Daily Trust Sunday

Issues and Challenges of Restructur­ing Nigeria

- By Bukar Usman Bukar Usman (PhD) is a former permanent secretary in the presidency, Abuja.

The 1999 Constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended) has provisions for the necessary steps that must be taken and adhered to in amending any of its provisions. Similar provisions were made in the previous constituti­ons of Nigeria. The procedures for changing or altering the constituti­on are complex and cumbersome. The framers of the constituti­on deliberate­ly made it so to discourage frivolitie­s and unwarrante­d tinkering with the constituti­on so as to preserve the unity of Nigeria.

The call for the restructur­ing of Nigeria which in essence is a call for partial or wholesale review of the current 1999 Constituti­on should be treated under those provisions. It is the perceived difficulti­es in compliance with those provisions that tend to make some people want to circumvent the process by condemning the existing constituti­on altogether as a product of a non-democratic process. Some of these people are even calling for a new one that would emerge through what they perceive as the “democratic process.”

There is no doubt that the restructur­e advocates are few and localised to some sections of the country. However, many of them are respected and influentia­l in the society. Some of them have held public offices. Others are still serving. Some never held public office. There are also notorious armchair critics and non-conformist­s among them. Some of the advocates are also fairly well off in the society. They cannot therefore be accused of acting on selfish grounds or for material gains. But it is quite apparent that they are out to promote, in the main, sectional interests and agenda that could erode the pillars of our national unity. Some of them promote their views with all the force at their disposal. Others threaten to unleash unimaginab­le calamity on the nation if their largely narrow and untenable wishes are not granted within a given time, ignoring the undeniable fact that nation-building is a continuous project.

However, there are those who joined the bandwagon in calling for restructur­ing without knowing the full import of what the concept and content of restructur­ing entails. This reminds one of the episode under the Gowon administra­tion when some students took to the streets in demonstrat­ion, shouting, “Ali Must Go!” Non students joined them innocently, echoing “Ali Must Go!” without knowing what the students were protesting against.

Viewed closely, the restructur­e advocates essentiall­y anchor their arguments on certain misgivings and perception­s in form and style of governance. They perceive intolerabl­e imbalance in the federal structure, as currently constitute­d; imbalance in appointmen­ts and imbalance in the distributi­on of resources. They equally perceive the system of governance in practice as unitary, contrary to their yearnings for federalism.

The question is, what are the likely solutions to the myriads of perception­s and arguments for restructur­ing Nigeria?

Some of the advocates of restructur­ing propose a return to the 1963 Constituti­on. They justify this by arguing that it was the only constituti­on in the nation’s history that was freely negotiated by our revered civilian political leaders. The three initial Regions and later four, created by that constituti­on, performed wonderfull­y as units of developmen­t under the political and administra­tive structure. Indeed, there is no doubt that the Regions recorded unmatched developmen­ts within the rather short time they were operative.

The restructur­ing advocates point out that all the subsequent constituti­ons were handed down by the military. They emphasize that the 1999 Constituti­on currently in operation was a product of the military and that it is a carryover of the unitary system of governance imposed by militaryst­yle governance. Hence they call for a re-enactment of “true federalism” and “true fiscal federalism”, the like of the 1960s which left the Regions with sufficient resources to perform. They argue along this line of postulatio­ns contrary to the fact that the current 36 States of the federation get more money than the former Regions.

But what are the reasons that made Nigeria to jettison the regional arrangemen­t of the 1960s, if it indeed worked satisfacto­rily?

Memories are short. Some people seem to forget that it was similar agitations like the current clamour to restructur­e that brought about the balkanisat­ion of Nigeria into states, ostensibly to redress perceived imbalance that might jeopardise the existence of Nigeria as a country. Emerging from a hard-earned independen­ce, the nationalis­ts could not contemplat­e such a suicidal act and therefore sacrificed their individual ambitions to sustain the unity of the country.

In their anxiety to bury the ghost of regionalis­m permanentl­y and to shun the revival of regionalis­m under any guise, they were not prepared to even tolerate the existence of the residual “common services” after the abolition of the regions. The regional assets were shared to the last kobo, sometimes after much acrimony among the successor states. Some promising regional industrial, commercial and financial undertakin­gs of the likes of Industrial Investment and Credit Corporatio­n (IICC), Eastern Nigeria Developmen­t Corporatio­n (ENDC) and Northern Nigeria Developmen­t Corporatio­n (NNDC), inherited by the successor states, were starved of funds and allowed to collapse or pale into insignific­ant entities.

Those who propose, for an experiment­al period, the creation of “Geo-economic Zonal Commission­s,” as a more practicabl­e answer to the clamour for restructur­ing, need to revisit the circumstan­ces of the demise of IICC, ENDC, NNDC, Oil Mineral Producing Areas Developmen­t Commission (OMPADEC) and similar institutio­ns and also critically examine the performanc­e of the Niger Delta Developmen­t Commission (NDDC). Likewise they should examine the performanc­e of the River Basin Developmen­t Authoritie­s. Of course, a new commission has recently been approved for the North-East. Its take-off and success in meeting the objectives of its establishm­ent and the expectatio­ns of the people in its areas of operations may inform the nation better and encourage or discourage the establishm­ent of such geo-economic commission­s. But would the agitators patiently wait for such evaluation?

While it may be necessary to occasional­ly undertake a critical selfexamin­ation in nation-building, it is unrealisti­c to prescribe the structure of Nigeria of 1963 to Nigeria of today, let alone of the future. Definitely Nigeria has undergone a lot of irreversib­le metamorpho­sis from 1963 to date. The population size has increased. The proportion of the contributi­on of agricultur­al commoditie­s to revenue of the component units has drasticall­y changed. What remained relatively fixed is the Nigeria territory, less ceded Bakassi. Socio-cultural and political dynamics have inflicted permanent changes. The structure, systems and practices of that era cannot realistica­lly be superimpos­ed on the existing structure.

Perhaps, it is in realisatio­n of the impractica­lity of returning to the 1963 structure and worried by the malfunctio­n of the current state structure, that some of the advocates floated the idea of adoption of the current geopolitic­al zones as the federating units. This idea was canvassed and rejected in the course of the constituti­onal discussion­s prior to the promulgati­on of the 1999 Constituti­on. Another proposal is for a supra body of federation of some states within the federation. That is to group the states into several federal regional government­s and empower the federated states to have representa­tions overseas, just like it was when the regions had consularge­nerals. The workabilit­y of this proposal is suspect and should be rejected.

It may be recalled that Nigerians were jubilant and hailed the creation of their states. It is therefore, inconceiva­ble that the states as presently constitute­d would willingly give up their hard-earned freedom and again subordinat­e themselves to the former regional capitals. The ensuing struggle for a would-be capital of the proposed sub-federating units is another issue that must be anticipate­d. Can Nigeria afford more rounds of squabbles and expenses to site and build new capitals for the proposed sub-federating units?

Besides, much as there is serious concern about the economic viability and sustainabi­lity of the existing states, many interest groups still clamour for further balkanisat­ion and creation of more states, no matter what. Hence, there is need for the two extreme groups - those calling for further balkanisat­ion vs those demanding for sub-federating entities - to seriously reconcile their views.

Undoubtedl­y, serious questions have been raised by the demands for restructur­ing. Unfortunat­ely, the answers are not easy to come by. The way forward, however, is not in a return to the bygone structures of the early 1960s. Such proposals remain mere nostalgia as the bygone structures of that era can’t be re-enacted in their exact format today. The answer to the re-structurin­g question lies more in collective self-examinatio­n, in fundamenta­l change of attitude, and in a public-spirited approach to public administra­tion by the current operators of our constituti­on. Fortunatel­y, there is a silver lining after the initial heated agitations. This is in the realisatio­n that Nigeria as a whole is in better stead than the constituen­t parts standing alone and that solution to the questions raised should be sought within the context of maintainin­g Nigeria’s sovereignt­y.

Nigeria, the largest black nation on earth, a creation of God and blessed with a lot of potentials, can be administer­ed properly by a more ethical, transparen­t and accountabl­e leadership at all levels. There is urgent need to uplift the living standard of the citizenry and this also calls for a more judicious use of our God-given resources.

While there is need to put in place measures that will ensure our current leaders exhibit the right attitude in the performanc­e of their functions, the more urgent and fundamenta­l need is to work out a way of inculcatin­g and sustaining in the younger and future generation­s patriotic zeal that puts service and loyalty to country above selfish and parochial inclinatio­ns.

Given the required change in attitude, the 1999 Constituti­on is workable. Contrary to its condemnati­on by some critics, it is not the product of a single individual. It is a reflection of the totality of all the numerous efforts and experience­s Nigeria gained and harnessed at constituti­on making since the amalgamati­on of the country in 1914. At least there were seven consecutiv­e constituti­ons drawn up for the country prior to the 1999 constituti­on.

Many living Nigerians could testify that they participat­ed in several constituen­t assemblies, the discussion­s of which preceded the promulgati­on of the different constituti­ons by the military, as a matter of formality.

The centre may well have turned out to be too powerful, hence the current call for devolution of powers and redistribu­tion of resources. However, it cannot be denied that the powerful centre is the outcome of intense agitations by Nigerians of the 1960s that the regions were too powerful and imbalanced and should be balkanised. The agitations were heeded and implemente­d to grant selfdeterm­ination to some communitie­s and preserve the unity of Nigeria.

Nigeria needs to move forward. This is not possible with unending revisionis­m and the constant underminin­g of its constituti­ons and institutio­ns. On this point, one cannot agree more with Mr. Simon Kolawole who perhaps out of exasperati­on remarked: “...We are unable to reach anything close to a national consensus on the way forward. Some just take the opposite direction out of ignorance, some out of mass hysteria, some for political reasons, some for cheap publicity, some out of hardened ideologies and some for no reason.” (Thisday, November 12, 2017, P.88).

Certainly, the evils of corruption, greed, selfishnes­s, impunity and mismanagem­ent of public funds which have plagued the nation for years are not structural­ly induced. They arise mainly from human weakness and poor compliance with rules on regulation­s. It is not a structural matter that disposal of litigation­s in courts is prolonged in Nigeria relative to the swiftness with which similar cases are disposed of in courts in other countries. Electoral malpractic­es are not structural­ly induced. They are due to non observance of the rules. While one may not want to invoke the adage, “A bad workman blames his tools,” it should be re-asserted that the solution to some of Nigeria’s socio-economic and political problems greatly lies more in a much-needed change of attitude to governance by the operators than in restructur­ing of the country.

 ??  ?? Dr Bukar Usman is a former Permanent Secretary at the Presidency
Dr Bukar Usman is a former Permanent Secretary at the Presidency

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