Tag: Whither

  • Whither conference report?

    Whither conference report?

    The National Conference rose last week after a four-month deliberation. Its report is expected to be submitted to President Goodluck Jonathan on Thursday. Where does the country go from there since the conference had no legal backing? Precious Igbonwelundu asks.

    Introduction

     

    FOUR months after it began sitting, the National  Conference rose last week with a voluminous report to  be submitted to President Goodluck Jonathan on Thursday.

    President Jonathan inaugurated the conference with pomp last March 17 to jaw-jaw on how to correct the foundational problems of the nation.

    Coming at a time of ethno-religious conflicts, political tensions, insecurity, massive unemployment and poverty, observers described the President’s action as a ploy to win public sympathy, especially because the conference was not backed law.

    Sceptics insisted that the gathering was not a national conference unless its outcome would be subjected to a referendum so that the Federal Government would neither abandon nor tinker with it as previous recommendations  by such committees.

    But, despite these controversies, Jonathan, at the conference’s inauguration, charged delegates to deliberate on all issues except the nation’s unity, which he tagged “non-negotiable.”

    When the conference kicked off, there was no stopping it. There were occasions the sessions were rowdy, with delegates almost engaging in fisticuffs, but they always resolved their differences at the  end of it all.

     

    Conference’s Recommendations

    In the course of performing its assignment, the conference made far-reaching decisions, including that elected officials should automatically vacate their seats if they defect to another party and that elective offices like that of the president be rotated among the six zones.

    It encouraged the creation of state police for states who desire it; the establishment of constitutional court as well as an anti-corruption court; the creation of 18 new states and that creation or dissolution of local governments should be the business of states, by extension, suggesting a two-tier federal system.

    Other new recommendations are compulsory military service for all Nigerians; approval of independent candidacy; appointment of 18 ministers with at least three from each of the six geopolitical zones; merger of states; and establishment of Independent Grand Jury to investigate impeachable offences against a sitting President.

    The conference also recommended that most of the responsibilities undertaken by the Federal Government be shifted to states and the central government should concern itself with issues of defence, foreign relations, monetary/economic policy and any issue affecting the entire states; it resolved that the revenue sharing formula be tilted in favour of the states since they have been assigned the bulk of the responsibilities; reduction in the cost of governance; local government financial autonomy and removal of immunity currently enjoyed by the president and governors.

    It also recommended the scraping of the government’s sponsorship of pilgrimage;  increment in derivation funds from the current 13 per cent; and life imprisonment for persons convicted of raping minors.

     

    The issue

    Although many Nigerians have congratulated the conference for doing a marvellous job, observers have expressed concerns that the wonderful report like previous ones may never see the light of day.

    Some have expressed doubts that the legislators, saddled with law making and amendments, but most of who have been accused of widespread corruption, would accept the recommendations against their interests.

    They fear that the resources, time and even death of some delegates may come to nought should the Federal Government, out of selfishness, refuse to amend the Constitution to accommodate the conference’s report, especially on devolution of power and a weaker central government, restructuring of the revenue sharing formula and rotational presidency.

    Analysts say the country may be plunged into a deeper crisis should the efforts of the delegates be wasted, bearing in mind that the best the President can do is to draft a bill based on the report and forward it to the National Assembly for approval, which may be turned down.

    For a constitution amendment, at least two-thirds majority of the states must be in support, aside the National Assembly, whereas, for a referendum to come into effect, all eligible voters would be required to participate to arrive at the final binding decisions.

    Either way, the National Assembly, perceived to be anti-conference, has a great role to play because nothing can be accomplished without its support.

     

    Where do we go from here?

    The reality and delicateness of the situation has dawned on Nigerians, who are wondering what the next line of action would be after Jonathan receives the report. Will the Federal Government implement the outcome? Should there be a referendum for the people to decide on the report? What can be done to resolve the dilemma?

    Lawyers, who aired their views, described the position as a dilemma, just as they noted that there was no clear-cut position on the fate of the conference’s report.

    They noted that the National Assembly has a greater role to play to save the Federal Government from ridicule.

    One of the delegates to the conference and a professor of  Law, Akin Oyebode, expressed doubt that the National Assembly would endorse the recommendations because the legislature had shown vehement hostility to the conference.

    “Now that we have concluded our assignment, the ball is in the court of the Nigerians to accept or reject our recommendations. The Federal Government, in my view, had better accepted the recommendations if it does not wish to become a laughing-stock.

    “Here we have a congress of some of Nigeria’s most illustrious citizens coming with far-reaching recommendations after gruelling discussions for more than four months.

    “From day one, the National Assembly had evinced its vehement hostility to the conference. So, quite frankly, I’m not really enthused by the thought of passing our recommendations to it. Their attitude is quite predictable.

    “I am on record as saying that the people themselves should have the last say on the confab recommendations by way of a national referendum just as happened in several African States. After all, we often mouth the shibboleth that sovereignty belonged to the people. Let us for once live up to that averment.”

    A Professor of Law, Taiwo Osiptan (SAN), congratulated the conference, but said the government should not accept all its decisions.

    He said: “The conference did well, but it is now left for the government to accept and reject some of its recommendations. It is not possible for the Federal Government to accept everything. It will accept as many as possible and reject some.

    “I think what the Presidency can do at this point is to sponsor a bill to the National Assembly reflecting the resolutions it accepts for the amendment of the constitution.

    “To me, issues like the devolution of power, local government autonomy are non-negotiable and the government must accept them. Devolution of power aims at making the central government unattractive.”

    Osiptan said a referendum coull only arise if the country was talking about a new constitution.

    “You can talk of a referendum if it is a new constitution, but if it is an amendment of the existing constitution, then, it is the duty of the National Assembly. Again, it is not legally or factually possible for all Nigerians to vote at a referendum. We will still have to rely on representatives,” he said.

    Constitutional lawyer Prof Itse Sagay (SAN) said there have been a lot of confusion regarding where the report should go.

    “Some have said it should go to the National Assembly to be passed into law. Of course, if that is done, it would mean a constitutional amendment, which will involve at least two-thirds of the state.

    “Others are talking about referendum, in which every Nigerian of voting age will participate. Each of the process requires the National Assembly’s endorsement.

    “For me, I would prefer a referendum to be held because that is the only way to get all Nigerians involved and the National Assembly would have no basis for amending or tinkering with the report.

    “Some areas of the report are, indeed, controversial, such as the issue of rotational presidency. This is because it distorts the right of any Nigerian to aspire to any office at a particular time. Such things can be done politically, not legally.”

    He went on:“There is a contradiction in saying local governments belong to the state and a state can create any number it desires or dissolve and then, still saying you want to give it autonomy. That is for the state which created it to decide. The local government is created for the convenience of the state and not the other way round.

    “If you want states to have control of local government creation and administration, then, it has no business being in our constitution and you cannot talk about its autonomy. If local government are going to be states affair, why make provision for local governments in statutory allocation? You let the states fund whatever local governments they have, so, that again is a contradiction. Though, the idea of local governments being within the state is a good one.

    “Despite my observations, I do not think the conference was a waste of time. They did well in a number of areas. They did well in devolution of powers and suggested also that the formula for sharing money between Federal and states should change with states receiving higher.”

    On the proposed creation of new states, Sagay called the recommendation ‘madness’. “That is madness. I do not know another term to qualify it. It is definitely madness for any Nigerian to talk about creation of more states in the sense that virtually all the states we have now are not functional. Most of them survive purely on the hangouts they get from the Niger Delta oil proceeds.

    “So, why create 18 additional babies, who are going to be permanently on a feeding bottle? It does not make sense,’’ said Sagay.

    Another constitutional lawyer, Norrison Quakers (SAN), said Nigerians must understand that constitution amendment is the prerogative of the legislative arm of government.

    “While, we commend the President for initiating the conference , the far reaching recommendations cannot be implemented by the President. The President cannot also initiate a referendum on the amendment of the Constitution, so as to incorporate the far reaching recommendations.

    “I hope that the President’s efforts will not be politicised. It is imperative for the legislative arm of government and the executive to work in the common interest of Nigerians in ensuring that recommendations, which presumably are the expectations and agitation of Nigerians across religious or ethnic divide, are implemented,” he said.

    To former Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) Ikeja branch Chairman, Monday Ubani, the country is in a quagmire over what to do with the conference report.

    He faulted its recommendation on creation of new states, insisting that a referendum should be the way out of the current dilemma. He lamented that the conference had ended with no clear-cut provision of what will happen to its report.

    “Some of the decisions reached at the conference were very qualitative except on the creation of new states, which I consider a minus on those quality decisions. From the look of things the country is in quagmire presently with those decisions. Where should it go to? The presidency? The Legislature? To a referendum?

    “If to a referendum, is there any law backing such? I am afraid none. Warning: May this exercise not be a wasted effort as the survival on this country lies on God and peaceful resolutions of several sore points tearing us apart through a round table discussion like this conference. We should not blow this away as any such action will be to our detriment as a nation,” he said.

    According to Ubani, the conference presented the nation with a last opportunity to stem the tide of disintegration.

    “Everyone in Nigeria except the political class is aggrieved with the present entrenched system that has several faulty foundations. The country is not working. However, it is working for insignificant few that are presently mismanaging the affairs of the country.

    “What some of us advocated from the beginning concerning this conference was for a proper legislation specifying the architecture of the conference which should have Included the modalities, personalities and what will happen to its conclusions.

    “That advice was spurned at and from the look of things the conference has ended without any clear vision as to what will happen to the outcome or decisions of the confab. Our advocacy has always been that we need a new constitution which should be a product of a constituent assembly through instrument of referendum. The people must have the last say on the provisions of the constitution that is needed for the new Nigeria through a referendum,” said Ubani.

     

     

     

     

  • Whither the PDP in Osun?

    Whither the PDP in Osun?

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) lost Saturday’s Osun State governorship election  to the All Progressives Congress (APC). Will the party learn from the defeat.  SINA FADARE x-rays the contending issues.

    Like the race of life, which is full of ups and downs, successes and failures, moments to smile and to cry, the political tension that had enveloped Osun State in the recent time came to an end yesterday, following the declaration that the incumbent Governor Rauf Aregbesola had been given a fresh mandate to govern the state for another four years.

    By this victory, it is going to be another four years outside the Osun Government House for the PDP, which was the former ruling party in the state. Though the PDP has not accepted the result, the fact remains that the people of Osun State have spoken. So, whether the PDP accepts the verdict or not, it is going to be a by-stander in the next four years as an opposition party in the state.

    Rejecting the result, the PDP agent, Mr. Bola Ajao, at the collation centre, refused to endorse the summary sheets, which indicates non-acceptance of the results.

    Ajao said the PDP had already forwarded to INEC a list of its grievances against the conduct of the election and would explore every necessary step to seek redress. “The candidate of my party, Senator Iyiola Omisore, will explore every necessary step in order to move forward,” he said.

    However, a chieftain of the party and the former Minister of Aviation, Mr. Femi Fani-Kayode, has dubbed the APC victory as another development of democracy in the larger political equation of the country.

    Fani-Kayode in his congratulatory message to Aregbesola and the INEC said: “For the last two weeks I have been in the field in Osun State, campaigning for my friend, brother and kinsman and my party’s candidate in the governorship election, Senator Iyiola Omisore. It has been a grueling, yet wonderful experience and I am very proud to have been part of the team and so deeply involved.

    “The final results of the election formally announced by INEC shows Governor Rauf Aregbesola of the APC polled 394,684 votes whilst Senator Iyiola Omisore of the PDP polled 292,747 votes. It is clear from the foregoing that Aregbesola has not only won but he has also won convincingly.

    According to him, it is a race of contest where, sometimes, you win and, sometimes, you lose; and it is good to accept the fact that the people of the state have spoken and in the spirit of sportsmanship we should accept the verdict. He added that all the areas which the party had suspected foul play have been passed to INEC, which is duty-bound to look into it.

    His words: “When you win, you rejoice and when you lose, you go back to the drawing board and restrategise in order to win next time. This is democracy and the will of the people must be respected. You win some and you lose some; yet the struggle continues. Though we lost this one, we are not deterred. As a matter of fact the battle has just started and we are deeply encouraged and touched by the massive support that we received from many quarters.

    “We shall continue to proudly fly the flag of the PDP and we shall continue to work and fight for a better Nigeria. God bless the good people of Osun State. God bless Nigeria.”

    Perhaps the first lesson for the PDP to learn in this election is the resolute of the people to actually make their votes count. Despite all intimidations and threats to their lives, they fought to the end. Therefore, the PDP should realise that the people cannot be taken for granted.

    Speaking to The Nation on this, the former governor of the state and a chieftain of the APC, Senator Isiaka Adeleke, who twice narrowly escaped the assassin’s bullet, said the attempt on his life was a threat to democracy.

    According to him, instead of such barbaric way to cow me down, it gave me more energy to forge ahead. “Most of those who are perpetrating this evil in the PDP are not politicians, but opportunists who were given the opportunity to taste power and they are misbehaving. If they have been elected into one position or the order, they will know how to value the electorate,” he added.

    Can the PDP come out of this defeat better and become stronger? A member of the Board of Trustees of the PDP and a former Minister of Transport, Chief Ebenezer Babatope, said the race had just begun.

    Speaking to The Nation yesterday he explained that though his final comment on the election will come later after INEC might have reacted to some of the observations the party made, he, however, pointed out that the party was well prepared for the election and will continue to do so because there is always another time.

    He said the party would go back to the drawing board and be more organised to reclaim Osun, which was once governed by the PDP, at any available opportunity

    Speaking on the way forward for the PDP, one of the international observers, Mr. Festus Okoye, said in the spirit of sportsmanship, the leaders of the PDP should accept the verdict and should borrow a leaf from what happened in Ekiti in order to forge ahead.

    According to him, it is pertinent for the PDP candidate, Iyiola Omisore, to congratulate the winner, so that his followers will see the election as a contest where a winner must emerged.

    “If he toes such a line, the people will see a new dawn in the political space and have confidence in the electoral system; with the belief that we can get it right without any acrimony and bloodletting.”

    Political pundits are of the view that the priority in the PDP camp should be how to be more organised and coordinated to form a formidable opposition that will keep the APC on its toes in the overall interest of the state.

    Will the PDP be able to rise up to these challenges or will it just fizzle out like a smoke in the open? Only time will tell.

  • Whither Oke-Ogun Polytechnic?

    SIR: May 14, was the day that the news filtered in that the Oyo State House of Assembly (OYHA) passed into law, two executive bills, seeking for the establishment of both The Oke-Ogun Polytechnic, Saki, and Ibarapa Polytechnic, Eruwa. The announcement was greeted with applause from the concerned region. The news that The Polytechnic Ibadan, Saki satellite Campus has been granted autonomy as a full-fledged Polytechnic is now becoming stale and the hope of the people of Oke-Ogun having an autonomous higher institution of their own is becoming forlorn.

    The realities on ground as regards Oke-Ogun Polytechnic  demands that some sort of progress reports should be known. Going by the period of passage of the bill and happenings to this present moment, it seem as if the establishment has been shoved aside. There are considerable  reasons behind this assertion. First is that the current crop of students admitted into The Polytechnic Ibadan, Saki Campus, were admitted under the name of The Polytechnic Ibadan. Another reason is the recently constituted Board for the Technical University of Oyo State. The hope of announcing a similar Board or Committee  for the newly established Polytechnics is not forthcoming and thus further raise doubt about their take-off.

    However, the veracity of establishment of Oke-Ogun Polytechnic is not supposed to be doubtful based on the  broadcast by Governor Abiola Ajimobi, on May29, where he said: “We have upgraded the satellite campuses of the Polytechnic, Ibadan in Saki and Eruwa into full-fledged Polytechnics, so as to open more opportunities of tertiary education to our children…”. Two weeks after, the Oyo State House of Assembly announced its own version of the establishment. Six months after the announcement, there seem to be no corresponding follow up.

    The desire of the state government to “open more opportunities of tertiary education” to the entire state could be achieved by being true to promises made. A simple way to achieve this is to include in the budgetary allocation for the 2014, the needed funds that will cater for listed but yet to be implemented plans – the take-off of the upgraded and full-fledged institutions inclusive. Doing this will clear any form of misgivings that might have been nursed in the minds of those doubtful of government’s sincerity.

    The expectation of the Oke-Ogun region is high on the upgrading of the current Saki satellite campus of The Polytechnic Ibadan. A prompt and rightful action on making the Polytechnic a reality coupled with more dispensing of dividends of democracy to the region will be assuaging the hitherto neglect of Oke-Ogun.

     

    • Adesina Adeyemi

    Saki,Oyo state.

  • Whither government of the people?

    Whither government of the people?

    SIR: I was stuck, recently, watching the Special Adviser to the President on Research and Strategy, Douglas Oronto itemise government’s “Sure and Steady Transformation of Nigeria” agenda on a Sunrise Program on Channels Television.

    If dreams or set goals were to be awarded on merit of their presentation, or of their change-effecting potential, then the objectives of this present government deserve a national honour for their simplicity, objectiveness and seeming enticement.

    Unfortunately however, like it has always played out, a lot more is easier said than done. From Agriculture to Aviation, Health, Education and Infrastructure… both past and present records of government efforts puts it way below the possibility of achieving these lofty aims. The keywords has always been an increasing government scope and size, underachievement and sadly, unapologetic requests for another shot at their failure.

    The Government, according to Oronto, is determined at improving agricultural productivity in Nigeria, increase access to standardised education, improve the conditions of airports, work on sustainable healthcare and improve the level of infrastructure, citing the recent positive remarks on improvement in power supply by citizens all over the social media.

    Oronto’s message to the people is simple. That the elected government is simply a gracious machinery, foisted on the people it was meant to serve and protect. Hence, the sworn duty to protect and defend the people is replaced with favours within the corridors of power, and a sympathetic consideration for the people at the mercy of the whims and discretion of whoever holds power.

    The facts proving the government’s position as a babysitter on a blank cheque is apparent and vast. Regardless of how good promising adevelopment blueprints are, or their potential for maximum results, a society without security is akin to a basket being filled with water.

    It is time to quit drawing water into baskets as there can never be any meaningful socio-economic growth and development in an atmosphere riddled in insecurity and chaos. No matter how beautiful the picture of a country is painted, and forced down the throat of gullible citizens using state propaganda machinery, you can only succeed fooling all the people some of the time, but surely as Abraham Lincoln maintains, “you cannot fool all of the people all the time.”

    The gory picture of four young Nigerians cold-bloodedly murdered in a conspired effort of an entire community requires no effort to shed tears. This barbarous act only reflects the very attitude of the government towards the security of its own people. While lives and properties were continually being assaulted into extinction in parts of the country, the government is busy boosting security in the seat of power.

    The need for a nation, poised for growth and development is not a gracious government, but a government constituted for the benefit of the people, by the people and for the people, to protect inalienable their rights to life, defend their liberties and secure their properties.

    • Fiyinfoluwa Elegbede

    Greenville, South Carolina,

    USA.