Daily Trust Saturday

Celebratin­g Prof. Benjamin Nwabueze, a great legal mind

- Prof. Onwuchekwa Jemie Jemie was a co-founder of The Guardian Newspaper and its pioneer editorial page editor. He was also an editor-in-chief of the BusinessDa­y Newspaper.

Let us celebrate Professor Benjamin Obiefuna Nwabueze, one of the great legal minds of our generation.

It is difficult to speak of Nwabueze, except in superlativ­es. His grounding was in constituti­onal law. He was a renowned scholar, university teacher and mentor to many, prolific author of many books, adviser to government­s across the African continent and a drafter of democratic constituti­ons.

The encomiums showered on Nwabueze from all sides are well deserved, so are some of the criticisms. Nwabueze was not a god with feet of clay. He was thoroughly human, with his full share of the positives and negatives, to which all flesh is heir. And when it is all added up, when his achievemen­ts are weighed against his failings, he would be found to be an exceptiona­l person, a rare specimen of the human family.

Nwabueze’s most ambitious project was the drafting of the Nigerian Constituti­on of 1979. Led by Chief Rotimi Williams, the country’s then leading name in the legal profession, Prof. Nwabueze and the other eminences of the 1978-1979 Constituti­on Drafting Committee constructe­d what turned out to be an ill-conceived , ill-fitting American-style outfit, which was draped over Nigeria as it attempted to return to civilian rule after 13 years of military dictatorsh­ip and civil war.

The goal was admirable, but the method and result were dismal. All that the 1979 Constituti­on did was to canonise the military dictatorsh­ip then in practice, with all the decentrali­sed and reserved powers of the four regions of the First Republic taken away and handed to a central, plenipoten­tiary civilian federal government.

The 1979 Constituti­on was a boomerang. When its obvious defects were observed during the civilian government of Shehu Shagari, October 1, 1979 to December 31, 1983, discussion­s to amend it had hardly begun when another military coup blew everything to pieces. Then 16 more years of military dictatorsh­ip were to follow. Nigeria whirled further and faster downhill till it hit bottom with six years of General Sani Abacha, the worst of them all.

Abacha’s sudden death in 1998 brought no relief. On the contrary, his henchman and successor dredged up the flawed 1979 Constituti­on, transmogri­fied it a dozenfold, and foisted it on the incoming civilian government as the 1999 Constituti­on.

One might ask: Where was Prof. Nwabueze in all this drama?

It takes intelligen­ce to perceive one’s mistakes; humility to accept them when pointed out by others; godliness to confess your mistakes publicly and accept responsibi­lity for them; and saintlines­s to openly and seriously engage to correct your mistakes and undo the damage.

Prof. Nwabueze was one of the first to see the flaws of the 1979 Constituti­on.

“Quite frankly, there are many flaws and errors in the content of the constituti­on. And I was partly responsibl­e because I was a member of the Constituti­on Drafting Committee set up by the military government in 1978. I was not only a member but the chairman of one of the sub-committees that produced Chapter 2, the fundamenta­l objectives and [principles of state policy]. And one of the cardinal flaws in the constituti­on is the concentrat­ion of powers in the centre.

“That is why I accept that I am partly responsibl­e for that because at the time, the late Chief Rotimi Williams, a close friend of mine, and nearly everybody in the Constituti­on Drafting Committee, were so overwhelme­d with this patriotic feeling that we needed unity and the most effective way to achieve unity of the country was by having a very strong central government.

“Most of us in the committee shared that idea at the time. Chief Williams shared it because of the patriotism in us; we wanted a united Nigeria. We felt we could achieve unity by having a strong central government. Then, what did we do to achieve our mis-guided objective? We took away 50 per cent of the items on the concurrent list and gave it to the centre.

“We felt that by doing this we were establishi­ng unity. We did not stop at that. We looked at the residual matters that were exclusive to the states. We took a large part of it, more than 30 per cent and close to 50 per cent; we took it away from states and gave to the centre. The result is the almighty federal government. What we discovered was that nationalit­ies to write a new instead of producing unity, constituti­on and restructur­e we produced disunity the territory in a way that because of the intensity of reflects the will of the people. the struggle to control the When eventually centre. President Goodluck

“The intensity is so Jonathan organised such much. And it is not just in conference in 2014, his the political power that was successor in 2015 paid concentrat­ed at the centre, no heed whatsoever to much of the money also its recommenda­tions. went to the centre. So by Nigerians can judge for action we destroyed what is themselves in what direction called fiscal federalism. Too the country travelled in his much money at the centre successor’s eight years in increased the struggle for office. the control of the centre and The struggle for the money itself, and that has remained the feature of the constituti­on up till today.

“So, when people struggle and agitate for true federalism, they know what they are talking about and they are right. That must be changed. And until it is changed, we might not achieve true federalism because the basis on which we did it has proved to be misguided. The unity we thought we would achieve was not achieved and what we achieved was more of disunity than unity because of the struggle.

“So, we do not only need restructur­ing in political and financial power but also in the territoria­l basis of zones,” Prof. Nwabueze stated in a newspaper interview.

The 1979 Constituti­on was Nwabueze’s greatest project but also a cataclysmi­c failure and his deepest regret. His efforts to correct that mistake and make amends to the country came to naught.

In his voice and the voice of The Patriots, the activist organisati­on he co-founded, Nwabueze repeatedly called for a conference of Nigerian restructur­ing and a new constituti­on continues, but for Nwabueze, it is light out. Good night sir.

May the good Lord who made us all and sees every heart forgive your sins, look kindly on your efforts to make amends for your mistakes and grant you rest in his heavenly kingdom.

Nwabueze was not a god with feet of clay. He was thoroughly human, with his full share of the positives and negatives, to which all flesh is heir.

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