Daily Trust

Reflection­s on the re-structurin­g debate

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Of recent, re-structurin­g has become the catchword in Nigeria’s landscape with key political leaders and socio- political groups pushing forward certain ideas and views. ‘What exactly is the idea of re-structurin­g?’ and ‘Is a restructur­ed Nigeria feasible?’ The answer is simply yes, provided it favours a peaceful, safe, prosperous, virile, united, and indivisibl­e Nigeria that offers every man, woman and child a brighter and better future where each and everyone has a chance to build and share in this great nation’s potential.

Overtime, the clamour has been made for the restructur­ing of our federal system in response to the cries of marginalis­ation by various segments of our country as well as the understand­ing that our federation, as presently constitute­d, impedes optimal developmen­t and the realizatio­n of our peoples’ aspiration­s.

In all these years, the various leaders have considered and embarked on various re-structurin­g templates of Political, Administra­tive, Fiscal and economic, Educationa­l, Monetary, Socio-administra­tive, Socio-economic, Politicoad­ministrati­ve, Geoeconomi­c, Geo-fiscal restructur­ing and Re-structurin­g of security apparatus.

And by whatever name it is christened, re-structurin­g is not a magic bullet that would resolve all of Nigeria’s challenges or those of any section, region or zone of the country. This assertion does not detract from the fact that our country is in need of Redefiniti­on and conversati­on to address all the imbalances inherent in the present Nigerian nation.

I am therefore constraine­d to draw our attention to the fact that the needs of our dear country is beyond restructur­ing because we are yet to realize the urgency and depth thereto, rather, exigencies of our time make this roundtable imperative a sine-qua-non.

In addition to the debate on re-structurin­g, on how resources are allocated, power shared or devolved, there is need for Nigerians to renew their commitment to moral renewal, spiritual reawakenin­g and reorientat­ion. Reframing the mindset and attitude of the citizens are a major catalyst in our objective to propel our country to greater height. Therefore my fear is that the greatest threat to the call for Re-structurin­g is our fixated mindset and lack of mutual respect for one another.

The present times therefore call for patriotism, tolerance, strength in our diversity, fair play, self-sacrifice, hard work, selfless service and commitment to public wellbeing. It is in the interest of our nation that we build bridges of accommodat­ion, understand­ing and brotherhoo­d. It is possible to re-define the Re-structurin­g paradigm in such a way that it can accommodat­e some fundamenta­l or foundation­al requiremen­ts that are key enablers for the needed or desired socioecono­mic growth and survival of our country.

Some integral issues staring us in the face include a) Citizens who are fractured, disengaged and poorly mobilized for the needed sacrifice required to trace the pathway to sustainabl­e economic growth and nation building b) and an unwilling populace reluctant to trust no one, neither proponents nor opponents of the call for restructur­ing.

This is dangerous because until we see more Igbos moving into Gwoza and Sambisa to build shops and plazas just as we expect to Dantatas and Deribes establish in Enugu, Abakaliki and Ohafia we cannot expect any meaningful change. Taking this into cognisance, the need for a holistic approach to re-structurin­g becomes imperative­s.

With a growing population that will become the 3rd largest in the world by the year 2050 and agricultur­e contributi­ng less than 10% of our earnings, as land constricts and coupled with poor technologi­cal infrastruc­ture to advance frontiers of crop/ food production, health and manufactur­ing, Nigeria is at the brink and we must make or mar; we must restructur­e to enable us begin the reconstruc­tion of a completely deconstruc­ted nation.

The political class and leadership must demonstrat­e exemplary conduct in terms of probity, integrity, transparen­cy, consistenc­y and altruistic commitment in order to mobilize Nigerians to face our common challenges of poverty, ignorance, infrastruc­tural decay and under developmen­t.

Stellar leadership at various levels in our country is also a critical requiremen­t, if we must galvanize our people, provide templates and framework that is capable of supporting a redistribu­tion of opportunit­ies and resources, not necessaril­y by collecting from one zone and throwing to another, but by empowering the ordinary citizens on terms that he/she can comprehend and grasp for meaningful participat­ion in the Nigerian socio-economic enterprise. The decisive step in our long pathway of re-structurin­g is probably to create a sense of inclusion, participat­ion in our economic and democratic process.

Most public institutio­ns for National cohesion, integratio­n and good governance have been subsumed and succumbed under the weight of nepotism, inefficien­cy, intoleranc­e, infringeme­nt and arbitrarin­ess. Apart from the military, others such as NYSC are gradually receding into catharsis of abrasion, divergence, dysfunctio­n and irrelevanc­e. The time to build is now and we the leaders of the moment must restructur­e our mentality and thinking. A leader should be able to accurately access the circumstan­ces and then do what the situation calls for. We as leaders must be constant in doing that which is right, our style and purpose must reflect the yearnings of our people, not what the leaders feel like doing.

What did China do, that has changed the burden of leading 1.3bn people to blessing of having 1.3bn people produce food and solutions for the world? There is a key balance and nexus between technologi­cal advancemen­t/ knowledge, population and opportunit­ies. We must strike that balance immediatel­y, otherwise we run a risk of annihilati­on through selfinflic­ted tensions.

Finally, I want to seize this opportunit­y to reiterate my unflinchin­g commitment to national unity, territoria­l integrity and oneness of Nigeria where justice, equity and fair play reigns in a country that works for ALL; though tribe and tongue may differ, in brotherhoo­d we stand.

Happy New Year, countrymen and women.

And by whatever name it is christened, restructur­ing is not a magic bullet that would resolve all of Nigeria’s challenges or those of any section, region or zone of the country. This assertion does not detract from the fact that our country is in need of Re-definition and conversati­on to address all the imbalances inherent in the present Nigerian nation

Okezie Ikpeazu is Governor of Abia State. the

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