Thursday, September 5, 2013

ABOLISHING REGIONAL GOVERNMENTS WAS A MISTAKE

“Scrapping of local government councils is not the issue, Nigeria should go back to the regional system of government where six regions should be the federating units.” Alhaji Balarabe Musa. 

In a nation-wide broadcast on 24 May, 1966, Gen. J. T. U. Aguiyi-Ironsi, Chairman, Supreme Military Council, announced the abolishment of the then existing three Regional Governments of Southern Region, Eastern Region and Northern Region through the promulgation of Military Decree No. 5. By the same Decree, the prefix ‘Federal’ in the name of our country was dispensed of. Our country’s name became simply the “Republic of Nigeria”. In the words of the General, the old Provinces become the administrative units for governance. He concluded his speech by saying, “The provisions of the Decree are intended to remove the last vestiges of the intense regionalism of the recent past, and to produce the cohesion in the governmental structure which is so necessary in achieving and maintaining the paramount objective of the National Military Government, and indeed, every true Nigerian, namely, national unity.”

Gowon ended the reign of the Provinces when he created 12 States in May 1967. The country has since gone through several Military Decrees and Acts of different Parliaments which have given us our present structure of 36 State Governments, the Federal Capital Territory FCT and 774 Local Governments.
I was born a few years before our Independence and have grown knowing nothing else but intense rivalry between all Nigerians on three fronts, namely, ethnicity, regionalism and religion. My observation tells me that that rivalry continues to intensify by the day.

In the 1980s we did not object to our States of NYSC posting. We simply went there and made the best of the one year national service. Today, requests for redeployment are the order of the day for reasons of religious or ethnic or geographical dislike. Today, my children cannot pick up jobs in the companies I worked in the 80s for reasons of religious, ethnic and geographical incompatibility. Neighborhoods in which I had bosom friends and could enter and have a good meal are today ‘no-go’ areas for me because I am no more welcome there and because I am concerned for my personal security. Friends I could trust with my family before, I can no longer trust even to deliver a common letter to them. I, therefore, cannot find the justification in Gen. Ironsi’s optimism in “cohesion in governmental structure” or “national unity” and therefore I have remained an unrepentant regionalist.  

Today, Christians are migrating out of the north-eastern parts of the country due to direct and open physical attacks on them. Fulani herdsmen are having too many clashes with their host communities all over Nigeria. The settler/indigene syndrome has resulted in deadly clashes in many parts of Nigeria. The National Assembly is currently considering the removal of all references to ethnicity in our Constitution. One of the contentious political issues in the ruling Party, the Peoples’ Democratic Party, is the rotation of the presidency between the regions of the country.

For any Government in Nigeria, whether Federal, State or Local, to pass a law that installs any religion as the official religion is a constitutional violation. Yet twelve State Governments in Nigeria have done just that in blatant violation of our Constitution with no one challenging them in Court. Government sponsorship of religious pilgrimages is as unconstitutional as the enthronement of State religion, yet all Nigerian States are engaged in this act. Part II, Section 10 of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria states categorically and without equivocation that, “The Government of the Federation or of a State shall not adopt any religion as State religion.” States that have passed Shariah Laws have violated this section and also Section 38 - Right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion, Sub-sections (1), (2), (3) & (4), and Section 42 - Right to freedom from discrimination, Sub-sections (1), (a) & (b).

My readers should not get me wrong. I am not about to advocate for the balkanisation of Nigeria into several sovereign States. To the contrary, I want us to avoid that by all means. Unfortunately, many of our actions and utterances suggest that we prefer disintegration while preaching unity with our lips. Breaking up into several countries like Yugoslavia did is not desirable. Nigeria should remain one country but with an internal governmental arrangement that recognizes our natural cleavages and capitalizes on them for foster peace and rapid development. Refusing to give these natural phenomena recognition and our pretense that we shall somehow surmount them someday baffles me.

A true federal structure for us is one with a few, say 6 or 8, fairly autonomous regional governments. Greater regional resource control, pursuit of developmental objectives as dictated by natural regional needs and the creation of opportunities for the exploitation of naturally endowed capacities should go along with this suggested structure. This is the panacea for optimum and sustainable economic growth as opposed to the current monthly sharing of revenue from one wasting asset - petroleum. This suggestion will guarantee self-determination, which is an instinctive desire of all human beings. Demands for the convocation of a ‘Sovereign National Conference’ by Prof. Wole Soyinka and many others, the demand for true federalism and the devolution of powers by Prof. Ben Magbueze, Chief Emeka Anyoku and many others give credence to my suggestions.

Recent write ups by many eloquent Nigerians have helped to re-enforce my belief in the concept of regionalism as the best governmental structure for Nigeria. I will make reference to some of them.

An article was recently written by Okey Ndibe and titled, “Lagos Deportations & the Crisis of Citizenship”. Okey Nidibe is a professor, novelist, essayist and political columnist who works at Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut, USA. While commenting on the recent deportations of some Igbo people by the Lagos State Government from Lagos to their State of origin, he said the episode “has underlined the shakiness of the idea of one Nigeria.” He added that “a policy that forcibly removes undesirable citizens from their State of residency to their State of origin does grave violence to the concept of national unity... More than fifty years into our game of pretending we have a nation; ethnic identity pretty much trumps every other consideration. For many Nigerians, ethnicity is not merely a virtue, it is the sole virtue.” He captures exactly what I am saying – that we are, first and foremost, ethnic bigots before being compulsory Nigerians.

Section 41(1) of our Constitution provides that, “Every citizen of Nigeria is entitled to move freely throughout Nigeria and to reside in any part thereof....” Therefore, regarding the recent Lagos State deportations and all other earlier internal deportations, my conviction is that they were unconstitutional and criminal acts against the victims.

Another recent write up by Ayo Teriba was titled, “Confronting Inter-regional Disparities in Nigeria”. Ayo Teriba is a one-time Chief Economist and member of the Editorial Board of Thisday who is now the Chief Executive of Economic Associates. In his article, Teriba used statistical data on the natural endowments of the six geo-political zones of the country, their revenue generating capacity, their consumption patterns, their federally allocated funds and their populations to prove the grave error in our developmental plans. My reading of his writing is that he is saying Nigeria would be better governed and developed along regional lines. 

The third article I will refer to is written by a blogger, Adeola Aderounmu. In 2011 he posted, “Nigeria right from the onset is a political error and an occurrence facilitated by the selfish (and probably stupid) thinking of the colonial masters. How can people and ethnic groups that have nothing in common be formed into one country? Intelligence was deducted when such economic and political decisions were formulated. The stupidity of the creation of Nigeria would have been neutralized by a purposeful leadership. But what Nigeria got since 1960 has been a series of governments dominated by tribalism, nepotism and massive corruption... Nigeria remains one country just to serve the corrupt cabal... We should support a return to regional governments similar to what we had in those days.... It is time for each region to determine how it wants to run itself using its own economic, human and natural resources. It is time to take the power away from the centre. Let us return it to the regions where it will be possible to manage and even uproot corruption. It is absolutely useless to remain like this.” I couldn't have put it more aptly.

My fourth and last reference will be to Dr. Yusufu Turaki, Professor of Theology and Social Ethics, Jos ECWA Theological Seminary. In a paper titled, “Historical Roots of Crises and Conflicts in Nigeria with Reference to Northern Nigeria and Kaduna State”, he opines that ethnic nationalities and militants are not driven by national, political and economic principles, but by their own core values, which are usually at variance with national values. He contends that we have relied too much on social scientists to proffer solutions to political, economics, educational and religious problems to no avail. The evidence is that Nigeria is getting worse and deeper into the quagmire. He surmises that great nations of this world made it by making deliberate effort to define and transform their ethnography, geography, religion and culture to make it viable and conducive for development and transformation. Therefore, for us to develop and be transformed, we must address and transform our primary and primordial social factors, harness their potentials, tame their excesses and develop harmony, balance and unity in and out of them.

The arguments for the restoration of regional governments are strong, numerous and overwhelming. Regional governments are the best platform for the avoidance of disintegration and the promotion of rapid economic and social development. To go on the way we are now would be foolhardiness. Certainly, the rapid development envisaged will not be equal in all the Regions. But we shall share across regional boundaries as each Region specializes in areas they have comparative advantage. Our legislators will oppose such an arrangement not because they have better ideas but simply because they will be its first major casualties.

Regionalism and a unicameral system didn't fail us. We failed in its implementation. It is cost-effective and easy to operate, making it most appropriate for our present state of development. The Presidential system we adopted from the USA, with its huge Presidency and a bi-cameral parliament is a very wasteful over-duplication of administrative structures. Given our 36 States and 774 Local Governments, the canker-worms of ethnicity and religious bigotry can only be ferociously fed into maturity and implosion.

Whenever I hear the cliché, ‘Unity in diversity’ being used, I wonder if the speaker has thought of the meaning of these words and if he has seen any evidence of this in Nigeria. Let us stop saying things just to be politically right. Brazil, Malaysia Indonesia and others are supposed to be our peers in terms of developmental and social achievements, but we are lagging far behind them. Now is the time to act decisively.

James Pam, 26 August, 2013
jamespam2004@yahoo.com





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