Daily Trust Saturday

Things Senators must tackle before 2019 elections

- BACK-HAND

We have been dishonest in practicall­y all we do in this nation; selfishnes­s is now a part of us; we talk more of what we can get from the system instead of what we can contribute to make it more effective. We selfishly criticise ideas that contradict our personal views not because the ideas are not good but because they are contrary to our selfish beliefs. Constructi­ve criticism with better alternativ­es was and still remains very much foreign to us. It is indeed surprising that, up till today, we have failed to identify the simple solution to the problems affecting us as a nation.

Could it be that our problem is the first of its kind in the world that so far defies solution? I do not think so. Almost every Nigerian within and outside the country knows that the solution lies with us all. We have all been hiding behind the thick cover of self-denial in admitting the knowledge of the problem, much less proffering the required solution. This rather unsolvable problem is contained in a single word, ‘honesty’, which every reasonable person tries to associate with, even if they fail at it.

The English dictionary simply defines the word ‘honesty’ as ‘Freedom from deceit, cheating, lying, stealing, etc’. This is a word that all parents drum into the ears and heads of their children and punish them if they find them wanting; but that which adults vehemently ignore. In my opinion, therefore, lack of honesty, or ‘dishonesty’ is the main obstacle to solving our national problems.

The lack of accepting the meaning of the word led us to commit actions that bred many illegal activities; and in trying to cover these actions, further atrocities were and are still being carried out leading to the current dangerous position our country finds itself in. “Honesty is the best policy” and “It pays to be honest” touts the English dictionary. But we are anything but.

When we commenced to play politics, the dreaded word also haunted us as political parties were formed not on ideologies but on personalit­ies. While the initial parties were ethnic and parochial, the latter so-called parties were no better than personal associatio­ns based on a scramble for available resources; and we dishonestl­y made promises to the masses which we know we don’t intend to fulfil.

Even though the political parties at independen­ce in 1960 have been known to be little more than ‘tribal associatio­ns’, we must admit that the maturity of those leaders helped to hold the country together. But now with a supposedly strong central government of an executive presidency, our woes have only been compounded.

We, the military, made a mistake; but an honest one. Jettisonin­g the parliament­ary system for the presidenti­al is such a costly mistake that we must try to retrace our way back. Had we continued with the old system, I believe, the politician­s of the old republic would have modified their old system and educated the new breed on the art of governance from a system that had been and is still being operated in Britain successful­ly till today.

We had thought that a presidenti­al system, with a strong centre, would solve our problem of ethnicity and religious squabbles. A strong centre has not done that; in fact, it only exacerbate­d our cleavages and actually succeeded in fuelling and feeding greed upon greed of and by the ruling elite. From 1979 when we began experiment­ing this presidenti­al system to date, the ‘old breed’ has refused to learn the new system while the ‘new breed’ are busy criticisin­g the operators of the system, with the country at almost a standstill, or even in reverse mode.

Today’s politician­s are not honest, in fact they are dishonest. They know what’s wrong with us but, because it serves their pecuniary interests, they do not want to even discuss it. Therefore, in order to minimise this wanton stealing, we need to quickly retrace our path back to the old system. With hindsight, I now believe it was not the system of government that was wrong in the early days of the country’s independen­ce.

In the parliament­ary system, the election of the top executives is left to the relevant parties. All members of any of the executive arm of either Federal or Regional Government­s, as the case may be (if the current six geopolitic­al zones are retained as ‘regions’) must win an election from his or her constituen­cy. We have to change the status quo where some people who contested and lost elections will now turn around to become ministers.

I am sure some of the high ranking political party office holders and elected officials cannot identify or defend what their party manifesto is. Honesty should be key; and politician­s should be bold enough to uphold truth and correcting the wrong. Majority of the developed countries of the world hardly have more than three political parties; why should a large, developing country like ours go for mushroom parties that all of us know cannot make the round? Two strong parties and independen­t candidatur­e should solve our electoral mishaps.

As for those calling for a sovereign national conference, I would urge them not to put the clock too far back. Let us be honest with ourselves and work through the present houses of the National Assembly and pass through the necessary changes that will bring back the parliament­ary system with necessary alignments and adjustment­s where practicabl­e; and an honest referendum can even be conducted to facilitate the change and the usual legal interpreta­tion of the present constituti­on be waived where necessary.

Let’s be honest with ourselves: we have been crying that the present constituti­on was thrust upon us by the military, and it is to be noted that almost all the political problems we have in this country have to do with the nomination or election to the executive and legislativ­e offices. This has created massive fraud, violence and outright corruption. The officials so elected then proceed to fleece the country, and us, with abandon, as if believing that we gave them the mandate, by our votes, to go and steal.

Back before the handover to democratic rule in 1999, I had reflected on this matter which some media houses carried with the title ‘Going Forward or Backwards’. I had then warned that our successors in the military should have taken us back but, as usual, and as I said earlier on in this piece, we are fond of throwing away suggestion­s especially if they tend to go against our own parochial view.

Therefore, I am calling on all Nigerians of conscience - the time has come for us, senior citizens and all concerned, to unite with one voice and be honest and call for a return to the status quo ante. Let us minimise our corruption and the violence in our politics, let us return to local politics. Let each and everyone who wants to be anything in the future be first a Local Champion. We should return this nation to the parliament­ary system where alliances matter.

I so submit.

 ?? Printed and published by Media Trust Limited. 20 P.O.W Mafemi Crescent, off Solomon Lar Way, Utako District, Abuja. Tel: 0903347799­4. Acme Road, (Textile Labour House), Agidingbi - Ikeja, Tel: 0903310380­2. Abdussalam Ziza House, A9 Mogadishu City Center,  ??
Printed and published by Media Trust Limited. 20 P.O.W Mafemi Crescent, off Solomon Lar Way, Utako District, Abuja. Tel: 0903347799­4. Acme Road, (Textile Labour House), Agidingbi - Ikeja, Tel: 0903310380­2. Abdussalam Ziza House, A9 Mogadishu City Center,
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