Tag: restructuring

  • The restructuring row

    To restructure or not to restructure? This is the juncture we are today as a nation. Everybody seems to have caught the restructuring bug. The advocates believe that it is either restructuring or nothing. The antagonists argue that there is nothing to restructure about the country, blaming our problems on leadership. Restructuring is a vexed issue; whether you are for  it or against it, it does not matter.

    We have for long run a system of  government, which concentrates power at the centre. It is not of our making as a people, but that of the military, which in its days in power, tinkered with the country the way it wanted. The military adopted the unitary form of government as it became all in all in the running of the country. It decreed things into existence without recourse to any other authority. Under the military, executive and legislative powers were collapsed into one and they were held by the head of state.

    The system, of course, brooked discontent. Those who did not find themselves in the location of power grumbled. Politicians that stick to any body or party in power, but who were not favoured agitated the most, crying that their state or ethnic group, was being marginalised. So, when people talk about restructuring, they are in one way or the other, talking about the sharing of power. Those agitating for restructuring the most today are doing so because they feel they are nowhere close to the seat of power.

    There are several strands to restructuring and each of the three old regions aligns with the strands that suit it. But the thing is Nigeria has outgrown those regions of the East, West and North, on which the power axis rotated in the 1960s. These regions were the locale of power and eminent politicians from there dominated the scene before the military interregnum. Perhaps, things might have worked out, with politicians resolving their differences on their own terms, if the military had not struck on January 15, 1966. That first coup set us back many years as a nation and we are yet to recover lost ground 51 years after.

    That coup was the foundation for the clamour of restructuring which has become a singsong in our daily life. The coup engendered bad blood in the military and it led to the July 15, 1966 counter coup, which eventually brought about the civil war. So, restructuring means different things to the  different regions. Some are for it because they believe that after the exercise, they will have the opportunity of getting into power; others are against it because they believe they will lose all the privileges they are enjoying under the present arrangement.

    What really is restructuring? Companies restructure to enhance their efficiency and effectiveness. According to a management text, it is the corporate management term for the act of reorganising legal, ownership, operational and other structures of a company for the purpose of making it more profitable or better organised for its present needs. Another said it is the fundamental internal change that alters the relationship between different components or elements of an organisation or system. Since a country could be likened to a system, is the restructuring we are talking about aimed at a fundamental internal change that will alter the relationship among the diverse elements in the country?

    We need to ponder this poser because our unity, some say, lies in our diversity. But this same unity, some have argued, is negotiable. If our unity is negotiable then our diversity will no longer be our strength. Rather, it will become an albatross because we will no more think about the larger society but about the minuscule ethnic group to which we all belong. In one word, nobody will think Nigeria again. As it happened in biblical times, everybody will lose faith in the common patrimony. The question will become : what portion have we in Nigeria, which the Herbert Macaulays, Ahmadu Bellos, Nnamdi Azikiwes and Obafemi Awolowos toiled for? May the labour of our heroes past never be in vain.  Then, people will move to their own tent, as defined by their ethnic nationalities. Is this what we want?

    There is no perfect structure anywhere in the world. What we have are organised societies, where things work with clinical precision. We want things to be like clockwork in our country too, but we cannot afford to achieve that by throwing away the baby with the bathwater. We should not misconstrue restructuring with separatism. They are not the same. We must define the kind of restructuring we want before we dabble into the venture. The separatists among us, who enjoy the support of many of their kinsmen, should be told in unequivocal terms that in as much as they are entitled to hold their position, they should do so within the ambit of the law. They are not clamouring for restructuring by preaching secession; they are breaking the law.

    There is a thin line between secession and treason and if they cross the line, the law will catch up with them. Restructuring is good to the extent that it addresses the problems of power sharing, resource control, revenue formula,  13% derivation, resource control, state police, devolution of power and true federalism. It cannot be restructuring when what some people want is just for us to go our separate ways. We went the secession route before and it did not pay us as a nation. Never again shall we go that way. Whatever may be the problem with us can be resolved through dialogue and not through swashbuckling.

  • UPP: Self-determination through restructuring

    Not even a sworn enemy would succeed in discountenancing the contribution of Chief Chekwas Okorie, to the struggle of Ndigbo for political reckoning in Nigeria. Such, would be a long, weak, tortuous and hectic struggle.

    A young man who began to attend the meeting of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, the umbrella socio-cultural organisation and apex decision-making body of the Igbo people in 1976 as an undergraduate, he must have been bitten by a certain bug which apparently injected into his bloodstream a certain virus, which impelled him to take up the gauntlet of the Igbo struggle without looking back. Today, 41 years later, he is still in the struggle, despite the ups and downs, contradictions and downright upheavals on his way.

    However, unlike the table banging strategy, which has created the present noise and chaos in the country, he chose a different course, the political solution as an option in his approach and has since gone ahead to tread that path, with a concomitant attempt to first pursue the unity of the Igbo in his own way.

    Having adopted this strategy and apparently compelled by other factors, such as his young age and perhaps limited financial resources to take it slowly, he began with Nzuko Abia na Imo, a socio-cultural association seeking to bind the people of Imo and the newly-created Abia State under one umbrella and when Ebonyi State was also carved out of Abia, changed the name to Nzuko Abia, Imo na Ebonyi.

    With the success of the organisation and the mileage or traction that it attracted, he upped his ante with the establishment of Igboezue Cultural Association (ICA), another body that now comprised the entire Igboland.

    Yet, unlike many similar Igbo outfits that many times spoke and acted out of variance and in many cases tried to tip the balance as a result, this organisation appeared quite sober and restrained. Instead, it became the intellectual and ideas backbone of Ohanaeze, with the Igbo body always adopting the ICA positions, not only for their depth and originality, but for being in sync with the thinking and belief of the larger Igbo community.

    Again, with the ostensible success of the ICA, came the idea to move into yet another and bigger platform – a political party. First, was the Peoples Democratic Congress (PDC), between 1996 and 1998, which failed to fly, because the authorities then denied it registration.

    But, three years later, the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), was born through the same instrumentality. In fact, by that singular act, Okorie became the first Igbo man to found a registered national political party in the history of Nigeria.

    Of course, this particular feat was not only celebrated within the South-east particularly, but became the veritable vehicle for transporting the Igbo political ideology and aspiration, just as was originally conceived by its promoter.

    In fact, the belief in many quarters is that APGA, actually won all the governorship elections in the South-east, in its first outing in 2003, but was denied the enjoyment of the benefit of that feat by the powerful Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) forces at that time.

    Apart from the perceived rigging culture of the party then, it is also believed that then President Olusegun Obasanjo, a veteran of the Nigerian civil war, was alarmed at the implication of such a political milestone that he actually did everything to stymie the party, if not kill it outright.

    The subsequent leadership crisis that suddenly erupted within its fold which lasted for almost a decade was seen as the handiwork of the clandestine federal government’s effort to do it in, by sowing a seed of discord among the contending parties, fearing the security implication of such a sharp rise.

    However, even if the government angle is unfounded, what seemed quite obvious is that those who took over the leadership of APGA from Okorie, either lacked the vision, tenacity or the gusto to propel and grow it beyond a certain limit, or were simply distracted by individual aspirations that they simple forgot the raison d’etre for its formation.

    The result is that the party, which even by official records, was the third in ranking at the end of the 2003 exercise, soon became quite diminished and relegated. It suddenly lost the passion and drive, which made it a sort of movement, whilst its original leaders traversed beyond the nooks and crannies of the South-east to such places as Sabo Ngeri, Kano, Central Market, Kaduna, Alaba International Market and Olowu Spare Parts Market in Lagos, and even as far as Adamawa and Maiduguri, died almost immediately, to raise the consciousness of the Igbo people, its target.

    Such is the irony that today, whilst the leaders of the South-west, which successfully moved the political momentum of the South-west from the Alliance for Democracy (AD), through the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), to the All Progressives Congress (APC), are enjoying power at the national level, their South-east counterparts appear to be groping in darkness like a herd of blind cattle left in the wilderness.

    Stewed in its continuous and consistent internal crisis, which seems to find new fervour and flavour each passing day, APGA is now being threatened with total extinction, by the obvious possibility of losing the November 18 Anambra State governorship election.

    Therein lies the fresh attraction for the United Progressives Party (UPP), yet, another of Okorie’s attempt at achieving his dream Igbo political emancipation. One only needs to be in the South-east to experience the loud, deafening din as it roars into contention as the party to beat in any election from now onwards.

    Though, established in 2012 after Okorie returned the APGA certificate to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), indicating the end of his battle to reclaim the leadership of the party, the UPP has suddenly assumed a phenomenal role in South-east politics, especially with the texture and tempo of the current agitations in Nigeria at the moment.

    With the Biafran spirit raised to the optimum, it has become a platform through which those convinced about the political option in the quest for the distinct Igbo identity are finding ambience.

    In fact, many of its supporters and members have renamed it the Biafran National Party, to underscore its impact and place in the current Igbo political undertaking in the Nigerian polity.

    Nonetheless, Okorie, though does not see anything wrong in such a corruption of the party’s name, explains that its ideals go beyond the Igbo to the fight against every form of oppression in the country.

    This, he says is because the party is founded on the ideology of self-determination and restructuring, which has become a national singsong. “Today, we’re the only political party of the 45 that exists at the moment that has come out with this bold initiative. So, as we approach the campaigns for 2019, we’ll take this message to every nook and cranny of this country, so that they will not see it as an Igbo agenda, but an agenda that will liberate Nigeria. Because what is holding Nigeria down is the type of structure it is operating and that structure must be dismantled and a new one put in place and you will see Nigeria experience a quantum leap in its development. So, this is what Nigerians should expect from us.

    “The party is therefore as important to the people of the Southern Borno, the Middle Belt, the Southern Zaria, and the Niger Delta, as the people of the South-east, because of the common feeling of oppression,” he says.

    Will the current momentum in Nigeria find expression in UPP? Something must certainly give.

     

    • Igboanugo, a journalist, writes from Abuja.
  • ARG backs calls for restructuring, state police

    ARG backs calls for restructuring, state police

    The Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG) yesterday backed calls for restructuring to save the country from a looming implosion following cries of marginalisation and separatist’s agitations.

    ARG’s Chairman Olawale Oshun made the group’s position known in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, at a Town Hall Dialogue with the theme: “State of the nation: A conversation with ARG Leadership and Yoruba Intelligentsia.”

    Oshun said Nigeria must do away with the unitary government shrouded in a veil of federalism, where the Federal Government controls majority of  the resources to the disadvantage of the federating units.

    He added that only those profiting from the flawed federal structure being operated in Nigeria would oppose calls for restructuring, stressing that were the  late Sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, to be alive today to observe the fate that has befallen Yorubaland, he would surely weep over it.

    “The over-bearing power of the Federal Government is killing the states and local governments. States are incapacitated, they should be allowed to control their resources to develop themselves instead of being tied to the apron strip of the Federal Government.

    “Everything is collapsing because everybody solely depends on what is coming from the Federal Government to survive and if we don’t restructure, we will continue to remain where we are today.

    “Those who are against restructuring are those who are benefitting from the rots in government. The Federal Government must cease to control resources of the states.

    “If Yoruba leaders like Chief Obafemi Awolowo and others were to be alive today to see what is happening to the Yoruba nation today, they will weep for us,” he said.

    He, however, advised Nigerians to go about the calls for restructuring peacefully,  saying the country must return to the regional government, where each region would develop at its own pace.

    According to him,  the Federal Government lacked the capacity to harness the country’s resources for its rapid socio-economic growth.

    “We need restructuring to progress and develop. The situation where the Federal Government will collect everything and beginning to give states small things to develop their states, we need to change from that. Regions should take care of their resources for their growth,” Oshun said.

    Also, a renowned columnist, Mrs. Bamidele Ademola-Olateju, urged  Yoruba nation to wake up from its slumber, declaring  that the race was living on past glory.

    Mrs. Ademola- Okateju, who was the  keynote speaker, noted that the Yoruba nation became the conscience of the country through education, but lamented that the region has now taken the back seat.

    Speaking on “The Knowledge of Now: Pathways for the Yoruba,” she said the education sector started witnessing setback after the discovery of oil in the 70s, noting that “Nigeria failed to plan for the future”.

    She blamed the electorate for encouraging the nation’s politicians to exploit them by selling their votes.

    “A society gets the kinds of leaders they deserve. Our electorate are responsible for the rots in the country today; they encourage our leaders to steal and exploit them by selling their votes to the highest bidder.

    “People are not responsible; they have refused to hold the leaders accountable. But rather, they sing-praise corrupt leaders because of financial gains,” she said.

     

     

     

     

     

    The Afenifere, a pan Yoruba socio- cultural organisation, also joined other Nigerians to demand for the restructuring of the federation, fair and equitable resource control and distribution, establishment of state police and reformation of the nation’s judiciary to enhance rapid development as well as stem the tide of all forms of agitations.

    Acting State Chairman, the Ogun State Chapter of Afenifere Otunba Kunle Makekodunmi made the group’s position known at their  meeting at the  Ogbo Ijebu- Ode country home of the Afenifere chieftain, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, where Senator Femi Okunrounmu, Senator Ayo Otegbola among others were in attendance.

    The group mourned the passage of Mrs. Omowunmi Akande, wife of former Osun State Governor Chief Bisi Akande, by observing a minute silence for the peaceful repose of her soul.

  • Restructuring is inevitable, says Etta

    Restructuring is inevitable, says Etta

    Hon. Hilliard Etta is the National Vice Chairman (Southsouth) of the All Progressives Congress (APC). In this interview with TONY AKOWE in Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), he speaks on agitations for restructuring, the crisis rocking the ruling party and other national issues.

    Why is the All Progressives Congress (APC) silent on the clamour for retructuring?

    First of all, let me start by saying that it is true that the APC has, as one of its cardinal programmes, restructuring the federation of Nigeria. But let me also say that the world restructuring means different things to different people in this country and no one has been able to come up with a definition that will meet the expectations of all those clamouring for restructuring. But, that is not to say that we don’t know that at the heart of all these agitations is the fact that the way government is structured in Nigeria made it heavy at the top and so, there is the need for devolution of powers. You see, the resistance to restructuring has always come from the northern part of the country and I think it is born out of fear that is misplaced. That fear can be traced to the inability to clarify, not been able to interact and discuss with our brothers from the north and let them know exactly what some people in the south are looking for. There are people who think that restructuring means resource control. There are others who think restructuring means confederation. There are others who also think that restructuring means taking away the powers some people have being enjoying over time. I think the first thing that we have to do for those that are at the fore front of the agitation for restructuring is to come together and define what we mean by restructuring. If you look at the constitution, you will find so many reasons for wanting the restructuring of the governmental setup in Nigeria. For instance, you go to the constitution and it tells you that it is the president of the federal republic of Nigeria who issues you your driver’s license. I mean it is ridiculous to even think about the president being involved in the issuance of my driver’s license.

    How should the 2014 National Conference report  be handled by the Federal Government?

    Of course, whether anybody likes it or not, whether you do a referendum or not, the constitution must be amended to reflect any new idea. Even if you want to devolve power from the centre to the constituent states, you must amend the constitution to give it effect. So I think any document that can help the representative of people to do their job well; any document, whether it is the 2014 or 2010 document or wherever it can be found, should be brought together and given to the National Assembly as working documents and opportunity should be given to people with new ideas to also contribute. I think it is a good place to start. All these documents, from the 2014 conference, the one that was conducted by Babangida and Abacha or wherever it was conducted should be brought together. Nigeria has never been short of ideas and these ideas can be found at the shores of government and that is a good place to start.

    What is the position of the APC on restructuring?

    If you have restructuring in the manifesto of the party, it is settled that the APC is for restructuring. Not only is the APC as a party for restructuring, the governors elected on the platform of the party have come out to tell the nation that they are also for restructuring. I prefer that the restructuring that Nigeria must have, the process should start immediately. The reason is that our economic backwardness, our political backwardness, our social backwardness can be traced largely to the awkward and unsustainable super structure of the country and not the sub structure of the country. So, it is important that we restructure now so that we will not have the unnecessary duty of having to force ourselves to the table.

    Some have argued that the APC used restructuring to campaign in 2014 to get the votes of Nigerians, but found it difficult to implement. Is there anything the party is afraid of?

    I don’t know if it is essentially about the APC. But some Nigerians are very quick to enter judgement when it comes to APC. The APC has been in power for two years and in these two years, you are aware of what has attended our presidency. It is disingenuous for people to now look at the APC and say those types of things that they say. If is unfortunately because, whenever these things are done, I think they are just amplifying or reciting the propaganda of the PDP. The PDP was in power for 16 years and never cared about restructuring. Today, PDP is all over the place talking about restructuring. I think Nigerians should be a little patient with us. It is unfortunate that the unsustainable sub structure of Nigeria has brought the current agitations in the manner it has come and at this time when the APC is in power. We  we are not afraid of the responsibility and the challenges of the time.

    In 2014,your party refused to participate in the National Conference organised by former President Goodluck Jonathan conference. Will you be happy if the report is implemented?

    I have said that there is no report that can be implemented holistically. Even, if Nigerians discussed issues relating the state of the nation inside a pepper soup bar, it doesn’t matter as long as they are Nigerians. Let us begin to talk because when you look at what has happened in other countries; when you hear the history of Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia, you know the history behind them, you will think those things can’t happen here. Let me say that anyone who think like that is just being naive. So, we must prevent those things from happening to us because when these people who are beating the drums of war don’t have the experience of war. So, it is better for us to restructure than be forced to a table to talk to ourselves. Now nobody is going to put a gun to our heads to talk. But it is better if we are patriotic, if we are forward moving, if we are visionary and see Nigeria 40, 50, 100 years from now then we need to sit down and discuss. That is my position on the matter.

    There are cries of marginalisation leading to one form of ultimatum or the other. What do you think is responsible for this?

    Today, there is agitations from almost all parts of the country. The almajaris are agitating for a better life, the Yoruba man is agitating for better governance, the Igbo man is agitating, the Calabar man is agitating. There is no ethnic nationality in this country that isn’t agitating. Now we must interrogate who they agitating against and who should they agitate against? I laugh when I hear my Igbo brothers agitating against the Hausa/Fulani, are they to saying that it is the Hausa/Fulani that has marginalized them. When I see the Almajiris agitating, are they to saying that it is the Hausa/Fulani that has marginalized them? It is the same thing for the Yoruba, the same for the Igala people, the same thing for the Efik people, the same for the Ibibio people. The truth of the matter is that Nigeria is sharply divided into two; the leaders and others and the people that have marginalized all ethnic nationality are less than one percent of the population of Nigeria and they come from all ethnic nationalities. I have done a personal interrogation of those who have superintended over Nigeria and very sadly, I have come to realise only three Hausa/Fulani people have been in charge of Nigeria since independence. The first was Tafa Balewa, the second was Buhari and the third was Yar’dua. All others are not Hausa/Fulani. But everywhere you go, you hear that it is Hausa/Fulani that has ruled us. Let me tell you; the relationship between the minorities and the majorities is such that at every point, where you have a majority in a human setting not just restricted to Nigeria, the tendency is for the majority to appropriate to itself the space, the resources and the time of that environment. Let me put in prospective so that you will understand what I am saying. Between 1954 and 1967 when the war broke out, in the eastern part of Nigeria where Ndigbo and other ethnic groups made up eastern Nigeria of that time, go and find out who occupied the leadership position whether in the judiciary, executive or the legislature. You will find out that more than 90 percent of them were Igbos. That is the truth of the matter. The Igbos were in majority and the human tendency is that the moment you are in the majority, you will like to dominate your space. Now even till today, go to Edo state, the first governor of the state who is not of Benin extraction was Ambrose Ali, then, Professor Osunbur and later Oshiomhole. But every other governor was from Benin and if you give the Benin people the opportunity, they will rule till perpetuity; it is human nature. Take Delta state for example again; the first non Urhobo governor was Uduaghan and the second is Okowa. So, it is a human phenomenon. I know that within the human environment, there are certain things that are completely divine that makes it impossible for that kind of domination to go on in perpetuity. Everybody in Nigeria is complaining of marginalisation. I can tell you that even the man from Baylesa is complaining of marginalisation today whereas Ebele Jonathan was president for six years. So, I think the first thing we need to do is to identify the people that are marginalising us and then, we put them away from leadership. I watched a television sketch where Nnamdi Kalu was canvassing for arms and ammunitions in America and an Igbo man stood up and asked him why can’t we start from within our state and ask for good governance. Those people that have collected our hundreds of billions, why can’t we ask them to use those billions to develop our environment? That is where we must begin because something of interest happened recently when the people of Anambra state warned Nnamdi Kalu to stay in Abia and stop threatening them. I knew this was going to happen because it is human nature.

    For some time now, the party has not been able to hold either its NEC meeting or the mid term convention as contained in its constitution. Why is this so?

    Finance. A lot of people would not like me to say that. but I would say it again and again; it is finance. The reason the party hasn’t had that midterm convention is because of finance.

    Have you not breached your constitution? Does that bother you? 

    I am seriously worried that we cannot convene this midterm convention. But, I have told you that the convention has been shifted to September and we hope by the special grace of God that we will be able to have the finance to conduct it.

     

     

    But there are insinuations that the reason ha to do with serious cracks within the party and the governors are not working with the NWC.

    There is no crack at all. I think you should take what the National chairman told you as it is, it is the truth of the matter.

    Ahead of the 2019 elections; it appears that there are a lot of crisis in all the states being controlled by APC; Kogi, Baylesa, Rivers, Bauchi and others especially in Kogi state where people are already dying. How do you want to resolve all these crisis?

    I keep answering this question over and over again and I don’t know how else to say this. Political party is a human organisation. Even in your family, you have disagreements. There is simply no way where you can put more than two people together without disagreement. Even when you have only two people, there naturally will come a day when both of you will disagree and that doesn’t mean a meltdown of the party. I find it very difficult to understand because all of us where here when between 1999 and 2003, we had almost four senator presidents all from the PDP and nobody was talking about the party having crisis here and there. The party is on top of every situation. One of the fundamental tenets of politics is conflict resolution. The reason that has been accepted as a fundamental tenet of politics is because it is a known fact that when you put two or more people together, there would be disagreements. So, you must create both in your constitutions, institutions for conflict resolutions. As you are aware, in the case of Kogi, a very high powered committee was setup. What that means is that the party is on top of that situation. There is no situation anywhere in the country that the party hasn’t taken proactive measures to deal with. Several years from now, as long as it is a political party where people come with likely self interest, you must have acrimony and it is only a party that isn’t worth of its name that will not be in a good place to resolve all the conflicts as it finds in the party. I must say this again; the Nigerian public and the media hasn’t given us the benefit that they gave to our predecessors. Regardless of the fact that we have had disagreements within the party, this party has had one set of leadership in the National Assembly; we have had one set of leadership in the presidency and for a party that came together from different political affiliations and platforms to form this party I think that we have done well. The next thing you will hear people say is ‘is this the change that you people promised us?’ like Ameachi said the other time, the party promised change, not miracle and for every change to occur, there must be a gestation period. If you stop planting corn in your corn farm and you begin to plant yam, you must wait for that yam to germinate, to grow to a point where you can harvest it. So please I want to beg the media and I also want to beg the public especially from the South East and the South South that we are not doing well in terms of nation building. No matter how much you hate a man, the moment he becomes the president of your country, the moment he becomes the symbol of your country, you must begin to think only of your country.

    Rivers state is having issues and it is a major problem that the two players in that state are at loggerheads and it is under your jurisdiction?

    There was a publication from the state party chairman that there is no crisis in APC

    What is your own assessment of APC in Rivers state?

    Let us concede for the purpose of this argument that Ameachi and Senator Abbe are having a disagreement, has it now become a issue that has assume the portion of a crisis in APC in Rivers state? I am not aware that Senator Abbe and Honourable Ameachi are quarrelling. But even if they were quarrelling Senator Abbe and Ameachi are the best of friends and friends quarrel. Does that therefore translate into a crisis in the party in Rivers state?

    You would agree with me that they are the two main heads of APC in Rivers state and without them APC won’t have been making any impact

    What you would have said is that APC won’t have existed. You see, where we have proceeded to, it means that human beings are susceptible to divine limitations and tomorrow your soul is required of you which now means that the party automatically dies in that area because your soul is required of you by your Maker?

  • Restructuring as path to Nirvana?

    SIR: Everybody in Nigeria at the moment is on the restructuring train. Former leaders who once ruled this country and had the golden chance but failed to do so are on that train. So also are cultural groups such as ‘Afenifere’ and ‘Ohaneze’ Ndigbo. Agitators for a Biafran nation haven’t stopped daring the state with calls for secession. And South-south militants never tire to clamour for resource control. Others have said that the implementation of the 2014 confab report is what Nigeria needs to stop all problems threatening the sanctity of Nigeria.

    However, opponents of restructuring have wondered if restructuring as is being hammered – is the solution to Nigeria’s problems.

    Didn’t we practice the parliamentary system of government in the First Republic with a weak centre? The Western Region under Chief Obafemi Awolowo was the first region in Africa to set up a TV station. In the Eastern Region led by Dr. Michael Opara, it was once rated as the fastest growing region in the world. The Northern Region under Sir Ahmadu Bello was better than some of the Gulf states today.

    But the in-fighting amongst the regional leaders who were interested in regional power and relevance led to the decline of nationalism, occasioned by the alliance and counter alliance by northern and southern leaders, which birthed two coups, and a civil war.

    In 1861, 11 southern states of the US decided to secede because of the closely held belief that the federal government was interfering with their way of life. Slavery was the backbone of the economy in the breakaway south. It took a bloody civil war which killed two-percent of the population to bring the rebel states back to the country.

    Quebec once held a referendum to decide whether they wanted to be part of Canada. So also did Scotland on relationship with Britain. Now we have Catalonia agitating for a referendum with Spain, Corsica chafing under France, and in northern part of Italy.

    Agitation(s) aren’t restricted to only Nigeria.  There are 244 countries in the world today. Of these, 193 are members of the United Nations. Out of the lot, 163 run a unitary system of government. There is a myth that majority of countries in the world practice the federal system of government, or to put it lightly, our own idea of, “true federalism.” This is not true.

    What is the guarantee that the South-south states wouldn’t want to leave Nigeria and form a new country since control of their oil and gas resources would make them self-sufficient in the event of restructuring?

    Lagos has the fifth highest G.D.P in Africa. It is the only state that can survive without federal allocations. The state pays over 65 percent of Nigeria’s taxes and 70 percent of Nigeria’s economic activities are carried out in Lagos. How can we know for sure that the Yoruba, thanks to the successes of Lagos, wouldn’t begin to agitate for a new country in future?

    The problem with Nigeria over time is that she has been unfortunate to have had visionless leaders. So visionless that under them corruption became endemic, poverty became a way of life and violence an attribute of state. It is still a wonder that we still haven’t been classed amongst failed states.

    Even if we restructure Nigeria, nothing would change, unless we import a new set of leaders from Mars.

    Ghana, nearby, with the same system as Nigeria is more stable than Nigeria even though Nigeria is richer than Ghana. It is either we clamour for parliamentary system of government today, restructuring tomorrow or are in lost Island, a day after.

    Look to quality leaders not restructuring. But where are the leaders from north to south? I don’t see any.

     

    • Essien Idiong,

    Port Harcourt, Rivers State.

  • The Devil’s Conundrum: Problems and Prospects of Restructuring in Nigeria

    The Devil’s Conundrum: Problems and Prospects of Restructuring in Nigeria

    ( Excerpts from a contribution to a two-day seminar on National Integration, Devolution of Power and Restructuring organized by the Savannah Centre for Diplomacy, Democracy and Development, Abuja 13-14th July, 2017)  

    Origins of the current crisis

    Every now and then, Nigeria seems to be seized by a strange linguistic animation. A particular word or concept, hitherto innocent and innocuous, suddenly takes hold of the political imagination of the country. And then all hell is let loose.

    In the past it used to be resource control or fiscal federalism. Going further there were buzz terms such as hidden agenda, self-succession, army arrangement, Sovereign National Conference, and going much further into the seventies we had a romance with diarchy and its discontents.

    Now it is the noise of restructuring rumbling across the firmament of the nation. In recent times, no phrase or political terminology has been a greater source of pains and perplexity to Nigerians than the notion of restructuring or devolution of power.

    The two words are often used interchangeably in contemporary Nigerian political discourse. Yet it is only by an extreme generosity of interpretation that they be lumped together to mean the same thing. For example, restructuring may not necessarily involve devolution of power, whereas devolution of power does not necessarily entail restructuring. Yet despite the semantic confusion, it has come to point in some parts of the country when no contrary voice can be uttered against restructuring without the person casting a furtive glance across the shoulder.

    But what really is restructuring? Ironically, the ordinary dictionary meaning of restructure is to reinforce or rearrange, alter or change a current structure with a view to enhancing its overall performance and efficiency. This also engenders profound semantic difficulties. To panel beat, alter or change an existing structure is also to preserve its fundamentals without repealing its organic nature

    Consequently, it can be seen from this definition that for any human organization or social entity, restructuring, or constant and ceaseless self-invention, is a precondition or sine qua non for survival. No human organization can survive for long without occasionally restructuring itself. In Britain, Spain, the US, France and indeed all the older nation states, restructuring has been going on for centuries and they are still at it. In America, they call it striving towards a more perfect union.

    Sometimes, this involves tinkering with the entire state architecture, sometimes it involves changing the demographic configuration of the nation and occasionally it means altering the national alchemy in a way that throws up a new national leadership. This is to cope with historical dilemmas or emergent realities.

    But occasionally, an attempt at restructuring can also go catastrophically awry, such as we saw in the Brexit vote in Britain. It is now left to the leadership of the nation to deal with the pain and trauma. The Brexit gamble accounted for the political scalp of the former British Prime Minister, David Cameron, and has put the nose of his successor, Theresa May, out of joints. In France, it was a voluntary restructuring which finally threw up Charles de Gaulle and the Fifth Republic. A decade later, De Gaulle was to succumb to an involuntary restructuring induced by popular protests.

    It can be seen from the foregoing that restructuring does not lead to an automatic El Dorado.  It is not a panacea for good governance but a strategic ancillary. Restructuring is not a once and for all cure or talisman but a means to an end. Any restructuring which leaves Nigeria with the current level of grinding poverty, environmental squalor, biblical misery and legislative larceny has not achieved anything.

    By decentralising and devolving power away from a bloated and overburdened centre to the margins, genuine federalism aims to liberate the local genius of the people and unfetter their creative and enterprising spirit. Local productivity is radically enhanced and so is accountability and transparency in governance since there is a face to government. Surely, there is less to steal at the centre and less humongous resources available to placate the larcenous appetite of the political elite. Like a revolution, restructuring can also be an act of societal desperation when available human agency can no longer be trusted to do what is right without a constraining structure.

    Foregrounding the current crisis

    Once again, Nigeria has reached uncharted waters. Uncharted waters must be negotiated but they call for caution and circumspection. But at the same time, they call for visionary leadership.

    Eighteen years into post-military civilian rule, and despite enviable strides in some departments of governance, it is clear that the expectations of the Nigerian people have not been fully met. There is a disconnect between the governing and the governed. Poverty and biblical misery stalk the land. With the naira undergoing an unprecedented free fall, Nigerians have never been this poor. Centrifugal forces of regional, religious, economic divisions are having a field day. This is because the institutions of the state designed to rein them in are either too weak or too enervated by their own internal contradictions to function effectively.

    This is the nearest thing to what is known as a perfect storm, a freak situation in which all the classic requirements for a naval disaster is present at once. In such circumstances, something is bound to give. This is why there is an urgent need for a modulating and moderating voice at this critical conjuncture in our history.

    Etymology of Restructuring

    The struggle for restructuring has been with us ever since the amalgamation of the Southern and Northern protectorates into a unified country known as Nigeria. In fact in the Crown Colony of Lagos, restructuring has been going on since the naval bombardment of the city in 1862. The colonial authorities were constantly tinkering and searching for the most convenient mode of administration for their prized overseas possession. It briefly led to the anomaly of Lagos indigenes being regarded as British citizens while the rest of the country endured colonial subjecthood.

    Famously it was reported that the first civil war in Nigeria was not fought among Nigerian nationals or between Nigeria and Biafra but among British colonial officials duelling over the most suitable form of governance for the amalgamated territory. Such was the intense ferocity of the infighting that at a point Whitehall intervened, overruling the submission of the ranking British administrator of that period in favour the more cogent and superior argument of the subordinate.

    The new colonial thinking aligned itself with the fact that Nigeria is a multi-ethnic, multi-religious nation in which the constituting nationalities are in different states of political and economic development. Given this reality of different modes of cultural and spiritual production, it was thought that rather than imposing a unitary and arbitrary blanket on them, it may be better to allow the constituting regions to develop according to their own internal logic and peculiarities.

    This was the first major battle of restructuring and it led to the regional federalism that Nigerian enjoyed in the run up to independence and for the first five years after independence until the military put their boot in.  After amalgamation and in consonance with Lord Lugard’s originating vision, Nigeria was ruled very much like a dual-nation state with a unitary organogram. The colonialists firmly discouraged interaction between the two entities.

    When leaders of the three regions met eventually several decades later, they could well have been visitors from different planets and not the same nation. This mutual misgiving and misunderstanding was to lead to the infamous incident of 1953 which led Ahmadu Bello to explode that the mistake of 1914 had been discovered. He was lamenting the forcible conjoining of two separate and distinct entities.

    Yet by 1954 when self-government was inaugurated for the three regions, the ice had significantly thawed among the leaders as a result of quality interaction and sustained contacts. Although mutual suspicion, such as inevitable among rivals simmered just below the surface, the three leaders were able to do the needful in the overall interest of the new nation.

    This new spirit of cooperation was to yield bounteous fruits in the epic conferences that preceded independence. Sir Ahmadu Bello, the northern leader, was persuaded to moderate the confederal position which he had adopted to protect the social, educational and economic vulnerabilities of his region in favour of a federal arrangement.

    Zik was prevailed upon to modulate the unitary utopianism of a borderless Black intellectual who saw the entire country, nay the Black world, as his oyster in favour of regional federalism. In the case of Awo, political realities on ground and the need to sustain the momentum and tempo towards independence forced him to jettison his Utopian federalism.

    Tragically, this new cooperation could not be sustained as independence opened up new vistas of competition and struggle for economic and political domination. Consequently, the ominous fact remains that in the history of the country, no civilian government has been known to successfully undertake even a minimal restructuring of the country. The only exception was the Balewa administration which summarily expunged the mid-west from the old west in an attempt to restrict Awolowo to his ethnic stronghold, contrary to a subsisting elite consensus which recommended the wholesale reinvention of the entire country.

    In triumphant exultation, Balewa would openly declare that any other ethnic group that dared the federal might would face a similar fracturing. This misbegotten restructuring, accompanied by the open persecution of its leader, set the old west on the course of open insurrection and the nation itself on what one of its finest poets described as the path of thunder. It led directly to the first military putsch of January 1966.

    The Devil’s Conundrum

    From the foregoing, let us extrapolate and tease out certain facts which may be useful for getting                                                                                                                                                                     out of the structural impasse that the nation has found itself. In 1966, the military administration abolished the imperfect federalism they met on ground ostensibly in the name of staving off the centrifugal forces threatening the nation.

    In keeping with the institutional ethos of rigid centralization, the military embarked on a wholesale unitary destruction of the extant order eventually imposing a twelve-state architectural structure on the nation. Thirty years later, the twelve-state structure, under relentless restructuring, had mutated into an unwieldy thirty six state arrangement with many unviable states unable to pay salary and lacking in the organic capacity to turn their dominion into productive, self-sustaining entities no matter the federal alms. It is a scandalous travesty of what federalism is all about. In the name of satisfying the yearning of a delinquent political elite, Nigeria has found itself in a developmental cul de sac.

    Emergent realities tend to suggest that the military mantra of deploying unitary and statist engineering to stave off destructive centrifugal forces has proved a hollow failure. The reality on ground suggests that the nation has never been more divided and polarized along ethnic, regional, religious and economic lines than this moment. A restive pan-Nigerian underclass, the product of economic, political and spiritual mismanagement, is on destructive rampage.

    It is useful to recall that it was under military statist and unitary engineering that the annulment of the freest and fairest democratic election in the annals of Nigeria took place. The country is yet to recover from the poisoned inter-ethnic relations arising from the summary abrogation of the electoral rights of fourteen million Nigerians. Similarly, in 1986 and 1990, Nigeria played host to military bloodbath as a result of internal opposition to military rule.

    It must also be recalled that it was under unitary military rule that Nigeria witnessed an intensification of military autocracy as seen in the regime of General Sani Abacha leading to the harsh repression of the Ogoni Movement and the execution of its leaders. The military regime that succeeded General Abacha had to hurry out of town as a result of the fact that military rule had exhausted its political and historical possibilities. It could not even furnish the political class with the constitution under which they were supposed to operate.

    Consequently, post-military Fourth Republic civil rule was inaugurated on very shaky foundation indeed. The martial culture of a militarized national psyche persists in virtually all the institutions of the state. Subsequently, despite successful elections witnessing regime transition and a historic regime change, Nigeria has never been farther away from the economic and democratic promise land. It has been proved that elections do not alleviate the National Question. As a matter of fact, they tend to exacerbate it as we have witnessed in Nigeria particularly since 2015.

    The polarization and bitter division of the Nigeria polity have proceeded apace even under civil rule, reaching its zenith of hype and hysteria in recent times. Separatist agitations followed by calls for a referendum to determine the status of the country have become the order of the day. Going forward in a situation of massive hunger and unprecedented misery in the land, it is obvious that something will have to give and much sooner than we expect.

    With the route to political reform virtually foreclosed, ethnic, religious and regional restiveness is likely to escalate; armed critiques by rogue liberation groups trying to impose a solution on the grave national crisis will become prevalent; social cannibalism such as we are witnessing in many parts of the country will turn into a security nightmare for our already overstretched armed forces. The coming anarchy and freewheeling chaos will be unprecedented in the history of Africa.

    This is the devil’s conundrum in which we have found ourselves. The failure of military social engineering and the absence of a truly visionary political class have plunged the nation into its worst political crisis since the civil war. As many have noticed, there are ominous echoes of 1966. Many have also hazarded that no nation can survive two civil wars.

    But Africa has proved an exception to that rule. In Congo since independence from Belgium and even in post-partition Sudan, they have been fighting serial civil wars since the sixties and fifties respectively while until recently Somali state disappeared with the ouster of the monstrous Siad Barre in 1991.

    From the foregoing, it is no longer a question of whether Nigeria needs restructuring or not but a question of recognising its pressing immediacy and the fierce urgency of now. But there is restructuring and there is restructuring. The old-type restructuring, a mere cosmetic make-over which does not allow a fundamental shift of paradigm or a repeal of the organic nature of the militarized garrison that Nigeria has become,  is a mere exercise in futility designed to prolong the pains and trauma of a longsuffering people.

    What Nigeria now needs a complete and comprehensive overhaul of its state architecture and organogram of governance including provision for a confederal arrangement or a referendum to determine the basis of the union. Yet it is also obvious that in a civilian regime, no restructuring can take place within the context of elite polarization and mutual hostility. We must now deal with this contradiction in the final and concluding part of this piece.

    Prospects of restructuring

    Restructuring in a democratic polity requires substantial elite buy-in and compliance. Restructuring can never take place in the context of elite sabre-rattling and war-mongering. Unless we are ready to settle matters on the field of battle, democratic restructuring requires elite-pacting and intense negotiation on a give and take basis. It is this absence of elite-pacting and consensus building that hobbled the Obasanjo conference eventuating in a walk-out. It also plagued the Jonathan conference resulting in the eventual repudiation of its major recommendations by a section.

    As we have noted, the only civilian restructuring that has taken place in the country was preceded by a subsisting elite consensus among the three regional titans. The final push to demilitarize the polity which resulted in the Obasanjo Settlement of 1998 was made possible by a series of elite negotiations and pacting which commenced with the death of General Abacha and MKO Abiola.

    Elite negotiations and quality interactions can also result in the moderation and modulation of extreme views and notions of the nation. We have seen the example of the constitutional conferences of fifties which allowed Nigeria to have its closest approximation to a functioning federalism.

    In 1966, it was again the turn of Chief Obafemi Awolowo to be persuaded to change his mind. Uncharacteristically, Awolowo had pushed and canvassed for a confederal arrangement for the country. The Ikenne sage had been shaken to the foundation of his faith in the country by the gory events of January and July.

    Apart from the refusal of the federal authorities to remove northern troops laying a siege to the old west, Awolowo believed that he would almost certainly have been killed in Calabar prison if Fajuyi had not volunteered to be killed along with Ironsi. Awolowo was persuaded to moderate his views through interaction with the Lagos and mid-west delegates. Once again, he became a staunch advocate of federalism. It was this that encouraged and emboldened Gowon to embark on a twelve-state restructuring of the federation.

    This elite preponderance in restructuring is a reflection of the situation on ground and is not about to change given the existing balance of forces. Populist pundits may hew and haw about the absence of the people in these deal-making ventures on their behalf and the obvious lack of citizens buy in. But popular restructuring, like popular democracy, is a pious fiction. The people are merely brought in, if at all, to legitimize and validate decisions taken and position canvassed by the elite. The American Federalist papers were not written by farmers.

    With no provision for a referendum in the constitution, only a Sovereign National Conference can restore sovereignty to the people and only in a context of catastrophic state collapse. Except in this situation of extraordinary political turmoil and revolutionary turbulence, a Sovereign National Conference is out of the question. For it will be argued that once there is a successful election, the people have already transferred their sovereignty to an elected sovereign until the next election.

    Such a conference succeeded in the old Benin Republic simply because it confronted an unelected military dictatorship lacking in popular legitimacy. Mathieu Kerekou who had demonstrated exemplary patriotism and visionary sagacity in recognising the end when it had come would later return as the democratically elected of his country whereas in the old Zaire Joseph Mobutu prevaricated till the bitter end until the Mobutu state collapsed in an orgy of violence and bloodbath.

    Given the foregoing, the Nigerian political elite must now find the visionary courage, the inner reserves of moral strength and the patriotism to begin the series of consultations in order to commence an urgent political and economic restructuring of the nation. Given the current dismal realities, this may sound like a tall order indeed. But the alternative is eventual state collapse opening the door to anarchy and the reign of war-lords.  Thank you.

     

  • Restructuring without stampede (2)

    Many of the callers for restructuring assume that construction of a new constitution is inevitable

    To ensure the strengthening of national peace and cohesion, the peace group urged that ongoing efforts to reach out to leaders from various parts of the country should be broadened into honest dialogue with all segments of the Nigerian population to ensure that ordinary citizens get the opportunity to convey their views to government at the highest levels and get carried along in the formulation and implementation of government policies….We also need credible institutions, an economy that guarantees a fair deal and outcome for hardworking people, better physical infrastructure and an enabling environment in which citizens can thrive…The National Peace Committee, therefore, calls on State governments to commit to developing their own people more and relying less on Abuja to fund their consumption through monthly allocations.— Statement by the National Peace Committee in response to agitation for change in Nigeria
    Agitations for restructuring the governance framework for Nigeria can only be done through the alteration and amendment of the 1999 Constitution. I wish to say, that the House of Representatives and indeed the National Assembly is ready to do its part in terms of amending the constitution when consensus have been reached on any matter by stakeholders and Nigerian citizens.—Yakubu Dogara, Speaker of House of Representatives

    Last week’s column drew attention to the danger in rushing into restructuring. What now seems like thawing of the ice on restructuring through acknowledgment of calls for restructuring by some of those (like General Babangida or General Danjuma), hitherto glued to the immutability of the status quo, should not be viewed as readiness on the part of all who see the current structure as promoting their interests and thus has to be kept intact. Having waited this long, it is worth making sure that a structure that is friendly to the circumstances of our multi-ethnic nation-state is created to nurture unity and progress for eternity.

    There is no need to take a fast-food or quick-fix approach to a situation that requires proper preparation. Calls by various organisations for assembling recommendations of 2005 and 2014 national conferences from which to select ideas for restructuring the polity and economy may end up serving the interest of speed of action rather than holistic consideration of considering re-designing the country for equality, equity, and justice that subtend unity and stability in multicultural societies.

    Currently, two problems are being confused unnecessarily: restructuring and creation of a new constitution. Many of the callers for restructuring assume that construction of a new constitution is inevitable. Others think that identifying specific powers to be devolved to subnational governments and embedding such changes in the 1999 Constitution should be enough. Furthermore, far-sighted campaigners for 2019 presidential election are worried about anything that can delay change of the baton of power in 2019 in the guise of wholesale overhaul of the polity. Such impatient political power seekers had their way in 1999 when the choice before the nation after the death of Abacha and Abiola was between changing the political culture that made annulment of 1993 election and other acts of domination of one part by the other possible and just sending military rulers back to the barracks to yield governance to civilians. We all seemed persuaded by the latter option, to the extent that we went into an election before having a constitution proclaimed by departing military rulers on behalf of all citizens. And the rest has become history for our nation-state to the extent that various anti-marginalisation or anti-domination groups are now proffering solutions that vary from restructuring of the polity and economy by leaders of thought in the Southwest and South-south to call for secession or separation by self-appointed leaders of the Southeast.

    There is no better way to clarify the position of calls for restructuring than to have a constituent assembly designed to look at the issues from various sections of the country pertaining to creating a new befitting architecture of governance that can sustain unity. There are people in various sections of the country who believe that the best way to sustain the country’s unity is through the current structure and the constitution that legitimises it. Contrarily, others believe that a new structure requires a new constitution to reflect the highlights of the new architecture in the fashion of integration of form and content, while others prefer that changes to the current constitution that arise from restructuring should be left solely to elected lawmakers to handle by way of amendment. The second quotation overleaf abstracted from a recent statement by Yakubu Dogara, current Speaker of the House of Representatives, is the most recent reinforcement of the school of thought that sovereignty rests solely in the legislature.

    The position of the Dogaras in the legislature presupposes that the current constitution is a product of consensus. But this not the truth of the matter. The consensus that should have preceded construction of a modern constitution freely agreed to by citizens or nationalities coming together to belong to one multi-ethnic polity and society was not a factor in the authoring of the current constitution. Under the current constitution, all that is needed to throw away recommendations for amendments is for any 24 states to agree or disagree on any or all such recommendations. What is unmistakable in calls for restructuring is the need to do what the country had not done since attainment of independence in 1960: sitting together of citizens representatives of constituent nationalities to discuss and agree on what should constitute the core of the country’s Grundnorm. This appears to be the safest way to create sustainable federal democracy in a nation that seems to have been fumbling with lock to the door of democratic governance for about five decades.

    It is not in the interest of sustainable unity for restructuring to be left to the devices of the kind of intra-elite negotiations in the past which had led to structures that appear to have failed to achieve its purpose: rancour-free, harmonious co-existence of people of diverse worldviews: cultures and religions. The vision that created the current structure resulted from intra-elite negotiation within groups of military rulers. The survival of such structure after the exit of military rule has been made possible by intra-elite negotiation within the group of politicians jockeying for the template of power management relinquished by military rulers. The latter group has even found adequate support by citizens who have had privileged access to the lucre made possible by oil boom and the rentier state it has thrown up. More than ever before, the average citizen now needs to be involved in an inclusive process of searching for the answers to challenges of living in a productive economy that is likely to lack the easy flow of foreign exchange from sale of petroleum, the country’s manna for the past fifty years.

    Thus, insisting that all that is needed to restructure the country is to assemble recommendations from all conferences is a risky thing to do. All the conferences in the past from 1979 constitution to 2014 national conference were guided by the vision that money from oil sale could solve all the country’s problems, regardless of how rational or irrational the design of governance is. Just as the National Peace Committee posited a few days ago: “State governments need to commit to developing their own people more and relying less on Abuja to fund their consumption through monthly allocations,” those to be charged with constructing new pillars of unity need to be weaned off the parasitic economy that informed most of the recommendations of previous national conferences. A political elite—legislative, executive, or judicial—that has gotten used to feeding fat on easy flow of revenue to the federation account—whether in Abuja or Abakaliki—need to be given a chance to listen to citizens about what kind of federation they believe can bring out the best possible for the country.

    Nigeria needs a restructuring exercise that combines the ideas and wisdom of leaders and followers, not a ‘panel beating’ of the current constitution or of previous recommendations that may have outlived their relevance. Opting for a federal constitution that has the promise of new wine in a new bottle is what is needed, to replace the culture of putting new wine in an old (or wrong) bottle.

    Roposek@msn.com

  • Alaafin:  Nigeria  must restructure

    Alaafin: Nigeria must restructure

    The Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Lamidi Adeyemi II, yesterday supported the calls for the restructuring of the nation’s polity.

    The monarch warned that the present arrangement will not allow the nation’s components to develop at their pace.

    Oba Adeyemi spoke in Ibadan, Oyo State capital, at the launch of a book, titled: Samuel Ladoke Akintola In the Eyes of History.

    The first-class monarch traced the first Federal Government’s interference in state affairs to the dispute between the late Akintola and the late Obafemi Awolowo, two prominent Yoruba politicians.

    He said the interference snowballed into the crisis that occurred in the Southwest and ultimately in the death of Akintola.

    The book, written by Femi Kehinde, is a biography and postscript on the late Akintola.

    The launch was attended by eminent personalities from the Southwest and other parts of the country, including former Oyo State Governors Omololu Olunloyo and Adebayo Alao-Akala.

    Others were: the Orangun of Oke Ila, Oba Adedokun Abolarin, Justice Ladiran Akintola, Prof Bolanle Awe, late Bola Ige’s daughter, Mrs. Funso Adegbola, an ex-police officer who witnessed the killing of S. L. A. Akintola, Chief Olabode as well as his Personal Assistant (PA), Pa. R. A Obaleke.

    The publisher of Ovation magazine, Otunba Dele Momodu, delivered the lecture, while Governor Abiola Ajimobi’s former Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Festus Adedayo, reviewed the book.

    On why restructuring is imperative, Oba Adeyemi said the North was favoured with revenue allocation while more states and local government areas were created in the region.

    The monarch said other regions did not enjoy similar opportunity, despite being federating units in the same country.

    He said: “The first time the Federal Government interfered in a state’s affairs began when the government at the centre interfered in the feud between Akintola and Awolowo. The government, in support of Akintola, declared a state of emergency in the old Western Region, snowballing into a serious crisis.

     

     

  • Controversy over agitation for restructuring

    Controversy over agitation for restructuring

    Nigerians are yet to agree on how to restructure the country. The disagreement is overheating the polity. Assistant Editor LEKE SALAUDEEN examines why some Nigerians are kicking against restructuring.

    The clamour for restructuring has polarised the country. Regions in the south believe in it, but they have different views of what it is all about. To the Ibos in the Southeast, restructuring will guarantee confederation in the constitution; the Yorubas in the Southwest want a restructuring that would take the country back to regionalism; while the Southsouth is pushing for resource control. While the positions of regions in the south are not irreconcilable, that of the three regions in the north is a different ballgame. The debate has pitched the south against the north, which is indifferent to restructuring in any form.

    Eminent leaders from the south believe what can save the country from disintegration is restructuring. They are of the view that the unity of Nigeria and harmonious co-existence of the various ethnic nationalities will be strengthened by fiscal federalism and restructuring of the polity.

    In making a case for restructuring, Ijaw leader Chief Edwin Clark said: “Nigeria is very sick today, because the Nigeria which our founding fathers like Chief Obafemi Awolowo, Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe and Sir Ahmadu Bello bequeathed to us is no longer what we have. At independence, we had a constitution that said there would be three regions; no one is superior to the other.”

    To the former Secretary-General of the Commonwealth, Chief Emeka Anyaoku, the disintegration of Nigeria is imminent and the immediate solution is restructuring. Similarly, Afenifere chieftain Ayo Adebanjo is spitting fire that Nigeria will break up, unless zones are allowed to control their resources.

    But, the pan-northern socio-cultural group, the Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF), has rejected the call for restructuring, saying what the country needs at the moment is competent leadership at all levels. The ACF spokesman, Alhaji Mohammed Ibrahim, said heeding the call for restructuring would weaken the centre. He said Nigerians fought for the unity and that it is not possible for the north to support anything that would cause disunity.

    Vocal northern politician Dr Junaid Muhammed said eminent citizens pushing for restructuring are trying to blackmail Nigerians into an unclear and bogus system of government. The Second Republic lawmaker posited that none of those calling for the restructuring of Nigeria had been able to give a clear cut definition of what they meant.

    He added: “Until somebody can tell me what this restructuring is all about, I won’t be convinced about the call. These agitators of restructuring like Clark, Ayo Adebanjo, John Nwodo and others have not actually told us what will be restructured and how it will be done. That was how we were told that without Sovereign National Conference (SNC) Nigeria will collapse.”

    However, Anyaoku insists on restructuring, saying there is need for true federalism, with the existing six geo-political zones as the federating units. He criticised the present structure of federalism “where virtually all the component states are not self-sustaining and are dependent on hand-outs from the Federal Government, because they are unable to pay the salaries of their civil servants and the agreed minimum wage”.

    He said: “Its dependence on the Federal Government and the fierce struggle between its diverse groups to capture power at the centre in order to control the national resources that have been responsible for the country’s present instability and the emergence of centrifugal forces.

    “I believe that our country cannot wait much longer to reclaim the halcyon days of the First Republic, when it witnessed faster national development through a substantial viability and self-sustaining economic activities in the existing four regions at the time.”

    It is the view of analysts that different ethnic groups should agree on how to go about restructuring the country. They argued that different positions taken by the protagonists of restructuring have brought confusion into the polity. They also cautioned against hard stance position and violent posturing of those calling for restructuring, because it is capable of sending wrong signals to the opposing side.

    Legal luminary Malam Yusuf Ali (SAN), said the call for restructuring has brought more confusion into polity. He said Nigerians must agree on what they want to restructure, rather than different zones or ethnic groups defining restructuring the way it suits them.

    Ali said restructuring meants different things to different ethnic groups or zones. For instance, the Yoruba definition of restructuring is regionalism and fiscal federalism and that the perception of Igbos on restructuring is confederation, while the Southsouth is gunning for economic self-determination through restructuring. He added: “Until there is agreement among the ethnic groups in the country on how to restructure Nigeria, we will not make progress; we will be over heating the polity. Let’s agree on basic issues and stop creating confusion.”

    The senior lawyer admitted that there are problems that must be addressed, if Nigerians must live together as subjects of one nation. He said: “If we abolished the settler and indigene dichotomy and ensure equitable distribution of amenities, Nigeria will not mind if the father is president and the son is vice president. An Ibo man won’t care if a Yoruba man is president for life, provided he is not denied of basic things of life. He added that it is lack of faith that is causing suspicion among the ethnic groups.

    Civil right activist Comrade Mashood Erubami agreed that restructuring has been misconstrued by some interest groups. He said the current clamour for restructuring is timely, but not good in context. He said: “It is good that it is coming at a time the National Assembly is embarking on constitutional amendments. It is however not good in context, because it is being mistaken for secession which is not the same as restructuring.”

    Erubami explained that the objective of restructuring is change, because the brand of federalism being practised by Nigeria has not been favourable to the federating units. He said to restructure the obvious unitary system being currently practised, instead of federalism, is a step in the right direction.

    He said: “There are subjective and objective material reasons for the increasing clamour in recent times for genuine restructuring, which may continue unless justice, which is the basis for the call, is demonstrated in the management and distribution of national resources among the component parts of the country.

    “However, those who are making the call in recent times are unserious and self centred. They are just waking up to the call as a means to achieving self-determination and secession, not necessarily because they are interested in truly restructuring Nigeria.”

    A political scientist, Dr Friday Ibok, argued that without restructuring, there will be no peace. He said the 2014 National Conference has set the template for restructuring and that its resolutions, if implemented, will douse the various agitations that is threatening the peace and unity of the country.

    Ibok noted that the conference recommended devolution of powers to the states; establishment of state police, rotational presidency between the north and the south and among the six geo-political zones; the creation of 19 additional states with the Southeast getting four more states

    He regretted that the conference failed to address the issue of derivation and resource control, which is one of the issues fuelling the agitation for restructuring. He said the contentious issue had been settled by the 1960 Independence and 1963 Republican constitutions, because the two constitutions specifically provided that the federating units should control their economic activities and finances, by keeping 50 per cent of all revenues and contributing the remaining 50 per cent to the Federation Account.

    He said: “The constitutions stated that 30 per cent should be shared among the regions, leaving 20 per cent to the Federal Government.

    “But, the law was changed in 1969 by the military administration when the crude oil from the Niger Delta became the mainstay of the economy. The change was effected by military fiat. The Southsouth is clamouring for a return to a true fiscal federalism as was the case when cocoa, rubber, groundnut and cotton were the mainstay of the economy. Their demand is based on principle of equity, justice and fairness.”

    A Kaduna-based lawyer, Mahmoud Haroun, believes those behind the campaign for restructuring are those who lost out in the last general elections. He said they are seeking political relevance ahead of 2019. He said restructuring is the buzz word of a section of the elite that feels that it has been shut out of government, particularly at the federal level.

    Haroun said, to the frustrated politicians, restructuring means regional autonomy or resource control. He added: “The driving force is that if they cannot be accommodated at the federal level, they should be in-charge at the regional level. They say the centre or Federal Government is too powerful and that the way out is to return the ownership of the resources to states or geo-political zones, which may then pay taxes to run the government at the centre.

    “Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has latched on to the so-called restructuring debate; he has positioned himself as the lead discussant. Apparently, the ongoing debate on restructuring needs a strong advocate in the north and Atiku fits the bill. Atiku needs the restructuring debate, to keep himself busy on the way to another shot at the Nigerian Presidency. Too much politics has crept into the restructuring debate such that it has now become a tool in the hands of those who have lost in the current order and want to distract President Muhammadu Buhari”

    Erubami is of the view that what binds the poor people in the north, east and west together is hunger and abject poverty. He said what can liberate the poor is for them to identify their common enemies and replace them with compassionate, courageous, committed and responsible leadership. He added: “Right now there is nothing different, the same old, unserious self-centred lots are clamouring for restructuring that cannot be said to represent true mandate of the masses.”

    Anyaoku advised that most of the powers currently concentrated at the centre in the presidential system be devolved to the regions to enable each region develops at its own pace. He blames the problems of Nigeria on military intervention that imposed unitary system of government, as against federalism that allows the regions to control their resources and pay tax to the Federal Government.

    He said: “The leadership of the centre should remain less powerful and less attractive as it was at the beginning of our independence. Nigeria should be restructured into a federation of six regions, based on the existing six geo-political zones. The new structure should retain the existing states as development areas but that the governance paraphernalia of governors, state assemblies, civil service and judiciary should be removed.”

    He observed that one of the main challenges that would come with the new system would be that of revenue allocation and suggested that resources should be divided into man-made resources produced by the citizens and God-given-that is minerals both liquid and solid. He said the revenue from God-given resources should be allocated with the Federal Government receiving something between 20 and 23 per cent.

  • What manner  of restructuring?

    What manner of restructuring?

    As major stakeholders, regional socio-political groups and prominent Nigerians, including conservative opponents of the idea, suddenly join the call for restructuring of Nigeria, Associate Editor, Sam Egburonu, Assistant Editor, Dare Odufowokan, South-South Regional Editor, Shola O’Neil and Sunday Oguntola, report on the different concepts of restructuring, issues behind the debate, confusion over the true meaning of the concept in Nigeria and what many believe would amount to actual restructuring of the country 

    SUDDENLY, restructuring of Nigeria, a concept that had been stoutly repelled by the political leaders and the elite over the years, has become a popular sing-song of the high and the mighty. Before now, only the radical elements and activists said Nigeria’s socio-economic and political problems would only be resolved through genuine restructuring of the country.

    But with Acting President Yemi Osinbajo’s tactful endorsement of restructuring debate on Thursday, July 6, 2017, observers said President Muhammadu Buhari-led Federal Government has finally come to accept that it is time for Nigerians to sit down in any agreed form to discuss how to restructure the country.

    Speaking through the President’s Special Adviser on Political Matters, Senator Babafemi Ojudu, at the official presentation of a book entitled, ‘Nigeria: The restructuring controversy,’ written by a former Inspector-General of Police and serving Chairman of the Police Service Commission, Dr. Mike Okiro in Abuja on Thursday, Osinbajo assured that the current federal government will utilize the outcome of the ongoing restructuring debate to come up with a new national policy.

    “We can assure you that all of the contributions being made across the country, whether from the north, from the south, east or west; the government of President Muhammadu Buhari is taking note of all the contributions you are making, and very soon, we are going to come out with policies that would take care of some of the issues that are germane in this debate about restructuring.”

    The Acting President added: “We want everyone to continue with this debate across the country, in boardrooms and conferences. This is what we need and not war. We are going to observe and take note of all your opinions, and be rest assured that we are hearing you loud and clear and that something will be done accordingly to make this country respectable and peaceful.”

    Unlike what obtained in the past, within the last two months, virtually every strong political voice, including former conservative opponents of the concept and apex socio-cultural and political organisations of ethnic nationalities, like Afenifere and Ohanaeze, have publicly endorsed the call for restructuring of Nigeria. One of the latest advocates, former Military President, General Ibrahim Babangida, described restructuring as a political action ‘whose time has come.’

    Coming even as the ruling political party, the All Progressives Congress, which earlier denied promising restructuring of the country, finally accepted it is an action that would be done, some observers said all that remains is to resolve the confusion over the real meaning of restructuring and what would amount to genuine restructuring.

    Long route to acceptance

    Call for restructuring of Nigeria has been traced to decades before the country became an independent nation in 1960. Second Republic lawmaker, Dr. Junaid Mohammed, who dismissed the current call as a non-issue told The Nation that the call for restructuring is not new and may just be a distraction. According to him, “it started as far back as 1914, following the amalgamation of the northern and southern protectorates by the then British Government.” Expressing fear that the call may blackmail Nigeria into adopting a political system that will worsen instead of helping Nigeria, he called on the agitators to spend their energy on what he described as “more serious issues needing attention in the country.”

    Different concepts of restructuring

    One of the reasons critics of restructuring gave for dismissing the call was allegation that proponents of the concept have not provided a concise and generally acceptable description of what they mean by restructuring of Nigeria. In fact, respondents to The Nation’s inquiries on what Nigerians mean by restructuring gave varying concepts though they all revolve around the need to change the current political and economic arrangements. The definitions range from feared disguised call for separation of different parts to true federalism. As a result, the critics of the concept are quite suspicious of the real motive of the proponents.

    Dr. Junaid Mohammed, for example, waved off the concept as a mere attempt to blackmail Nigeria. The frontline northern politician, on Friday told The Nation: “We enjoy discussing non issues here in Nigeria. Each time some people are looking for a way to blackmail the rest of us in Nigeria; they start this talk about restructuring. And I have been asking them to define what they mean by restructuring in clear terms. They have not been able to. That is one reason why I say it is nothing but blackmail.

    “Until somebody can tell me what this restructuring is all about, I won’t be convinced about the call. These agitators of restructuring, like Clark, Ayo Adebanjo, John Nwodo and others have not actually told us what will be restructured and how it will be done. That was how we were told that without Sovereign National Conference (SNC) Nigeria will collapse.”

    But Ohanaeze statesman and renowned scientist, Prof Anya O. Anya, had told The Nation in Lagos on Thursday that “restructuring simply means there is an existing structure; if you make adjustment to it, it is restructuring.” He said it does not need any special definition, alleging that the people saying they don’t know what restructuring is “are just speaking from both sides of the mouth.

    “You hear terms like devolution, decentralisation, federalism and others mean restructuring. It means you are changing an existing structure to something slightly different from what you have. So, there is no point over flogging it.

    “I am of the view, as other people are that the current structure has not served the country well. And the least we can do is to take a good, hard look at it and make necessary adjustments. I don’t want to say it has to be this way or that way. It is a decision for the Nigerian people to take.”

    He added: “The truth of the matter is Nigeria needs new foundations and we must build those foundations.

    “Either people defending their ethnic, professional or political empires, none of that is relevant now because where Nigeria is, we need fundamental re-examination of all aspects of our national life in order to build a nation. We don’t have a nation now.”

    Mr. Ayo Opadokun, Coordinator of Coalition of Democrats for Electoral Reforms (CODER), and General-Secretary of the National Democratic Coalition (NADECO), told The Nation that Nigeria as structured today is a lie, insisting that there is no alternative to restructuring of the country. “We must attend to the agitations of Nigerians by responding quickly to the issue of national restructuring being campaigned for. That is why I have been saying we may need to revisit the 1963 Constitution abrogated by the military when they overthrew the First Republic. It is one document that is federal.

    “Nigeria, as structured today, is a lie. We are yet to do the right thing. We must be bold enough to do the right thing if we truly want to move forward. There is no alternative to restructuring whichever way we look at the needs of this country. There is an urgent need for the restructuring of the polity. The only way forward is for us to reason together as a people.

    “All the current agitations, be it resource control, MASSOB, IPOB, OPC, Arewa youths, name it, are all a call for us to return to what we were before 1966. It was in I966, after the first coup, that the soldiers abrogated the 1963 Constitution and replaced it with a military styled central government.”

    He also we cannot force people to keep quiet when they are dissatisfied with the situation of things. Those who are currently living as second class citizens and those who have been denied their economic rights can no longer fold their arms and watch. That is why there is so much agitation.”

    Chief Anabs Sara-Igbe, a prominent activist and traditional titleholder from oil-rich Kalabari clan in Rivers State, who gave an insight into what restructuring means to the South-South region also, told The Nation earlier in the week that only restructuring can save Nigeria. “Restructuring is the only way to stop the country from collapsing. Some people are saying secession; ours is a call for resource control and true federalism. Before the advent of military coup in 1966, the Nigerian nation adopted a constitution called a Federal Constitution.  Nigeria became a federal nation.

    “The military adopted the same Federal Constitution, but they changed the components and ingredients of true federalism in the constitution of Nigeria. Ever since then, what we have been operating is not true federalism.  If we are practicing true federalism where states would be autonomous as it is done in the US and contribute to the centre, it will make the states to be very productive and active and Nigeria would be a greater nation than what we are today. We would contribute and pay tax to the centre. That is what we are talking about in the Niger Delta.

    Niger Delta does not believe in secession; we believe in one Nigeria; we believe in the greatness of coming together.”

    Why many opposed it

    The Nation investigation shows that many of the opponents of restructuring over the years allege that proponents of the concept are indirectly calling for the break-up of the country. Some critics have alleged that most of the most vocal opponents of the concept today are from the northern part of the country. While Ohanaeze and Afenifere socio-cultural organisations, including Niger Delta leaders, have endorsed the concept, one of the most outstanding opponents of the concept remains the Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF). Just late last month, the forum warned those calling for restructuring of Nigeria to have a rethink, even as it advised that the nation should preserve the present federal structure of governance.

    In a statement issued by its National Publicity Secretary, Muhammad Ibrahim, ACF faulted the stance of organisations and individuals agitating for the restructuring of the nation. “ACF observed with regret that most of those discussions are taking place without regard to decorum or civility, as the issues are often presented as demands by one group or the other.

    “Unfortunately, in most cases, they are followed up by some ultimatum to the authorities to accept or face deadly consequences. Some groups refer to restructuring to mean true federalism, others call it resource control”.

    Earlier, sometime in April, some northern leaders also kicked against restructuring. The leaders, who were members of the 2014 National Conference, in a meeting in Abuja, spoke on the platform of the Northern Delegates’ Forum (NDF).

    They said, “The North was not given fair representation in the conference with 189 delegates despite its landmass of 70 per cent and 55 per cent of the country’s population,” the NDF said.

    Months after, things have changed so much in the country. Between April and July this year, two prominent northern leaders, former Military President, Ibrahim Babangida and former democratically elected Vice President, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, have come out openly to support the call for immediate restructuring of Nigeria. Their support, according close observers, shows that the call for restructuring of Nigeria is no longer limited to the southerners, the common Nigerians and the activists. Coming from different parts of the country, and coinciding with challenging agitations and militancy with angry reactions that have exposed the growing tension and delicate sentiment of various parts of the country, informed observers said the call for restructuring may have become the much needed unifying elixir in today’s Nigeria. With Osinbajo’s latest assurances, it seems, as Babangida said, the time has come for the much talked about restructuring of the country.

    Why we want restructuring now

    Today’s proponents of restructuring, like Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar are of the view that it will promote economic and social development.

    Delivering a formal speech at the public presentation of the Daily Stream newspaper, at the Banquet Hall, Nigeria Airforce Conference Centre, Kado, Abuja, Atiku had said “the country is truly at a crossroads, and things are made worse by the cocktail of economic, social, political and problems which we have had to contend with, and which add to the abysmally low estimation of our country even by its own citizens.

    He said “Our beloved country has been in the throes of severe and debilitating social and economic problems….My take is that we will likely continue to grapple with such problems unless we get the structures of our federalism and governance right.”

    Former Military President, General Ibrahim Babangida endorsed the call with equal passion and zeal. Speaking during the prayer to mark his 75th birthday celebration at the Hilltop, Minna, Niger State, he said of Nigeria: “If we have repeatedly done certain things and not getting the desired results, we need to change tactics and approach, and renew our commitment. It is our collective responsibilities to engender a reform that would be realistic and in sync with modern best practices.

    “For example, restructuring has become a national appeal as we speak, whose time has come. I will strongly advocate for devolution of powers to the extent that more responsibilities be given to the states while the Federal Government is vested with the responsibility to oversee our fore