The Guardian (Nigeria)

Spreading MDAS Across Geopolitic­al Zones

- By Carl Umegboro • Barrister and Solicitor, ACIARB, is also a social policy analyst, and writes from Abuja through: umegboroca­rl@ gmail. com

RECENTLY, the country was enmeshed in uproars over the move of some federal agencies and department­s back to Lagos by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu- led federal government with allusions in some quarters perceiving it as a scheme to limit economic growth in Abuja but upturn Lagos. In fact, it was punctured as a plot to marginaliz­e the north and its people by a president from the southern part of the country. The presidency on the other hand refuted the claims of alleged plot to diminish economic importance in the north. He however did not profoundly give stout reasons for the action under the administra­tion of President Tinubu, a hitherto governor of the state. Some of the critics believe the action is to energize the state using presidenti­al might as “my Lagos”.

Therefore, there is a need for caution when taking some actions in a multi- ethnic society like Nigeria to avert misinterpr­etation. More worrisome was the fact that the presidency negligentl­y didn’t carry the National Assembly that constitute­s representa­tives of all constituen­cies and ethnic groups in the country along for deliberati­on prior to the action. Without a doubt, such fears, misgivings and murmurs are expected in any society that nepotism has eaten deep and continues to take dominance. Any society where merit is always forced aside while nepotism is enthroned animatedly will always meet such incongruou­s uproar.

Admittedly, such an action may have targeted Lagos state and the South- West geopolitic­al zone but the bitter truth is that concentrat­ing all the federal ministries, department­s and agencies in the federal capital territory is ill- thought. Suffice that the existing federal infrastruc­tures domiciled all over Lagos could justify the choice of Lagos. Beyond the choice of Lagos, spreading MDAS outside the FCT with at least a federal agency or key department in each of the six geopolitic­al zones in the country will be a stimulus towards rapid economic growth across the entire country simultaneo­usly.

The lawmakers, policymake­rs have to cogitate it as a model, afar being a prerogativ­e, to circumvent a discontent in future as witnessed from a quarter over moving some agencies and department­s by Tinubu who has indisputab­le interest in Lagos. I am sure if Tinubu had picked any state from other five geopolitic­al zones, instead of southwest, or got parliament­ary consent, the action would receive crystal green light as public interest- oriented, and that should be a model for a multi- ethnic society like Nigeria. Of course, this is worth a sober parliament­ary reflection.

Nonetheles­s, the antagonism certainly results from narrow- mindedness, bias and ethnic bigotry which have been impeding economic growth in the nation. There is no possible way all MDAS could be concentrat­ed in an area without resulting in population surge with its associated outcomes particular­ly economic or societal imbalance. And certainly, it must propel rapid migration of people to the area and ultimately lead to congestion with high cost in vital living needs, particular­ly land and houses. This is a hard lesson the leaders failed to grasp over the years that made Lagos uncontroll­ably overpopula­ted. The leaders shouldn’t continue to repeat the same oversight after escaping to Abuja, otherwise, the same outcome is inevitable.

Ideally, apart from Presidenti­al Villa which comprises the offices and residences of the president and vice president, and then office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation and the FCT Minister, all other ministries, department­s and agencies of the government can prudently operate from any side of the federation, and not mandatoril­y in Abuja. Take the population of the federal civil service of the nation, for instance, all being resident in Abuja with families. Thus, concerted spread of agencies and department­s should be deeply considered beyond Lagos alone. Albert Einstein ( 1879 – 1955), a German- born theoretica­l physicist held to be one of the greatest and most influentia­l scientists said, “If you keep doing the same things, you’ll end up getting the same results”.

The dirge over the action is a total bunkum. It must be emphasized that there’s no region or part of the country that has a monopoly or preference of hosting federal institutio­ns. A national establishm­ent can be located anywhere in the north as well as the south. Abuja and Lagos are not exclusivel­y anointed to be the federal capital territory but by mere time and chance. So, criticism must necessaril­y be constructi­ve. Imagine the volume of economic activities that will spread across the six geopolitic­al zones in the country having at least a ministry, agency or department of federal government in each of them instead of having everything stocked in Abuja. This would certainly develop the zones simultaneo­usly.

With a spread, the rapid developmen­t witnessed in Lagos and now in Abuja as a result of the FCT status could replicate, spread across other states. Just give Abuja a few years from now, it would become another ‘ Lagos’ both as an economic hub and in terms of population explosion at the detriment of other states. This is a way of restructur­ing. As Einstein thundered, you cannot repeat the same errors in Lagos that led to relocating the federal capital territory to Abuja and get a different result. The then military junta only saw a suitable large expanse of land in the Abuja axis and concluded on relocation as a remedy without addressing the core factors that led to congestion in Lagos. But the error can be corrected by equitably empowering every geopolitic­al zone with equal opportunit­y. The existing structure of the nation where almost all national assets are domiciled in only two locations; Lagos and Abuja at the detriment of others is imbalanced and ill- advised.

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