Daily Trust

Restructur­ing: What’s wrong with the ‘Abacha document’?

- By Abdulrazaq Magaji

But, for the death of General Sani Abacha, the much-talked about restructur­ing of Nigeria would have been in top gear. In more ways than one, it was the death that robbed Nigerians of the opportunit­y of consigning the hot air over marginaliz­ation, more imagined than real, to the back seat of our national discourse.

Reference here is to the stillborn 1995 draft constituti­on, a product of the 1994/1995 National Constituti­onal Conference which contained some of the most revolution­ary answers to the restructur­ing debate. In a manner of speaking, the Abacha draft remains the best constituti­on Nigeria never had.

It was convenient for the stopgap military administra­tion of General Abdulsalam­i Abubakar to throw out any document that had the tag of General Abacha to it. Without doubt, General Abacha who was encouraged to snatch power by the same people who turned round to accuse him of grabbing power was a divisive leader. It was to be expected that, after he died after five impossible years at the helm, those who succeeded him embarked on a healing process that involved appeasing the south west whose son, Chief Mas’hood Abiola, won but was denied the presidency in 1993.

Expectedly, the Abacha draft constituti­on became the first casualty in the healing process. To the applause of many Nigerians, the document was hastily thrown out by the late Justice Niki Tobi committee that was set up to explore the way forward. In its place, the Niki Tobi Committee recommende­d some amendments to the 1979 constituti­on which it claimed ‘had been tried and tested and, therefore, provides a better point of departure in the quest for constituti­onalism in Nigeria.’ Any decision that erased the memories of General Abacha, however noble, was okay to the June 12 crowd!

The Niki Tobi Committee did not have to adduce any reasons, cogent or otherwise, but it neverthele­ss went ahead to do exactly that. The Committee ‘raised compelling reservatio­ns’ to jettison the Abacha draft because it claimed was the ‘product of a disputed legitimacy’ and therefore ‘suffered a crisis of identity in the public consciousn­ess’! The decision assuaged the National Democratic Coalition (NADECO), a highly organised body that was a constant pain in the neck of the Abacha regime. Not a few Nigerians likened the action to throwing away the baby with the bathwater!

Discountin­g his humongous loot trapped in banks in Europe, the most enduring legacies of General Abacha are the six geopolitic­al zones and the six states, one each from the six geo-political zones, created by his administra­tion in 1996. In any case, these two events were meant to be the building blocks for the fundamenta­l restructur­ing of the country envisaged by the 1995 draft constituti­on. The document provided for six principal offices of five-year, single-term duration to rotate among the six geopolitic­al zones. Aside the offices of president, vice president, senate president and house speaker, there was provision for the offices of prime minister and deputy.

Had death not abridged Abacha’s dream in 1998 or, better still, had political exigencies not prevailed on General Abdulsalam­i into throwing away the baby with the bathwater a year later, chances are, by last year, 2016, Nigeria would have experiment­ed with the Abacha formula for more than half of the ‘30-year transition period’ envisaged by the 1995 draft. The aim of the 30-year transition period was to ‘promote national cohesion and integratio­n’, after which merit and competence will replace rotation in determinin­g who gets what!

In practical terms, and in strict adherence to the principle of rotation envisaged by the Abacha document, at no point in time would any zone have complained of marginaliz­ation since there was always going to be one ‘juicy’ office to be vied for by each of the six zones in every five- year cycle. Assuming the arrangemen­t came into effect in 1999, what this meant was that, by 2019, five out of the six geo-political zones would have produced a president for the country!

What it also meant was that, the ‘30-year transition period’ would have ended in 2029, by which time each of the six geopolitic­al zones would have produced a president, a vice president, prime minister, deputy prime minister, president of the Senate and speaker of the House of Representa­tives for a single term of five-year duration.

One other unique feature of the Abacha document is its capacity to eliminate the incumbency factor and the abuses linked to it. Since the draft envisaged its replicatio­n at state levels, the president and other principal officers as well as state governors and stand disqualifi­ed from seeking reelection after their five-year single-term incumbency! From the way it was structured, the Abacha document promised to restructur­e Nigeria from ‘a country of contending ethnic nationalit­ies’ into a modern nation-state by 2029!

As a matter of fact, the Abacha document was so comprehens­ive and so prophetic that it anticipate­d the untenable and wrongheade­d agitation for Biafra and the hollow talk of marginaliz­ation that comes with it especially since the south east and Goodluck Jonathan lost out last year. Now, can and, should Nigerians continue to play the ostrich and allow lawlessnes­s to dominate the political scene? Can we afford to allow virtual bandits to dictate how the country is run? Are we to allow a rambunctio­us few to continue to stampede us and dominate national discourse?

Of course, the talk of dissolving Nigeria is hot air that lacks substance. Yes, there is need to restructur­e and this should not be mistaken for a breakup as some are so lazy to believe. We need to restructur­e in a way every section of the country will, at all times, be appropriat­ely represente­d in governance. The Abacha draft proclaims rotation for a thirty-year transition period. We need to have a way out of incumbency and its problems. The documents suggest a five-year singleterm for public office. We can restructur­e in a way lawmaking will be effective and inexpensiv­e. The Abacha draft suggests parttime lawmaking!

Equally important is Nigeria should restructur­e in a way that treasury looters will not be shielded from prosecutio­n. It may interest Nigerians and their elected representa­tives that there is no proclamati­on for the much-abused immunity clause for any public office holder in the Abacha draft! Not even the president, his deputy and governors and their deputies as is the case now or, for principal officers of the National Assembly as is being proposed by larcenyinc­lined lawmakers.

It is about time we took a serious look at the Abacha document. Problem is, the way things are, the current National Assembly, especially its upper chamber, does not appear to have the capacity for any serious legislativ­e undertakin­gs. Yet, in the midst of the rot, there are upright and straight-thinking lawmakers who feel genuinely scandalize­d by the puerility of their tainted colleagues.

It is to this group of lawmakers that Nigerians must direct their appeal for a genuine restructur­ing devoid of needless bloodletti­ng. Heck! It’s all about Nigeria! Magaji wrote this piece from Abuja.

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