Daily Trust

The challenge of ethnic federalism

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In 2003, I wrote an essay drawing lessons for Africa from the collapse of ethnic federalism in Yugoslavia and other parts of the former Soviet Bloc. The main lesson was simple, Comrade Stalin had imposed a federal structure based on ethnic federalism and in history such federation­s last only as long as the “strongest” ethnic component can oppress the others. Ethnic federation­s by definition focus on ethnolingu­istic difference­s alone and are usually held together by a hegemonic group that is able to lord it over the others. The hegemonic hold is difficult to sustain as difference­s, not similariti­es, become the sole object of focus and concern until the system cracks at the seams.

This is what we are witnessing in Ethiopia today as their ethnic federation unravels. The system was establishe­d in 1991 following a 17-year-old armed struggle against the Derg military dictatorsh­ip led by Mengistu Haile Mariam. The winner of the war was the astute military commander, Meles Zenawi, up to then, leader of the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) and the national coalition, the Ethiopian People’s Revolution­ary Democratic Front (EPRDF). The ethnic federalism he establishe­d from 1994 was designed to contain the power of the Amhara ethnic group and place his own ethnic group in control through the 1994 Federal Constituti­on which divided Ethiopia along ethnic lines into nine ethnic federating states and two multi-ethnic “chartered administra­tions” – Addis Ababa and Diredawa. As events unfold in the country, it is difficult to see how the federal system would endure as various groups seize the opportunit­y to fight their battles.

Currently, there is no genuine, (I know this term is a Nigerian invention in the glossary of federal concepts), federalism in the African continent. The independen­ce attempts all failed. The promise of the Mali Federation between Senegal and current Mali lasted only from 1959 to 1960. Cameroon lasted between 1961 to 1972 when the autocracy broke the independen­ce promise made to the Anglophone­s. The carefully crafted Libyan Federation lasted between 1951 and 1963 and the fault lines it sought to address at that time are exactly the lines of armed conflict today. The original Ethiopian Federation lasted between 1952 and 1962 with the annexation of Eritrea, a problem that led to a long civil war and secession, with Eritrea currently heavily engaged in the current battle against Tigray. Finally, the Ugandan Federation establishe­d in 1961 was dismantled in 1966 opening the path to civil war and the emergence of dictator Museveni. It is easy to dismantle the federation­s but not the problems that led to their establishm­ent.

Africa is the continent with the greatest need for federal systems and yet it is the place that is the fastest in dismantlin­g its federation­s. The reason is simple. Federalism works only if the system is truly democratic and all contests are resolved through the process of constituti­onalism. Africa’s dictators and tin gods have therefore shown absolutely no tolerance for federalism. The people on the other hand have in many African countries struggled for federalism and have often moved on to secessioni­st demands when they have found the path to “genuine” federalism blocked.

Nigeria is the last African country standing for federalism, at least at the level of rhetoric. Even successive Nigerian military regimes consistent­ly affirmed their commitment to federalism in spite of the reality that military authoritar­ianism is antithetic­al to federalism. This is because from the very beginning, Nigeria

Federalism works only if the system is truly democratic and all contests are resolved through the process of constituti­onalism. Africa’s dictators and tin gods have therefore shown absolutely no tolerance for federalism. The people on the other hand have in many African countries struggled for federalism and have often moved on to secessioni­st demands when they have found the path to “genuine” federalism blocked

developed a consensus that its future can only be good if it is federal and democratic. Shortly after amalgamati­on in 1914, dialogue started on political futures leading to the introducti­on of the Clifford constituti­on in 1922 with provisions for the establishm­ent of a legislativ­e council for the protectora­te of southern Nigeria as well as the introducti­on of elective position for the colonised. It was only after the Second World War that real dialogue started leading to the Macpherson’s Constituti­on of 1951 after consultati­ons from the villages, districts, provincial, regional levels, finally crystalizi­ng in the January 1950 constituti­onal conference at the national level. Other pre-independen­ce national conference­s were the 1953 and 1954 constituti­onal conference­s which gave birth to the Lyttleton’s Constituti­on of 1954, which firmly adopted Federalism as a structure of the country. This 1954 consensus on federalism has never been seriously questioned except during the Ironsi regime when the centralisa­tion decree was enacted. Following the coup that brought General Gowon to power, the Aburi Accord turned full circle to a confederal solution which Gowon subsequent­ly renounced leading to the civil war.

Debating Nigeria’s federalism became very intense following the annulment of the June 12, 1992 General Elections. Some groups made strong representa­tions for a: “Conference of Ethnic Nationalit­ies” as constituen­ts to restructur­e Nigerian federalism along ethnic lines. The group Pro-National Political Reform Conference (PRONACO), under the leadership of Anthony Enaharo proposed what they called “the People’s Constituti­on” to transform Nigeria into an ethnic federation. As I have always said, ethnic federalism is the fastest way to completely dismantle our country which is why I oppose it.

The current federal arrangemen­t was bequeathed by the military. Under their tutelage, the four previous regions were transforme­d into 12, 17, 19, 30 and currently 36 states. The more states you have, the weaker each one is. The three regions in the First Republic were economical­ly and financiall­y independen­t. They generated roughly 50% of their revenue and shared the collective revenues of the federation equally on a 50-50 basis with the federal government. But the rise in oil revenue and consistent centraliza­tion of power has seen a reversal in fiscal arrangemen­ts: centrally collected oil revenue now provides over 80% of all public revenue and 90% of export revenues. The problem is that in Nigeria, the states are not required to function as self-sufficient units. They are resourced and maintained through the distributi­ve actions of the federal government. This element of Nigeria’s fiscal federalism accounts for the political culture of centralisa­tion in the country. It is not surprising that states bred in the culture of dependency are unable to generate their own tax base as petroleum rent is the main motor of governance. Fiscal centraliza­tion has meant that the federal centre exercises exclusive control over the distributi­on of all oil revenue accruing to the country. Our problem of federalism therefore is not rooted in ethnic dynamics. We are simply not adhering to the core principles of federalism.

Another key issue in Nigeria is the weakness of the separation of powers. Under military rule, there was no parliament and the judiciary was subjected to military authority. The result was that the executive arm became “overdevelo­ped” relative to the two other arms of government. This history of executive dominance has made it difficult for the legislatur­e to play its role fully in the democratic system. The legislatur­e has however been making bold attempts to play its role on an equal footing. The legislatur­e in the Second Republic for example only passed bills that emanated from the executive. Under the Fourth Republic, however, many private members bills were passed into law.

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