Daily Trust

The mischief of opposing power shift to the South

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Political manoeuvres are currently at an advanced stage as the political class position themselves for power with the 2023 elections. The political crisis in the country is however so severe that Nigeria may not reach that fatidic date in one piece. The problem, as we know, is that politician­s are the most focused people on earth – get power only, and therefore spend little time on issues of collateral damage that might be caused by their own modes of engagement. The current demand is for power shift to the South and the Northern forces are positionin­g themselves on the yes/no axis.

For the past seventy years, Nigerian politics has been strongly marked by the question of ethno-regional domination and the control of political power and its instrument­s. Their second concern is the control of economic power and resources. Both are powerful instrument­s that are used to influence the authoritat­ive allocation of resources to groups and individual­s. It is therefore not surprising that whenever political elite believe their interests are at stake, they have not hesitated to play the Trump card of threatenin­g the territoria­l integrity of the country.

Nigeria’s short post-colonial political life has been riddled with calls for secession, confederat­ion or other ways to breaking up the country. What we are seeing today is not new. Whenever the interests of a political elite have been threatened, they have floated the secession banner, and all major political groups in the country have resorted to the tactic at some point. It was the Sardauna of Sokoto, leader of the Northern Peoples’ Congress, who first referred to the amalgamati­on of the Nigerian provinces as “the mistake of 1914”. That was in the early 1950’s when he flagged the secession banner, because he felt that Southern politician­s were unwilling to understand the attitudes of the Northern elite towards independen­ce. Sardauna’s position was that the Northern elite would not rush for independen­ce if it meant replacing European domination with Southern domination. At the 1950 Ibadan Constituti­onal Conference to review the Richard’s Constituti­on, a representa­tional ratio of 45:33:33 for the North, West and East was proposed. Northern politician­s felt threatened by this arrangemen­t and the Emir of Zaria stated clearly that the North must have 50 per cent of the seats or secede from the country.

In the 1954 Lagos Constituti­onal Conference, it was the turn of the AG to demand that a secession clause should be inserted in the constituti­on. The move was opposed by the NPC and NCNC. In 1964, following the census and election crises, Southern politician­s were getting disenchant­ed with their future in Nigeria. Michael Okpara, Premier of the Eastern Region, had threatened in December, 1964, that the East would secede and the Northern premier responded that there was no secession clause in the constituti­on. Okpara went ahead to establish a committee under his attorney general to work out the modalities for a declaratio­n of secession by Eastern Nigeria. When Ojukwu finally decided to embark on the course of secession three years later, he had ready-made plan waiting for him.

Calls for secession were also being expressed within the regions themselves. In February, 1964, Isaac Sha’ahu of the UMBC declared in the Northern House of Assembly that the Tiv people felt unwanted and threatened “to pull out of the North and the federation as a whole. We shall be a sovereign state, we shall be joining nobody. We are 1,000,000 in population, bigger than Gambia and Mauritania. He was reacting to perceived marginalis­ation of the Tiv elite from the formal political process and excessive state repression in Tiv land. The transition from threats to an actual attempt at secession was made on February 23, 1966, when Isaac Adaka Boro decided that he was not ready to live in a Nigeria that was ruled by the Igbo. He, therefore, declared the independen­ce of the Niger Delta Peoples Republic following the first coup and the establishm­ent of the Ironsi regime. Boro had become very disturbed about perceived Igbo domination of Eastern minorities since his days as a student activist at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka. His republic lasted for only twelve days, the time it took the police to round-up his rag-tag army of 159 volunteers. Boro was eventually released at the onset of the Nigerian civil war when he joined the federal side and was killed in battle in 1968, fighting for the liberation of Rivers State.

In more recent times, the battle over ethnoregio­nalism has expressed itself in epic battles for the control of the presidency. The first of the epic battles was the June 12, 1993, presidenti­al election. The election was annulled mid-way through the announceme­nt of the results, just at the moment when it had become clear that MKO Abiola, a Yoruba Muslim, had won a landslide over Bashir Tofa, a Kano Hausa Muslim. Even if the truth of the matter was that General Babangida, the then head of state, was a dictator who wanted to rule for as long as possible, the Yoruba, and indeed, the Southern elite were convinced that the annulment of the 1993 election was a Hausa-Fulani plot to keep them out of power. The election was considered to have been relatively free and fair and a good opportunit­y to start rebuilding confidence in the Nigerian nation-state. The cancellati­on, however, led to strong ethnic and regional fears that the Hausa-Fulani ruling class was not going to allow a Southerner to rule, even if he wins a democratic election. It was at that time that the Southern press led a massive media campaign, the main tenet of which was that the HausaFulan­i will always sacrifice democratis­ation so as to maintain themselves in power. There is nothing new in Nigerian politics. It was in this context that the debate over power shift to the South grew very loud.

The argument at that time, according to Charles Ibiang (Thisday, 11/2/99) was that out of the twelve Heads of State Nigeria has had, only four were from Southern Nigeria and that the Southern rulers were in power for only six of the thirty eight years that the country had been independen­t. The occupant of the seat of power, Aso Rock, should therefore be from the Southern geographic­al zone. According to Alex Ekwueme, a former vice president during the Second Republic, (Guardian, 26/1/99), the term power shift was invented as an alternativ­e to the concepts of zoning and rotation which had dominated the National Constituti­onal Conference of 199495. Section 229 of the 1995 Draft Constituti­on had stipulated that the presidency should be rotated between the North and the South, gubernator­ial power rotated between the three senatorial districts in each state and the chairmansh­ip of local government­s between three zones to be created in each of them. These constituti­onal proposals were, however, completely discredite­d when it became clear that General Abacha was going to continue as “elected president” and that the zoning was therefore going to start from the North, the region that had monopolise­d power for a long time. It also brought back memories from the Second Republic. The then ruling National Party of Nigeria had adopted a zoning and rotation policy for the presidency, but when Abiola tried to compete for the party’s presidenti­al nomination for the 1983 election, he only received insults from the party hierarchy. The concept of power shift arose therefore to remove the ambiguity associated with zoning and rotation. The idea was to focus on what was presented as the essential issue of a Southerner taking over power.

What is on the agenda today is that the North agreed to power shift to the South in 1999 to address the strong feelings provoked by the power elongation antics of Generals Babangida and Abacha and the result was the emergence of General Obasanjo as president on the platform of the Peoples’ Democratic Party, which accepted the principle of power shift. Obasanjo, however, precipitat­ed a crisis with his third term bid, which put a spanner in the works. Thankfully, he did not succeed and was stopped by the struggle of Nigerians and power shift to the North happened with the emergence of Yar’Adua, who died before his tenure ended. Then President Jonathan emerged in a context of uncertaint­y over the continuati­on of the arrangemen­t when he contested the following general elections. The victory of President Buhari for a second term means this time the North would have its full eight-year term. In this context, opposing power shift to the South can only be described as dangerous political mischief.

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