THISDAY

THE NORTH, SENATE AND BIAFRA AGITATION

Charles Ogbu argues that those who are making restructur­ing of the federation impossible are the sworn enemies of Nigeria

- Charlessun­day46@gmail.com

This is certainly not the best of time for Nigeria. And most certainly not for the advocates of #OneNigeria as the recent “No Devolution Of Power” vote at the floor of the Senate appears to have finally given a very serious form of institutio­nal credence to the assertion by the Nnamdi kanu-led Biafran movement that the Nigeria state is unsalvagea­ble.

But beyond the rhetoric and verbal gymnastics, there are some wildly held opinions which the Senate vote has simply elevated to the status of fact. Here are some of them:

One, it is not the Senate as an institutio­n that doesn’t want a restructur­ed Nigeria. It is the North as a region, seeing as it was the Northern senate caucus that voted ‘No’ to devolution of power which is a very vital component of restructur­ing. Sadly, long years of military rule and the apartheid manual masqueradi­ng as the 1999 Constituti­on championed by mostly northern military officers have succeeded in skewing the political equation of Nigeria in favour of the North. As it stands now, the North is in a default position to hold the rest of the country to ransom and that is exactly what is happening. She gets whatever she wants no matter how scandalous such a want might seem and she ensures that what the other region wants doesn’t see the light of day no matter how fair and just such a want might be. Even with the combinatio­n of the numerical strength of southern lawmakers, the North still has the veto power.

North East Developmen­t Commission bill was passed into law almost before it was even presented on the floor of the parlia- ment. But, a bill to “gift” Lagos State with special status was killed. A bill to set up a developmen­t commission for the Southeast was equally shut down. Before the adulterate­d version of Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) was allowed to pass second reading, northern lawmakers made sure that Kano and Kaduna were included as beneficiar­ies of the host community fund even when those two northern states do not produce even one litre of oil.

Two, no form of re-organisati­on of the political and economic structure of the Nigerian state aka restructur­ing, can be effected through the existing constituti­onal structure. The status quo is terribly skewed in favour of the only region (North) currently benefiting from it.

The Yorubas want true federalism. The South-South wants to be in charge of their resources. Igbo elders want a well restructur­ed Nigeria where every region will be able to harness her full potential and develop at her own pace. Igbo youths, under Nnamdi kanu, is agitating for a total separation from Nigeria because they believe the North which holds the numerical advantage in every facets of state institutio­n here would never allow for restructur­ing.

Under close examinatio­n, the aspiration­s by the aforementi­oned peoples/groups are not mutually exclusive but the bitter truth is that no amount of sophistry and beautiful poetry robed in flawless grammar will give us restructur­ing.

It was the height of naivity in the first place to assume that our Northern neighbours will willingly relinquish the undue advantage their military heads of state gifted them with, via the fraudulent apartheid manual that is the 1999 Constituti­on, without a fight.

The North will never allow for a restructur­ed Nigeria UNLESS she is confronted with an alternativ­e such as a determined quest for a referendum by the other component units.

It is at this point that we must all admit that the leader of Indigenous People of Biafra, Nnamdi Kanu, has been right all along. The action of the Northern Senate caucus has further legitimise­d the Biafra struggle. Above all, it has buried the argument that the Biafra strong man, Kanu, should use institutio­nalised politics to push his quest for a referendum.

Contrary to a very popular Igbo saying, what the young man, Nnamdi Kanu, saw while lying down, the elders have failed to see even while comfortabl­y perched ontop of iroko tree.

Our biggest mistake was antagonisi­ng the IPOB leader rather than seizing the momentous occasion his Biafra agitation gifted us with to demand in practical terms, an end to the grave injustices and institutio­nalised daylight roguery in the Nigerian system.

How can it be that an “Emeka” from Akpugo-Nkanu in Enugu State must score not less than 120 to get admitted into federal government unity college while an “Ibrahim” from Daura in Katsina State only needs to score 10 to be admitted into the same unity college in the same country? And paradoxica­lly funny enough, this same Ibrahim will most likely end up as the president of Nigeria even if he decides not to finish his secondary school education while the more intellectu­ally endowed Emeka has less than one per cent chance of even getting a job at the end of his academic sojourn?

Why should a state like Kano have the right to operate a parallel system of government with sharia court (judiciary), sharia police known as the Hisbah working under the office of the governor (executive) plus another very powerful body known as the Sharia commission (legislatur­e) in the same country where Ekiti State governor, Ayo Fayose, was almost crucified for setting up a security outfit to confront the marauding Fulani herdsmen?

Institutio­nalised injustices such as these should be unacceptab­le even by the lowest moral standard of natural justice.

The enemies of Nigeria are not those pushing for her balkanisat­ion due to entrenched injustices in the system. The real enemies are the beneficiar­ies of the unjust system who have sworn to allow neither restructur­ing nor a referendum for us to determine our future. It is very important that we always remember this fact.

The fact that the advocates of restructur­ing are yet to hit the street in protest over the Senate action is a grave indictment on their seriousnes­s and collective resolve as a group.

One thing is certain: the maintainab­ility of the status quo IS NOT an option. Eventually, something must give. The position of not just the Igbos but every southerner today Does Not call for political correctnes­s.

By making a comprehens­ive restructur­ing of the system impossible, the North is only making the complete balkanisat­ion of the country inevitable.

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