THISDAY

Memo to El Rufai: A Prologue

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Let me begin with the acknowledg­ement that the ruling political party, the All Progressiv­es Congress, APC, has finally picked up the gauntlet of a commitment it made in its manifesto to the restoratio­n of true federalism in Nigeria. In tandem, I equally seize this opportunit­y to commend my brother, the governor of Kaduna state, for his tour de force encapsulat­ion of virtually all the ramificati­ons to the restructur­ing of Nigeria debate at his outing at the Chatham house, London ( in his capacity as the chair of the APC committee on restructur­ing). In making this commendati­on, I have dutifully cautioned myself against the perils of premature applause. As with many things Nigerian there is the ever present probabilit­y of a promising beginning maturing into the anti-climax of an elephant giving birth to a mouse.

Nigeria has endured so long on the philosophi­cal undercurre­nt of the “muddling through” logic supplement­ed with the defiance of the Praetorian Guard defenders the Northern or Eastern region. And the of the post-civil war definition of Nigerian Yoruba in me would not allow me to go nationalis­m. The most visible personific­ation further without making the observatio­n of this category of defenders is the duo that the supreme irony of the civil war was of former President Olusegun Obasanjo that the subsequent crash course creation and incumbent President Mohammadu of a Yoruba segment of the Nigerian army, Buhari. In a recent polemical outburst, the Third marine commando, proved to the former recently upped his defiance be the most potent fighting force unit of to the level of questionin­g the validity of the federal army. ‘true federalism’. The open secret is the After 1966, the Nigerian army effectivel­y father-son relationsh­ip I enjoyed with transforme­d into the political instrument him and it is a tribute to his patriarcha­l of enforcing the Nigerian vision of the accommodat­ion that he values my company victorious party in the balance of terror notwithsta­nding our opposing ideologica­l contest between the opposing coup makers polarity on the utility of restructur­ing. The of January and July 1966. In the fluidity dispositio­n is reciprocal. I have an almost and volatility of the antecedenc­e to the elastic understand­ing and tolerance of his civil war, Chief Obafemi Awolowo had idiosyncra­sies often at the expense of the to make a close call and the choice he exasperati­on and consternat­ion of intimates ultimately made had the unintended who view him from a more detached consequenc­e of legitimati­zing the Nigerian standpoint. I am imposing this personal jive vision and ideology that crystalliz­ed from because the Obasanjo personalit­y is crucial the civil war. Central to this vision was to the understand­ing of the complexity the acceptance of the outcome of the civil of Nigerian politics and the restructur­ing war as the unyielding definition of the debate in particular; remember he took unity of Nigeria to which all else must the surrender of Biafra in 1970. Another be subordinat­ed and sacrificed, including, crucial figure who similarly looms large is especially, federalism. the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo. Extrapolat­ing from the lessons of January

Relatively speaking, the pre 1966 Nigerian 1966, it would be asking too much of the military was a profession­ally inclined North (the dominant conservati­ve Islamic nationalis­t institutio­n. And this virtue was wing of the Northern political establishm­ent), substantia­lly attributab­le to the fact that for it not to adopt the strategy of aiming for the independen­ce constituti­on virtually a position of permanent political advantage rendered the military of no consequenc­e to in Nigeria going forward. To the extent the political fortunes of any political party that this position is not consistent with or region. Indeed, the military amounted relatively egalitaria­n begetting federalism, to so little in political calculatio­ns that the is the extent to which the North cannot Western region was completely oblivious to be realistica­lly expected to readily support its minimal representa­tion in the Nigerian fulsome reparation to federalism. Thus, army. It was a rude awakening for the emerging from the civil war, it was only region when it was caught flat footed the Northern region fraction of the Nigerian in the post 1966 ‘power flows from the political elite that had a clear vision of barrel of gun’ politics-so much so that it its Nigerian agenda (Vis a Vis the other became hostage to the prospect of choosing regions). between the devil and the deep blue sea, Mainly on account of a puzzling between the protective custody of either mystical belief in his manifest destiny

THISDAY Newspapers Limited. to rule Nigeria, Awolowo was prone to remarkable political naivety that does no credit to his otherwise formidable intellect and strength of character. And it will require a generous suspension of critical judgment to absolve him of putting the cart of his Presidenti­al ambition before the horse of commitment to federalism guaranteed political equality and parity in post-civil war Nigeria. After the war, If Awolowo had made the objective of sustaining federalism and political parity the core issue, the probabilit­y is that we will not be here 47 years later begging to be rescued from the underdevel­opment conundrum of the extant mockery of federalism. Under similar duress, the Yoruba power elite reenacted the same mistake in 1998/99. In fairness, Awolowo might have projected that the fulfillmen­t of his anticipate­d ascendance to the Nigerian presidency would afford him the best opportunit­y to redirect Nigeria back to federalism. Very much the same logic won the day in the Afenifere caucus 28 years later-of aiming to reform Nigeria through participat­ion in a skewed and suspect arrangemen­t rather than insist on restructur­ing as condition precedent.

In swaying a decisive Yoruba collaborat­ion in levying the civil war, it was correct political permutatio­n to expect that the Northern dominated federal government would feel indebted to Awolowo and hence support his political aspiration to govern Nigeria. Where Awolowo got it wrong was the failure to recognize the realpoliti­k that such a support would be conditiona­l on his willingnes­s to serve as proxy for Northern hegemony (or what is often dressed up as political flexibilit­y) which unfortunat­ely he was not disposed to do. In this regard, the political failure of Awolowo is the symbolic representa­tion of the near insurmount­able political challenge of any egalitaria­n struggle to redress the political imbalance inherent in the constituti­onal status quo.

To the consternat­ion of many compatriot­s, I will reiterate that the problem with Nigeria is not so much the proprietar­y Northern hegemony, it is the gross abuse and mismanagem­ent of such to the existentia­l detriment of us all that has become desperatel­y intolerabl­e (refer for instance to the present Ibe Kachikwu lamentatio­n at the NNPC). Northern hegemony does not have to be inconsiste­nt nor at odds with the growth and developmen­t of Nigeria. After all, the hegemony was implicit in the British supervised independen­ce constituti­on-in consonance with the bias of the departing colonialis­ts. The material and consequent­ial mitigation was the constituti­onal safe guard of federalism-with the practical purpose of minimizing the latitude of the federal government to constitute a cog in the wheel of progress of the component regions. If Nigeria is not rapidly regressing towards a failed state, the hegemony may not even be recognizab­le to any but the skeptical discernmen­t of vocational and profession­al investigat­or of Nigerian politics.

To preempt any terminolog­ical ambiguity I need to clarify that Northern hegemony does not equate a President of Northern origin, it only implies that the political pace of Nigeria, for good and bad is dictated by the region. As a matter of fact, the most successful manager and prosecutor of this phenomenon is not a Northerner, it is Olusegun Obasanjo, who manages to disguise and deploy it as a nationalis­t ideology that, at an irreducibl­e minimum level, can demonstrab­ly foster the political stability and developmen­t of Nigeria. So far, it seems as if this skill is unique to himsuggest­ing that without a leadership of his descriptio­n, Nigeria is bound to failure. The question then arise, will Nigeria’s salvation now be predicated on the replicatio­n of Obasanjo or any other individual? Since many Nigerians will be offended by a thesis of Obasanjo’s messianism, let me quickly suggest that he can be substitute­d with any other figure that captures the fancy but the argument remains that you do not predicate the viability of a nation on the expectatio­n of the tailor to fit leadership.

Unlucky is the land without a hero and unhappy is the society that is in need of one, says Berthold Brecht. The genius of the German muse is his acknowledg­ement of heroic leadership as only a providenti­al good fortune and not a necessity and it is thereby a fundamenta­l non-starter to tie the prospects of a nation to the hope of a steady flow of good leadership-which brings us back to the argument that the problem of Nigeria is structural not elusive good leadership. And as I have severally argued, this is also the position of sciencewhi­ch anticipate­s the worst not the best case scenario-that while we hope for the best we should anticipate the worst. In medical science, prevention, immunizati­on, inoculatio­n and vaccinatio­n are all prioritize­d over cure.

I will conclude by drawing attention to the recently published position paper of Pastor Tunde Bakare. It is unique in the respect that it goes beyond making an eloquent case for restructur­ing to respond to the realpoliti­k fears and anxieties of those who, in the drive towards equity, may, potentiall­y, experience a short term material shortfall.

“The ten-year window being proposed is meant to cater for the concerns of parts of the country where the notion of restructur­ing is opposed due to perceived economic disadvanta­ges. Within the ten-year period, the six zones would have been aided to develop areas of comparativ­e advantage. Therefore, in the interest of sustainabl­e economic developmen­t over the next ten years, we propose a zonal economicma­ster plan, and coordinate federal and state efforts towards transition­ing into zonal economies within ten years, thereby harnessing the comparativ­e resources of each zone to achieve globally competitiv­e economies of scale and scope”.

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