We are yet again at the
season of unreasoning – the season when hair-brained ideas are put forth in
order to advance personal ambitions instead of moving the country forward. These are times when after running out of
ideas, our politicians resort to emotive issues to whip up sentiments and draw
the undiscerning to their cause. Nigeria
has seen so many of such fly-by-night politicians in the past and I am sure
will see the back of the current crop.
These politicians are not averse to pushing the country to the brink as
long as their scheme gives them political mileage. The vogue today is the call for the
restructuring or renegotiating the structure and unity of Nigeria as it exist
today. These were the same currencies
used by pseudo-democrats in the early and mid-90s to fight both Babangida and
Abacha and also scuttle Abiola’s ambition of becoming the president of the
country. It achieved its purpose when
two candidates were presented from one part of the country and Obasanjo emrged
victorious
Most of the chorus men
couldn’t talk thereafter because their mouths were stuffed with gravy. Throughout Obasanjo’s eight year tenure, we
were spared this particular demand. When
we called for restructuring of the country, we were shouted down by this same
gang. They chose to be mute and in many instances
they were found to be complicit throughout the PDP locusts’ years because they
were direct beneficiaries of the skewed federal structure. Now with APC and Buhari in control of the
country, and with no hope of getting back on the saddle strapped on the backs
of the poor in the foreseeable future, they are not averse to bringing down the
roof on all of us.
I am for restructuring or
renegotiating the federal setup or even the unity of the country, if you
may. South Sudan was excised from Sudan
and we can all testify to the progress the southerners are making after being
weaned from the oppressive yoke of the retrogressive northerners. So I am for whatever will bring an end to
this oft-repeated cliché by failed politicians looking to reinvent their
fledgling political careers. We have
been subjected to intimidation, blackmail and outright insults in the past by
advocates of restructuring. Unfortunately
none of these advocates came out with a very clear agenda or framework of how
this should be done. Some believe
Nigeria should be restructured along ethnic lines while others call for a
nebulous fiscal federalism. To most, it
is just a cliché.
By all means let’s
restructure but in doing so we must take into account how we got “structured”
in the first place. According to my
records the northern and southern protectorates were what was cobbled together
by the British to give birth to Nigeria so if we have to re-negotiate our
continued existence as Nigeria we have to start from there. The federating units as we know them today –
states and local government councils – were creations of the military,
therefore ‘unelected’ governments that were not representatives of the people. These federating units were created either at
the whim of elites to satisfy their lust for power which most will not acquire in
bigger political units, therefore the need to fractionalise the country. These same elites are the ones calling for
restructuring of the country. They prey on
the gullible and the undiscerning. They
made their names and ill-gotten wealth under this same imperfect Nigeria,
wealth which they now deploy in calling for the renegotiation of Nigeria.
We are also for the
restructuring of the country but we will like to call for the implementation of
certain conditions before we do that.
First among these conditions is that we should go to the negotiating
table on the basis of our amalgamation and not on the basis of any other factor
particularly as may be defined by those who brought the country to where we
are. Also anyone found to have been in
public service and conducted private business while in the employ of the
government must first return the proceeds of such business to public
coffers. It will not be fair on ordinary
Nigerians to be saddled with those who want to have the best of both worlds –
steal them blind while in government then turn around to pull down the same
system they employed to the fullest to gain advantage over less fortunate
Nigerians.
Fiscal federalism or
‘true’ federalism is good. Let’s go back
to whichever is acceptable to majority of Nigerians. If my history serves me right it was Ironsi
who moved Nigeria away from ‘true’ federalism to unitary system. Most of those now crying for a return to
regionalism were at the forefront of applauding Ironsi for bringing some
arrogant regions under heel. The
conventional wisdom is that some regions may not survive once they are weaned
from oil tits. I remember clearly during
the - Jonathan convoked, skewed national conference in 2014, it was the Lamido
of Adamawa, a delegate to the conference, who advocated for 100% resource
control. I concurred with the royal
father then and now. This will have been
a sure path to attaining the cure-all “fiscal federalism” that some people have
turned into a bogey slogan to be trotted out anytime they don’t get their
ways. The Lamido’s proposal wasn’t
allowed to see the light of the day despite the disproportionate presence of
those from the region that believe the area where the Lamido come from will not
survive without petro-dollars. I just
pray this government will have the courage to reintroduce this as a bill to the
National Assembly who are perpetually amending the constitution without
amending their ways.
For those who may not
remember, the “zonal” structure upon which the country operates today was a
baby of those same people who are scared of a ‘monolithic’ north. The north is a multi-ethnic, multi-religious
political unit very much unlike the rest of the other regions with, by and
large monolithic religious and ethnic configuration. This notwithstanding, the post-independence
leaders of the region were able to bring the diverse people of the region
together to live in peace and harmony despite the efforts of some people from
outside the region to endanger hatred among the various peoples living in the
area. Realising that breaking the north
into three zones hasn’t worked out well for them, and with dwindling national
political fortunes by many among them, the call for restructuring and
renegotiation has taken front seat once more.
Like I said earlier,
let’s restructure by all means. Or
better more – let’s have the courage of our conviction by dissolving the union
instead of pretending to live together while hating each other. We shouldn’t allow those elites who gained
tremendously from the system they now disparage set the agenda for us. We are not responsible for anybody’s
political failure and therefore will not be expected to carry their failed
political cross. Let the southern and
northern protectorates go their separate ways and develop at their separate
pace. This way, the hating, the
denigration, the insults and the uncouth language may abet.
No comments:
Post a Comment