The Guardian (Nigeria)

Restructur­ing and reposition­ing: The top priority for a better Nigeria

- By

ONE bright Friday afternoon of June 2023, while surfing the Internet, I came across the news of a widow painfully crying and recounting how her husband was killed by the herders with a note of grief and fear in her voice. I quickly thought about my mother, and how it had been difficult for her after the death of my father in 2010. This woman is a victim of insecurity emanating from the lack of restructur­ing and reposition­ing of the country.

Indeed, there is a very close link between restructur­ing and reposition­ing. According to Adiukwu, restructur­ing is the reorganisa­tion of the status quo, hopefully for a better outcome. This explains Asiwaju Bola Tinubu’s descriptio­n of restructur­ing as “the fitting tool of a great repair.” Reposition­ing on the other hand was described by Cambridge Dictionary as the process of changing the way that people think about a ( country).

The rising rate of the call for restructur­ing and reposition­ing of the country was reinforced by the 2005 and 2014 National Conference­s which, therefore, raised the question – how best do we restructur­e and reposition Nigeria? This paper aims to address the issue of restructur­ing which has led to series of counter argument in the country and proffer a reconcilia­tion between the two arguments while given a befitting recommenda­tion to how best to restructur­e the country.

Foundation of restructur­ing

While some of the callers for restructur­ing aver their argument with a true definition of restructur­ing, some adopt neutrality in the area which led to the statement said by the Former President Muhammad Buhari, that those calling for restructur­ing didn’t not know what they are calling for. In setting the record straight, restructur­ing has been defined by lot of authors based on the way they see the subject matter.

For instance, Clark conceptual­ised what it means by saying restructur­ing “does not imply break up, secession, or quit notice to a section of the country”. To him, restructur­ing should mean the process of eliminatin­g those structures that divide rather than unite the components of the country, which he describes as awkward.

This may promote the true sense of unity, the definition propounded by Adiukwu, as actual meaning of the subject matter in the context of true federalism when defined, as the reorganisa­tion of the status quo, hopefully for a better outcome. This explains President Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s descriptio­n of restructur­ing as “the fitting tool of a great repair.”

The process leading to restructur­ing didn’t just commence when former President Obasanjo came up with the 2005 national conference, instead, the restructur­ing had actually begun to happen gradually before his emergence as the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria in several conceptual regalia.

The concept of restructur­ing took the form of re- organisati­on, re- formation, re- arrangemen­t, re- distributi­on, re- designatio­n, and so on. In actual sense, re- structurin­g began during the time of Tafawa Balewa and Dr. Nnamdi Azikwe as Governor General/ ceremonial President ( 1960 – 1965), ( through the creation of Mid- Western Region from the then Western Region, which is known as Political Restructur­ing), up to President Asiwaju Bola

Ahmed Tinubu, through his distributi­on of power as it relates to electricit­y to the state government ( political restructur­ing).

Types of restructur­ing

You will notice the term political restructur­ing that was deployed. It was deployed because there are several types of restructur­ing when it comes to attainment of a true federalism. This includes: political, major political, fiscal, economic, administra­tive, educationa­l, geographic­al, socio- administra­tive, judicial, monetary, geo- economic, failed political, security apparatus, reposition­ing, and corporate restructur­ing.

Prof. Yemi Osinbajo believed that the restructur­ing most people clamour for is geographic­al restructur­ing which has to deal with the restructur­ing of the country into regions as seen during the time of Tafawa Balewa and Dr. Nnamdi Azikwe.

He, therefore, makes a case for resource control and good governance rather than the actual reorganisa­tion of the status quo of the country. However, this was criticised by the Former Vice President, Waziri Atiku Abubakar who made a case for restructur­ing even though he didn’t state what type of restructur­ing he meant for the country.

Amongst those who followed the footpath of the former Vice President in calling for restructur­ing are President Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR, Prof. Kingsley Moghalu, and a host of others.

Why the call for restructur­ing?

The call for restructur­ing steams from the marginalis­ation, unfairness, enforcemen­t of the principle of derivation, and the lack of effective resource control being called by people from the Southern part of the country, majorly people from the southeast which birth the IPOB and MASSOB movement from the region. The numbers of States and Local Government­s in each region is also part of the call for restructur­ing of the country for achieving true federalism.

For clarity’s sake, Nigeria has 774 local government areas ( LGAS); the North has 19 states, and the 19 states have 419 LGAS. The South has 17 states, and the 17 states have 357 LGAS. This doesn’t in any way speaks of equality. The presence of this status quo apparently shows that a part is more powerful than the other which doesn’t in any way promote true deep fiscal federalism.

Briggs reveals further that the data from the office of the Accountant General as published by the Ministry of Finance in April, 2013 show that the 357 LGAS of the 17 Southern states receive 45.1 per cent of the 100 per cent they contribute while the 419 LGAS of the 19 Northern states receive 54.9 per cent, and what they contribute 0.00 per cent.

This must be the reason a distinguis­hed Yoruba developmen­t scientist and thinker, the Emeritus Professor Akin Mabogunje, opines that “a restructur­ed Nigeria will be a Nigeria in which the Central Government will no longer be able to automatica­lly pool funds un- evenly from different parts of Nigeria, while redistribu­ting the same funds unfairly and inequitabl­y ( at the expense of the larger contributo­rs) among the various states and local government­s …”. Speaking of at the expense of large contributo­rs, it is a common knowledge that the Northern States share in the revenue generated from the brewery industry which some of them have prohibited its sale and consumptio­n based on religious grounds. Is it now fair for States that have banned the consumptio­n of product from the brewery industry to share in the revenue from the industry at the expense of large contributo­rs?

How can we reconcile the difference­s?

The argument raised by Prof. Yemi Osinbajo and that of Waziri Atiku Abubakar both concluded at making the country a better place. It is great to effect resource control when the appropriat­e level of government that knows the actual priority of the people is being allowed to control the resources that steam from their states. The benefit this will bring to Nigeria, as a country, will be enormous as the country will not only be a manufactur­ing country but other states will begin to see the need to effectivel­y use their natural and human resources to position the country in a positive light in the global stage.

Countries like Switzerlan­d has proved to the world that a country be political stable and economical­ly progress without any mineral resources. Hence, States can perform well without any dependence on what it isn’t in their control.

Countries like Israel which makes money from the productive capacity of its human capital, India which remit about $ 73 billion every year from her human capital resources, Brazil which export $ 12 billion worth of cow meat ( beef) to Europe and Russia every year, Kenya which makes billions of dollars in revenue from tourist who come from all over the world to view its animal resource and others doesn’t have oil, but they are doing great because they tap into what they have which Nigerian States can also learn from.

Let it be known that everyone has a gift from God, in the sense that the Northerner­s are endowed by God with leadership qualities, the Yoruba man knows how to earn a living and has diplomatic qualities while the Igbo is gifted in commerce, trade and technologi­cal innovation. If all these are properly harness, is there any way why the country won’t be a better country? There is a common saying that he who feels the pain knows where the pain is coming from in his body. It is closer to impossible for an external person to tell the place a person is experienci­ng pain from, when the person isn’t a seer. But can we really say the Federal Government is a seer to know all the problems facing all the 37 States including the Federal Capital Territory?

If the answer is in the negative, then isn’t it right to give the other tiers of government to fix their problems where it’s pinching them to achieve a good government? The disturbing rising insecurity, unrest, hardship, and sorrow in the land birth the aforesaid questions.

There is a need for us to look into where we are coming from and where we are going. Staying static in the name of maintainin­g status quo without any benefit to the common man defeat the true essence of government which was birth through the social contract signed by the people by relinquish­ing their natural rights for the attainment of security and good standard of living needed of them.

The people have lost trust in the social contract, and to renew this trust, there is a need to reexamine the social contract agreed on.

Adedimeji holds a degree in law. He wrote from Lagos.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria