Does it mean we have solved all our problems?” That is where the word panacea comes. Even as developed as the countries of the western world are, we still hear protests about the inequalities and inequities of the country as they are. Those who say they want BREXIT were voting for some sort of restructuring of their country. Those who voted for the provocateur in chief in the United States, the toupee-happy Donald Trump went to the vote to append their distrust against the system as they saw it. In our terms, they are not changing the federal structure, but they are angry that even though they may love the structure of their country, the nation has not provided for them the elixir of good feeling that the richest country on earth shouldoffer. Ditto to Austria, even Germany and France where commonsense prevailed over bigotry.

    So, I want to start on a cautionary note that the call for restructuring, while necessary and even inevitable, should not be associated with the quality of el dorado.

    How did I respond to the female student at Ibadan? I said she just asked a good question, but I referred to a Russian anarchist in Turgenev’s novel, Fathers and Sons, in which the anarchist called Basarov was asked what would he replace the system with when it was brought down. His reply was, let us bring it down first. After that, we shall figure out what to replace it with. That I think is the mindset of those of us who believe we need to restructure. The difference with Turgenev’s anarchist is that I don’t believe the system should be dismantled before it is redeemed. What I seek is a revolution with kid gloves.

    I will state that one of the reasons we are in the middle of this rut of controversy is that Nigerians have never had the opportunity to collectively decide what country we wanted. When it seemed we had something, it was ushered in for us in the context of the military. When the Constituent Assembly was inaugurated during the time of the gap-toothed General Ibrahim Babangida, he gave off what was then known as “no-go areas.” Today, we still circling comically around the no-go areas.

    Yet, if we are to focus on the subject of restructuring proper, we would agree that some sort of restructuring has always taken place since Lord Lugard helped to birth what has become Known as Nigeria today. We had quite a few constitutions. We had the Clifford constitution, which was criticised for its restricted participation, though it gave rein to anti-feudal umbrage for endorsing the council of chiefs. Some progress was made with the introduction of the Richards Constitution which set the stage for a regional structure. The Southern and Northern Protectorates had been resolved into one and it was time to recognise the main strands of that country with a law. We had the Macpherson and the Lyttleton constitutions in tow.

    From the point of view of the colonial masters, they had prepared a country into one and, in their own lights, sealed it with the Independence constitution.

    Yet in the country they brought together, there were histories that they ignored. In the north, they did not take cognizance of the tension unfettered by the 1804 Jihad spearheaded by Uthman Dan Fodio. Though the jihad created a political behemoth that stretched from Sokoto to part of what we call the Yorubaland today, they did not understand that in Borno had thrived a caliphate that even enjoyed a dynasty, the Saifawa Dynasty, that lasted a thousand years.And within even the Sokoto Caliphate and the Borno kingdom thrived tendencies and peoples who were not always at peace with the establishment.

    In the south, they had forced on the Igbos what they called warrant chiefs in clear disdain for the republican virtues and provenance of its people. They were imposing rules  and ideologies and lifestyles that made sense to themselves and the people they had “pacified.” Even though one of their western poets Rudyard Kipling, had said, “east is east, west is west, and never the twain shall meet,” they presumed that the Igbo of the east and the Yoruba of the west would just hug, kiss and make love.

    But they were not so naïve. One of them Harry Willink headed a commission in 1958 that developed the report of minorities, especially in the Niger Delta and wanted the new nation to take cognizance of their conditions.

    At independence, the euphoria did not find its feet but we were at each other’s throats early. It confirmed many people’s view who say, along with Chief Obafemi Awolowo, that “Nigeria is not a nation. It is a mere geographical expression.” This cartographic illusion has haunted the nation since.

    Another level of restructuring also happened to the three regions, when the Midwest was created and excised from the western region. It was a restructuring that Chief Awolowo did not approve of because he wanted other regions to also have parts of them enjoy federal autonomy as well. It was restructuring as vendetta, he rightly contended. It was a way to clip his wings.

    But that same restructuring was at the heart of Biafra, and we shall get into this later. But during the civil war, General Gowon also broke Nigeria into 12 states. Some say the real reason was to immolate Biafra for the greater good of one Nigeria. With Rivers State created, two things were accomplished. Gowon ossified Biafra as a landlocked state without access to water and protein, which made it vulnerable to mass starvation. Two, it could lay no legitimate claim to oil as a resource base to prosecute the war. Again, restructuring happened out of the force of circumstance. Shall we not say it was restructuring as opportunism? If we wanted such other excuse, we did not have them for Murtala Muhammed’s step in breaking us into 19 states or Babangida into the present structure.

    But to say that restructuring is about creation of states is an error. Different people have defined it in different ways. Some want it to mean a severance of their ethnic nationality from Nigeria, some want it as a way to get the nation to understand that all should be fair to all else, some see it as a way to take the oil for themselves, others see it as a way to take the oil from those who have it, or at least dictate to them how the oil should be mined and distributed. Some – and that includes some of our political elite – see it as their only path to power.

    In all this, we have pride. We have prejudice. We have reason. We have chaos. We have sentiment. All of this is couched by each as an expression of patriotism or a rejection of it.

    From the beginning, we are at the crossroads of definitional confusion. We cannot really define what it means, and then it becomes problematic to agree on what should be restructured. It calls to mind when intellectuals of the late 19th century and early 20th century pondered the idea of structuralism. It has traversed such disciplines as political science, sociology, anthropology, psychology, literary criticism, economics and even architecture. Scholars like Claude Lévi-Strauss, Roman Jacobson and Jacques Lacan have elucidated it. Their point was that structure is more important that function. Well, many people calling for restructuring say they want the structure to function, but for it to function it must be the right one.

     Structuralists however got into a snag because many scholars started doubting the importance of structure. Everyone can be its own structure and function, and that led to such movements as post-structuralism and post modernism. We have had a lot of confusion since or what Christ described as “distress of nations and perplexity.” I hope that we do not get to s ate where we cannot have a structure.

    But nowhere is this confusion more revealing than in allowing the big names of nation to say it in their own words. So, we hear from TankoYakassai, we also hear from Wole Soyinka, and we also hear from Emir of kano Lamido Sanusi. The voices of Femi Okurounmu, Mallam AdamuCiroma, Atiku Abubakar, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Alex Ekwueme, Rotimi Amaechi, Paul Unongo, Ben Nwabueze, Edwin Kiagbodo Clark, AngoAbdullahi, Obong Victor Attah. The irony is that all agree something is wrong. They don’t know or agree on what is right.

    It is interesting to see how all of these people are patriots or claim to be patriots but they look at patriotism through different lenses. The ambiguity of their submissions is enough to make the average Nigerian observer wonder. More so when their aversion of ill will is only counterbalanced by their profession of love for their fellow citizens of a different faith and tribe. They seem to be saying: “I love you, but I love myself more. But I love you all the same. If you don’t love me as much as I want you to love me then I will withdraw my love for you. And then, maybe, we can head for the boxing ring.”

    It recalls to mind the lines of the late Arab poet Mahmud Darwish: “Don’t ask of me, my love/ the love I once had for you.”

    Yet in the voices of these men, and they are all men, the temperaments are not the same. A TankoYakassai declaims with an unmistakable truculence only counterpoised with an Nwabueze whose fidelity to restructuring bears the underlying angst of Biafra. A hard-charging AngoAbdullahi clearly enjoys his tirades. A Wole Soyinka, with syntactic rebellion, makes no bones about the negotiability of the Nigeria state and society.

    For instance, Edwin Clark comes across as an economist of inequality and guardian of the treasures of oil. AdamuCiroma unveils a persona that agrees that Nigeria is not sustainable in its present state. There are a few very profound offerings. They include the writings of Lamido Sanusi, Paul Nnongo and Atiku Abubakar.

    One sapient point that has been missed in the cacophony was the point that the western region under Awolowo and the eastern region of the First Republic were at peace with the centre. The centre was not always a scarecrow. It was a desirable thing. As Sanusi reminds us, so good was the centre that when Awolowo was done as premier of the western region, he decided it was time to take the centre. From being a regionalist, he was taking a crack at the centre. When Awolowo was at the centre with Gowon, he never raised a finger for federalism.

    The southeast also loved the centre.  They were not taking a crack at the centre. They dominated the civil service and had the best core of the officer corps of the Nigerian army before the civil war. But they changed when the centre cracked. What Sanusi did not say, was that things changed because the military took over on behalf of the northern power bloc, and de-democratised the centre. It began to work for the north and not the west or east or Niger Delta, culminating in June 12. The quest for restructuring began, it shows that no one gives away power and you must take it. The centre allowed violence and the violent took it by force.

    Oil played a big part on this role reversal. We can trace this to the pre-independence era when oil was still a small factor in the economy. The British recommended that regions that enjoyed mineral resources should have 50 percent of the resources. The federal could garner only 30 percent. If we look at the country today, virtually every state has mineral resources whether it is bauxite or kaolin or limestone or gold that can turn them into vibrant economies rather than the entities that bear bowls in hand to the centre for monthly bailouts.

    The army changed all that, but that was because the cabal ahead of the army represented an oil-free region. The wealth of the Niger Delta became free only for those who had the guns pointed and ready to shoot. Nigeria had changed in the 1960’s from a state with an army to an army with a state. At one time, the regions only had 1.5 percent, including during the Shagari years. It was during Abacha’s regime that a decision of a token 13 percent was taken for the region. Conversations about it has hit paralysis ever since.

    Before the jackboot, the different regions had agriculture in high gear. Those were the years of the groundnut pyramid, when Cocoa boomed as export and built a landmark edifice in Ibadan, when we taught a western nation how to make prosperity out of palm produce and our rubber was elite business in the world. Oil was a backdrop then and it was only in drops. When it became a flood, it submerged everything else. We became greasy with wealth. But we occluded a path not only to development but the army made us lose the path to cohesion.

    That was why the call for fiscal federalism started to resonate among the disenfranchised. Part of it was because Abiola won an election that was taken from him.The most strident voice over the course of the year came from an unusual source: the man Nnamdi Kanu. But the paradox was he did not call for restructuring. He wanted outright severance. In my columns I called him an ethnic entrepreneur who peddled hate. Yet he had followers, including those not associated usually with cant or extremism. So why would an Nwabueze or a Soludo speak so gleefully about an upstart whose biography did not celebrate industry or even Igbo patriotism to the extent that mere utterances from his lips paralysed the streets of the east?

    That is the conundrum made even more trenchant by the assertion by president Buhari that the nation is not negotiable. But Nigeria was not negotiated into being. It was a diktat from a foreign power. Now that we are together, it is important that some voices are saying they are not getting the right shakes in the system, that some part of the country seem to be sovereign while others are glorified subjects. The centre, they say, cannot hold when only one part of the country is at peace with the present arrangement when others are not. As of today, only the northwest has had voices that say the system is good the way it is.

     

    The only voice that spoke with some fire for justice has been Lamido Sanusi, but many in the northwest see his voice as a maverick, not representing the inner core of the region. But the Governor of Sokoto State, Aminu Tambuwal, whose progressive credentials are palpable, had to lend his voice eventually. Hear him:

     

    . “The idea that the north is against restructuring because it benefits most from the current state of things is circumscribed and patently false,” he noted. “The fact that some people continue to parrot such a lie only helps to give credence to the flawed argument. Let us be clear: the north wants restructuring as much as anyone else. “However, as a people we do not easily jump unto the bandwagon because we are always there for the long haul. We believe that any decision we take must be inclusive and respect procedures and processes so that the outcome is sustainable.” “I think we should first, as a country, agree on a mutual definition of the term restructuring. “In my view, if restructuring means taking stock of our arrangement to ensure that no state takes a disproportionate amount of the resources, or most of the available space in the education or job sector, or subjugate the others’ culture or religion. “Or lord it over the other so that the number of the poor and uneducated, whose future is circumscribed by their circumstance is shared proportionately, then we are game. “We all want a country where there is peace and progress, where justice is given, where all lives are safe and people can pursue their legitimate livelihoods wherever they choose. I believe each state in this country has areas of comparative advantage and life is a cycle so that what was once the largest revenue earner can in time become less so while something else takes ascendancy. “As a country we must look to the future and agree on what in the long run will benefit us all.”

     

    What the governor said is quite at odds with the caterwauling of a TankoYakassai.

     

    Another voice that has weighed in is the Sultan of Sokoto Abubakar Saad111.

     

    He says: “It is good to sit down and dialogue but there must be respect. I must respect you and you must respect me. And the greatest thing we can do for this country is always reflect on our history.

     

    “Because we didn’t fall from the sky, we came from somewhere. We became Nigeria in 1914 through amalgamation. People are shouting that our coming together as a country in 1914 was mistake, but God doesn’t make mistakes. If God doesn’t want such a thing as Nigeria to happen, nobody could ever have made it happen.”

     

    He goes further:

     

    “I know that many of these groups from the North, West, South-South and South East agitating for this or that have their positions.

     

    “But despite the realities at present, no group has the right to tell anybody you must leave this place or that place if we still live in this country called Nigeria. I say, instead of talking about devolution of power, let’s talk about devolution of economy,” he added.

     

    The voices of Governor Tambuwal and the Sultan are conciliatory and open the door to bring together a concatenation of ideas. It is good men for conversation.

     

    But these voices have to come to terms with others voices. For instance that Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

     

    The former governor of Lagos State called for a return to the ideals of the 1963 Constitution, which he said guaranteed fiscal federalism, regional autonomy, regional constitutions, and progressive competition among the federating units.

     

    Tinubu said, “Many of the 68 items on the Exclusive Legislative List should be transferred to the Residual Legislative List,” explaining, “This would be in harmony with the 1963 Constitution, again an instance of reaching back to revive something old yet more likely to give us a better Nigeria. That prior constitution granted vast powers to the regions, enabling them to carry out their immense responsibilities as they saw fit.”

     

    Tinubu said, “We cannot become a better Nigeria with an undue concentration of power at the federal level. Competition for federal office will be too intense, akin to a winner-takes-all duel. Those who lose will bristle at the lack of power in the periphery they occupy.

     

    “They will scheme to pester and undermine the strong executive because that is where they want to be. The executive will become so engaged in deflecting their antics that it will not devote its great powers to the issues of progressive governance for which such powers were bestowed.”

     

    He said if Nigeria continued in the current pseudo-federal path, it “will be in a constant state of disequilibrium and irritation. Such a situation augurs toward the maintenance of an unsatisfactory status quo in the political economy. It augurs against reform.” He stressed that the country must restructure “to attain the correct balance between our collective purpose, on one hand, and our separate grassroots realities, on the other.”

     

    What Governor Tambuwal and the Sultan called for is civility. But the counter question is that we never get things done with civility. It is when we roar and bang the table that the other side hears you.

     

    The reality, however, is that we need to go to the table. The key here lies with the president who has not shifted ground on the point that our unity is non-negotiable. Even husbands and wives negotiate their relationships every day. As the philosopher said, those who deserve freedom are those who are ready to fight for it every day.”

     

    It is not easy to give up power. No one gives it up without getting something back or without its back to the wall. What it means is that if the unfairness in the Nigerian state continues, the agitation will grow, and no one can predict what nature it will take. I love Nigeria, but I don’t agree that it is not negotiable. It is desirable when all get their due.

     

    We cannot get by mere institutions without content. Nigeria’s different endeavours at national unity are clear. They include the National Youth Service Corps, to tailor university graduates into the appreciation of the other by spending a year in a “strange” land.

     

    Over four decades of its founding, rather than harmony, the nation is tearing at its ethnic seams. We don’t even have the resources to guarantee a decent living for them in their areas of primary postings. There are other efforts at unity. They include unity schools, Federal Character Commission, the special case for the Niger delta like the formations of NDDB, OMPADEC and presently NDDC. The derivation policy, ministry of Niger Delta, and presidential amnesty programme. In spite of these, suspicions make relationships sour. The herdsmen crisis continues to create tensions with stories of slayings. A philosopher noted that in a true federalism the biggest part of a country is not better than the smallest part of it.

     

    The greatest problem is lack of trust. Trust does not come freely today. there is an African proverb that says, “be careful when a naked person offers you a shirt.” We have to move from there and abide by Ernest Hemmingway’s words, “The best way to find out if you can trust somebody is to trust them.”

     

    That is the model to follow and that is the challenge before us today.

  • Restructuring: Nigerians need to sit together to plan way forward – Omatseye

    Restructuring: Nigerians need to sit together to plan way forward – Omatseye

    For Nigeria to once and for all end the various agitations across its space there may indeed be a need for the constituent parts to sit round the table to structure out a way forward.

    Giving this opinion on Sunday in Warri, Chairman of the Editorial Board of the Nation Newspaper, Mr. Sam Omatseye, in a lecture he delivered at the 2017 Luncheon Party/Awards Ceremony of the Government College Ughelli Old Boys Association (GCUOBA), Warri branch, also noted the need for trust among the ethnic nations.

    Speaking on the topic “To Restructure or not to Restructure “, Omatseye noted that restructuring would not be a new thing to Nigeria as the history of the country had been replete with various forms and levels of restructuring, right from the colonial period, through the turbulent early years of nationhood.

    Citing the various views to the sort of restructuring so far espoused by key figures in today’s Nigeria, Omatseye, however noted that most of those calling for restructuring in recent times had tended to confuse the situation further by failing to agree on what should be ideal for the Nigerian peculiar situation.

    “Different people have defined it in different ways. Some want it to mean a severance of their ethnic nationality from Nigeria, some want it as a way to get the nation to understand that all should be fair to all else, some see it as a way to take the oil for themselves, others see it as a way to take the oil from those who have it or at least dictate to them how the oil should be mined and distributed. Some- and that includes some of our political elite- see it as their only path to power.

    “From the beginning, we are at the crossroads of definitional confusion. We cannot really define what it means, and then it becomes problematic to agree what should be restructured. The reality, however, is that we need to go to the table. The greatest problem is lack of trust; trust does not come freely today,” he said.

    Speaking further, Omatseye, who is also an alumnus of the Government College, Ughelli, noted that the call for restructuring had become so loud, especially in the southern part of the country because of perceived injustice and inequalities being felt by people from the axis, adding that crude oil ownership and appropriation has played a big role in the whole situation.

    Speaking earlier, the chairman of the event, a retired Federal High Court judge, Justice Jonathan Shakoro, expressed delight at the fact that the alumni association and its members had not forgotten their roots and had been giving back to the school, with the vision to restore it back to its old glory.

    Also speaking, the Principal of Government College, Ughelli, Evangelist Godspower Odenema, charged the old boys to enroll their children in the school, assuring that he was working to make it attractive enough.

    The event saw the giving out of three distinguished awards to some of the members of the association. Those awarded were Godwin Nenijesu O’Hare, Mr Philip Ileleji and Olorogun Enayomo Esike.

  • Restructuring: Open letter to PMB

    Sir: I strongly believe that you will go down in history as the father of modern Nigeria if you summon the courage to restructure the country so that we can move forward. What we have now is not working well and things will not work properly as long as we continue to do the same thing the same way that has not yielded any positive results.

    Those who are against restructuring are very selfish people. They see the present situation as a way to make easy money from Abuja whereby they collect money and spend it anyway they want without accountability. Poverty in the land is the result. Almost all governors, legislators, and top government officials are billionaires whereas the masses are in abject poverty. The political class is out of touch with Nigeria’s realities. This is not sustainable. This is what the present structure has created. Anybody who studied the sociology of social problems will tell you that the consequence for continuing this structure will not be palatable. The frustration in the society is getting to the peak and the masses are blaming the APC government for their predicaments because this government is not doing much to enlighten the people about what they are doing to make life better. The government is only known for complaining about PDP’s bad governance without explaining what they mean. They have not explained to Nigerians that the Nigeria’s oil revenue from 2010 to 2014 as published by OPEC was over $400 dollars so that Nigerians could ask about what happened to that whopping fortune.

    We say that Nigeria is very rich in natural resources, yet almost all the resources are on the exclusive list without the federal government making moves to exploit these minerals thereby making the people very poor. Take Ondo State for an example. They have (a) crude oil (b) natural gas (c) bitumen (d) silica sand (e) kaolin (f) ball clay (g) limestone (h) salt (I) granite and (j) iron ore. Yet, abject poverty is prevalent there. The unemployment rate is off the chart because the federal government has refused to let the state exploit these resources and the federal government has not exploited them either. This situation is prevalent in other states too. What is the purpose of having water everywhere without a drop to drink?

    The era of going to Abuja to collect free money every month without accountability must stop if we are going to move forward. Let us work for our money. Let every state generate their own funds and develop their area. That is how it is done in every developed nation. Nigeria should not be an exception.

    Restructuring has different meanings to different groups but I am limiting my scope to two most important areas that are very crucial to our development: Resource control with taxes paid to the federal government and, administrative reorganization to make government spend less money on political and administrative matters so that more money will be available for infrastructure development.

    Imagine America with their size, population, and strong economic status having only 100 senators while Nigeria has 109 senators with huge running cost. There is no way to move forward with this kind of wasteful spending of our limited resources.

    The advantages of restructuring are enormous. Agitations from different parts of the country will stop thereby giving a chance for peace to reign in the land. Secondly, governors will be held accountable for their actions and looting of the treasury will be minimally reduced. Thirdly, only people who are creative will be ready to contest for elections knowing that no easy money will be coming from Abuja. Fourthly, competition will be the order of the day and every governor will not like to be left behind. Finally, the federal government will be more efficient because some of their responsibilities like owning schools, power supply etc. will be left for the states.

    This is the time to act. Set up a constitution drafting committee to look into the work of former national conference reports and pick the reasonable recommendations in them to move this country forward.

     

    • Henry Akinnawo,

    Info7power@yahoo.com

  • The moral undertones of restructuring

    The call to restructure the Nigerian federation has in recent times gained a momentum unprecedented in Nigeria’s history. The call has become so popular and important that it has refused to disappear from daily national public and private discourse. Notable politicians, academicians, socio-political and economic analysts and many others across the country have spoken and or written, for or against this important national issue in recent times. At another level, there have been increasing agitations by different ethnic-based groups most of them calling for a restructuring of Nigeria, for devolution of powers to the states and for fiscal federalism.

    Protagonists of restructuring have laid claims among other things, to the verifiable and convincing developments and growth recorded in the different regions during the First Republic when true federalism was in practice. To them, the extant or current insecurity, economic downturn, under-development, high rate of unemployment, ethnic distrust, the various ethnic agitations, threat and counter threats, dictate and make restructuring of the nation expedient. Their conclusion is that the present national structure is not working; neither will it work in the best interest of all Nigerians in the nearest future. They posit that it is high time a new approach to nationhood be sought for and applied.

    In the quest for the restructuring of the nation, it will not be out of place to look at other dimensions and undertones. One of such dimensions is the moral undertones. For long, Nigeria and Nigerians have been plagued with high moral failures at all levels and in every facets of our national life. These moral failures are manifested in political deceit, high level looting and corruption in both high and low places, scandalous jumbo pay pack and monetary allowances for lawmakers, fictitious contract awards, misappropriation of collective resources, bloated administrative cost and wastage at nearly every conceivable institutions, reward and celebration of mediocrity instead of merit, flaunting and celebration of ill-gotten wealth, status and positions, application of different standards in admissions to schools/Institutions and in appointment to offices. Records of moral failures abound in the judiciary and in the security outfits, in educational, health institutions, and the financial, manufacturing and marketing world. The religious and traditional Institutions are also not free from this malaise of moral failures.

    At the national, state and local government levels, there are embarrassing leadership moral failures in terms of their lackadaisical responses to the increasing poverty, penury, underdevelopment, stunted growth, increasing crime, unrest, cultism, unemployment and lack of social amenities in many places. Many of our leaders, without qualms, continue to display and flaunt their ill-acquired wealth, live a life of self-aggrandizement and flamboyant life style, even in the face of imminent national crises.  The led (populace) are not left out in the moral malady. Many, like the Biblical Esau, have not only sold their birth-right (civic rights) for a pot of porridge, but have made themselves cannon fodder for those who in a gluttony fashion, feed fat on their sweat and on God-given collective resources. Indeed, every facet of our society has been inherently infested with moral failures, not only in decision-making, implementation and in accountability, but also in moral living.  In our moral failures, we have wrongly come to see leadership as means of acquiring wealth, power and undue status rather than service to mankind. We have also failed to see followership as being good citizens. Unfortunately the emerging generation has imbibed these maladies of greed, corruption, wrong work ethics, immoral shortcut to whatever they want and a rat-race for wealth, positions and power for selfish purposes. There seems to be nothing immoral which we cannot do to achieve whatever selfish and immoral things we desire.  It is these moral failures that have brought the nation to this dangerous precipice in which we are today. The story is one of moral failures by all and in the national structures, to the detriment of all; yet, these failures themselves have wrongly become platitude among Nigerians.

    It is obvious to all, if we care to look and discern the situation in the nation today, that, the moral failures have served in part, even if remotely, as catalyst for the increasing armed insurgencies and militancy in the nation today. It has served as impetus for the continued agitations for restructuring the nation. The unemployed, the marginalized and the hungry, have in certain cases, become ready tools in the hands of scandalous individuals who claim to speak for the people asking for national restructuring.  Unfortunately again, the restructuring has become another source of immoral selfish-enrichment for some. The truth is that, so far these moral failures and depravity persist in the land, agitations of all forms, either for selfish individual or group purposes or for the good of all, will also persist.

    We cannot and must not continue to stand in self-denial about these cancerous moral problems confronting the nation. It is a time bomb, which if not diffused on time, will swallow all. The nation cannot be truly restructured without first a reorientation of the wrong mind-set of the populace (leaders and the led) for love of and acquisition of money, affluence, positions and selfish ambitions instead of selfless service, good leadership and humility. To restructure the nation without first, a moral values re-orientation (restructuring) of the mind-set of the people is to restructure and build on air, deceit and muddy foundation. It would be discovered at the end, that such restructuring has been an exercise in futility, mockery and cosmetic at that, because what has been, (the endemic moral failures) will continue to be. The wisdom in the Holy Bible has said it all, it is only “righteousness that can exalt a nation” (Proverb 14:34).Similarly, Jesus Christ advised that, we should “first make the inside clean and the whole would be clean” (Matt 23:26).

    In our quest for restructuring the nation, it must be echoed loud and clear that there must be concerted efforts by all, but especially, the authorities in the land, to re-orientate the mind-set of Nigerians (leaders and the led). Moral value such as honesty, truth, justice for all, equitable distribution of national resources, reward and celebration of merit, freedom, citizen’s rights, equal opportunities regardless of race or creed, positive work ethics, right use of power, transparency, accountability  and the likes must be well entrenched and celebrated as national values. They will without doubt, go a long way in bringing about peace, unity, development, trust, goodwill, progress, stability and all that makes for nationhood.  It will also help to reduce ethic mistrust, agitations, militancy and insurgency. Concerted effort must be made in a restructured Nigeria to make, nepotism, mediocrity, corruption, abuse of power and all injustices by any one or groups of persons or institutions, serious offences which regarded and treated as anathema and also met with stiff penalties.

    For sure, the nation needs a restructuring before it can move forward. Perhaps we need to revisit the Independence national charter (constitution) and begin there. Nevertheless, any restructuring must firmly and highly entrench national moral values in the scheme of things. Restructuring Nigeria is like purging her of her laissez-faire approach to issues, systems, institutions and structures. Along with that purge, the citizens (leaders and the led) must also be purged from our moral laissez-faire. Until then, the utopia that we all long for may still be far away.

     

    • Ven. Dr. Adeloye is a Priest of the Church of Nigeria, Anglican Communion.