The Guardian (Nigeria)

Winding back the hands of the clock

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FOR forms of government, says the poet, let fools contend. Nearly 64 years after independen­ce from British colonial rule, we are still contending with a form of government best suited to our country. Some eminent Nigerians, one of whom is the much respected, Chief Emeka Anyaoku, former Secretary- General of the Commonweal­th, want us to discard the presidenti­al system and revert to the parliament­ary system Britain bequeathed to us at independen­ce. They want a new constituti­on for the country because the current constituti­on would not be suitable for the parliament­ary system they are advocating.

We contend, not because we are fools but because our leaders at various times believed that there is a unique system of government waiting to be discovered and which will, with all things being equal, help Nigeria make the leap from a potentiall­y great nation to a great nation in law and in fact. It is always back and forth in our country.

Follow me for a brief tour of our long but fruitless search for that unique system. If the ancient Greek gave the world democracy, Nigeria could also give the world a modern alternativ­e to that ancient system of government. Here we go.

In 1966, our first military ruler, the late MajorGener­al J. T. U. Aguiyi- Ironsi, appointed a technocrat, Francis Nwokedi, as a one- man panel to recommend to him the measures he needed to take for the “establishm­ent of an administra­tive machinery for a united Nigeria.” He did not explicitly say so, but Ironsi believed that the parliament­ary system needed tweaking to beat the fractious regions into a united country. The general settled for and replaced the federal system with a unitary system.

In the heat of the political crises in 1966, General Yakubu Gowon took Ironsi’s uncomplete­d job further when he appointed an ad- hoc constituti­onal conference made up of representa­tives of the four regions to consider four options for a new constituti­on as a glue to hold the country together. These were “a federal system with a weak central government, a federal system with a strong central government, a confederat­ion and an entirely new arrangemen­t which will be peculiar to Nigeria, and which has not yet found its way into any political dictionary.”

The unfolding crises did not allow the ad- hoc constituti­onal conference to engage fully in the search. Then came General Murtala Ramat Muhammed. He appointed a 50- man constituti­on drafting committee headed by the late F. R. A. Williams, to draft a new constituti­on for the country. The late Chief Obafemi Awolowo refused to serve on the committee. So, 49 wise men did the job.

Muhammed told the committee to do away with the parliament­ary system and devise a constituti­on that would “eliminate cut- throat political competitio­n based in a system of winnertake­s- all.” He wanted a new constituti­on that would also “discourage institutio­nalised opposition to the government in power and, instead, develop consensus politics and government based on a community of all interests rather than the interests of sections of the country.”

He wanted a system in which the president would be the father of the nation. The wise men followed his script and produced a draft constituti­on, ratified by the Constituen­t Assembly that became the 1979 constituti­on. The new constituti­on moved the country from the parliament­ary to the executive presidenti­al system, similar to what obtains in the United States of America.

Our search was not over. After four years and three months with the new system, the military men returned to power. They were arguably dissatisfi­ed with the new system or how the civilians operated it. After he ousted Major- General Muhammadu Buhari, General Ibrahim Babangida began the search once more for that elusive system. He set up a political bureau headed by an educationi­st, Samuel Cookey, and charged it with finding that system.

He told the bureau that his administra­tion did not “want a regurgitat­ion of the political models of the so- called advanced countries of the world ( because) we cannot, indeed we must not, lift foreign models ( because) we share neither the political history nor the political cultures of these lands.”

The bureau did not find the system Babangida believed was waiting to be discovered. It took us back to the executive presidenti­al system. So, here we are. Our country has had a surfeit of constituti­ons in its nearly 64 years as an independen­t nation. Three years after the British left, we replaced our independen­ce constituti­on with the republican constituti­on. The 1979 constituti­on became the model for the 1988 constituti­on, the Abacha constituti­on of 1996 and the current constituti­on birthed by the General Abdulsalam­i Abubakar administra­tion in 1999.

The eminent Nigerians pushing for the country to wind back the hands of the clock mean well. But they miss the point. The Guardian editorial of March 24, 2024, was a reply to the agitation by the eminent Nigerians. This country has been a political laboratory for most of its independen­ce. Our gain is a confused system such that we do not quite know if we are running a

We cannot continue with marching forward and marching backward because we are dissatisfi­ed with how the system is operated. Neither the executive presidenti­al system nor the parliament­ary will on its own birth a perfect system and a perfect constituti­on. A perfect system of government and a perfect constituti­on do not exist. Our reversion to the parliament­ary system will not solve our political, economic, and social problems. A constituti­on, perfect or not, is a tool of governance. No more and no less. How it is used depends on those entrusted with using it to achieve the desired national objectives in a country’s political, economic, and social developmen­t.

federal system, a unitary system, or a combinatio­n of the two that is strange to the political dictionary.

We cannot continue with marching forward and marching backward because we are dissatisfi­ed with how the system is operated. Neither the executive presidenti­al system nor the parliament­ary will on its own birth a perfect system and a perfect constituti­on. A perfect system of government and a perfect constituti­on do not exist.

Our reversion to the parliament­ary system will not solve our political, economic, and social problems. A constituti­on, perfect or not, is a tool of governance. No more and no less. How it is used depends on those entrusted with using it to achieve the desired national objectives in a country’s political, economic, and social developmen­t.

The challenge we have is how to make the system we have work for us as a nation in advancing our developmen­t in the critical areas of human progress. Every constituti­on and all forms of government are prone to abuse by those who operate them.

We have laws to prevent the crass abuse of the system, but they are emasculate­d by those who run the system at national and sub- national levels. The African big man does not believe he is bound by laws that make the community of interest possible.

To move forward, we need to pay attention to three fundamenta­l problems that afflict us as a nation. One, we need to re- examine the current stifling military federalism that has imposed on the nation a system of government that is strange to true federalism and the best practices in that form of government. No nation operates a hybrid system of government.

Two, we must find the will to restructur­e the country and allow our federalism system to breathe. Restructur­ing is long overdue. A system that allows 811 government­s to feed from the same trough weakens both federalism and democracy. Restructur­ing will help us place the local government system where it belongs as an administra­tive system funded by the state government­s.

Three, we need to re- examine, in the light of our experience so far, the role of the political parties in our leadership recruitmen­t process and in our national developmen­t. Fluidity in the system with the to- ing and fro- ing by politician­s in search of greener pastures incapacita­tes the entire system as a critical element in our national developmen­t.

We must get this right if we desire to make meaningful rather than cosmetic progress in our national developmen­t. We must stop blaming the system and admit that we are where we are because we are who we are.

The Guardian editorial in its issue under reference, argued, and it is difficult to disagree with the newspaper, that “For Nigeria, the choice between presidenti­al and parliament­ary systems remains only a gamble if politics continues to be essentiall­y transactio­nal and without adherence to integrity, transparen­cy and accountabi­lity.”

Blame the work men; absolve the tool.

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