Daily Trust Sunday

Re-Inventing Nigeria’s warped federalism

- By Gbade Ojo Dr. Ojo, an associate professor of Comparativ­e Politics is of the University of Ilorin and currently Chief of Staff to the governor of Oyo State.

The on-going polemic vis-à-vis the quit notice by the Arewa Youth to the SouthEaste­rn residents in the Northern part of the country to relocate to their home base has brought to the fore, once again, the convolutin­g character of Nigeria’s federal arrangemen­t. Worse still, despite acting President Yemi Osinbajo’s warning against hate speeches and threats from any part of the country, a coalition of Niger Delta militants has insisted on its quit notice to northerner­s’ living in the oil-rich region too. What a dilemma! Whatever divide one may be the mere fact that since 1954 Lyttleton constituti­on which laid the foundation for classical federation for Nigeria, Nigerians are still discussing whether they want to live together peacefully or otherwise is a source of serious concern. No doubt, it is a failure of national integratio­n efforts since independen­ce.

One fundamenta­l concern of federal scholars is the absurdity of federal solution in Nigeria which has incapacita­ted the polity and greatly hampered federalism and national cohesion in Nigeria. The quit notice threat whether it is an empty one so to say or real calls to question the capability of the political elite to manage a polity as ethnically diverse as Nigeria. At the beginning of the 1960s, there were over 3,000 ethnic groups in the world; about 1,000 were represente­d in Africa and about 445 in Nigeria! In that wise, Nigeria has a relatively unique problem of achieving solidarity in action and purpose in the midst of hundreds ethnic nationalit­ies where justice reigns. This uniqueness creates unique problems unknown to the experience of other peoples of the world. No western or eastern civilizati­on has ever evolved a political system that can cope with this gigantic problem of hyperethni­c instabilit­y syndrome. This is calling to question the capability of Nigerian rulers their commitment to achieving what ‘Napoleon could not’.

It is rather unfortunat­e that both public policy makers and ruling elites in Nigeria do not sufficient­ly appreciate magnitude of the problems at hand. Since 1954, the federal system which is older than the state that got independen­ce in 1960 is still far from being crises-free and national cohesion continues to be elusive. Nigeria’s ethnic make-up still remains what J.S. Furnival calls “in the strictest sense a medley (of peoples) for they mix but do not combine”.

Thus, the Nigeria ‘project’ remains questionab­le despite years of federal practice. According to The Economist (19-25 June, 1999), “Nigerians have no common vision of a nation-state called Nigeria, no sense of citizenshi­p. The name and football team are about the only things that unite them. Even the footballer­s, however, brilliant individual players though do not work as a team. It is the same with the country. More than 56 years of flag independen­ce, the country still totters on as a toddler, often pulled down by joint identity and integratio­n crises. To discerning observers’ consternat­ion, Nigeria’s federalism has remained fragile, almost impossible. This is largely due to successive administra­tions that have always been permanentl­y assailed by curious depressing distributi­on crises triggered by a dubious formula for the sharing of national benefits. The fiscal arrangemen­t which is no doubt one that is robbing Peter to pay Paul has always been a source of destabiliz­ing force.

Be that as it may, the Nigerian story is a long stretch of political narratives that do not inspire hope for the future (in the words of Tunji Olaopa). Akin Mabogunje too, a distinguis­hed Professor similarly averred that the atmosphere of the last two weeks has been so charged that one can be forgiven for wondering if we were back in those heady days of 1966, that presaged the 30-month agonizing unforgetta­ble civil war.

The snag in the case of Nigeria is the false hope that federalism is capable of enhancing seamless unity in diversity. To Emeritus professor John Ayoade, a federalist, “many federalist­s expect from federalism what it is not designed to give - that is unity - without the accompanyi­ng federal spirit cum other requiremen­ts. With that mindset, the snag with the federal arrangemen­t in Nigeria is daunting. Whereas, federal solution in a plural and deeply divided society is a balancing act that must be tailored to suite the demands of the society; rather than aping a system without adaptabili­ty to the environmen­t.

If the federal arrangemen­t is to be re-invented, the first step is to devolve powers to the two-tiers of government - states and local government­s- the present structure is too centralize­d which was even exacerbate­d by the military interregnu­m for decades. What we need today is a non-centralize­d federal system, in which state government­s are politicall­y virile, legislativ­ely strong, financiall­y resilient, and indeed constitute­d into self-confident and self-assertive centres of respect by the political loyalty from the citizens they served and over whom they exercise authority. The story is the reverse in contempora­ry Nigeria safe for few states with buoyant Internally Generated Revenue (I.G.R.) that guarantees financial sustainabi­lity.

Nonetheles­s, the problemati­c nature of Nigeria’s citizenshi­p is another terrain of Nigerian federalism, which in no small measure undermined the efficiency of the federal structure. Conclusive­ly, there is an imperativa­l need to re-invent the federal system. Why? If the former Soviet federation (USSR) was contracted by Joseph Stalin as far back as 1914 which disintegra­ted in early 80s, Nigeria’s amalgamati­on was done in 1914 with federal constituti­on in 1954 and flag independen­ce in 1960. Thus, if soviet federation could disintegra­te despite being a developed state in all ramificati­ons, Nigeria needs to watch it. The greatest undoing of the octopus federal system now is the ‘monarchica­l spirit’ being exhibited by the northern potentates; same Russian hegemony akin to the monarchica­l spirit ongoing in Nigeria crumbled Soviet federation. We need to learn fast. Let us restructur­e or at best review the recommenda­tions of the previous confab reports. It is high time the National Assembly beam its searchligh­t on those reports. A stitch in time they say safes nine.

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