THISDAY

Boss Mustapha: May His Tenure be Smooth

- EMAIL: 24/7 ADVERTISIN­G HOT LINES: Abuja: TELEPHONE Lagos: ENQUIRIES & BOOKING:

Ionce gain congratula­te my big brother, Boss Mustapha on his dramatic elevation as the 19th Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SFG). Having emerged from the “hot ashes of the old” ( of his) predecesso­r, Babachir David Lawal, it would be uncharitab­le to further wish him a rougher ride. Of course, if the dead can read us and join in the ever vibrant Nigerian nation building discussion­s, I dare bet that given the current riot of Nigerians’ expectatio­ns of the Buhari administra­tion, the late Tai Solarin, (never known for flattery!) would still insist that “may the road of Boss Mustapha be rough”. And the late patriot would be right on point.

Given some of the work overload/ schedules of the SFG – coordinati­ng policy design and formulatio­n of as many as 35 ministries, scores of department­s and agencies for approval by government, serving as Secretary to the Council of State, the Federal Executive Council and other constituti­onal councils, which are chaired by the president and dealing with constituti­onal, political and socio- economic matters as may be referred to the presidency, supervisin­g, administra­tive tribunals, commission­s and panels of enquiry; coordinati­ng national security and public safety matters, national honours awards, prerogativ­e of mercy, protocol matters, channeling of papers and directives of the president and dealing with matters relating to conditions of service of political office holders, among others. The point cannot be overstated. Boss Mustapha has his full job cut out for him in a country paradoxica­lly suffering mass unemployme­nt and underemplo­yment.

Happily too he is eminently qualified for the enormous responsibi­lities. With remarkable profession­al qualificat­ions and experience­s ( a barrister of law, former state member of the Interim Management Committee (IMC) of the defunct Petroleum (Special) Trust Fund (PTF), and non-state activist of Nigerian Bar Associatio­n ( NBA), African Bar Associatio­n (ABA), Commonweal­th Lawyers Associatio­n, Internatio­nal Bar Associatio­n (IBA), Human Rights Institute ( HRI) and above all, rich experience­s in partisan politics, (from the defunct Social Democratic Party ( SDP), defunct Action Congress of Nigeria ( ACN), to the present ruling All Progressiv­es Congress ( APC), Nigeria might be getting, for once, an unapologet­ically tested partisan in a clearly open ended political office.

I salute the newly appointed SGF for acknowledg­ing that the Muhammadu Buhari administra­tion needs “an emergency accelerati­on” for the nation to get out of its present situation. For so long the president and his vice, Yemi Osibanjo had been “lone rangers” on the

Leaders & Company Limited . tripod mantra of corruption, economy and insecurity with less compliment­ary official voices on articulate­d policy thrusts on critical policy issues. Nigeria now has a timely activist SFG in Mustapha who must make a difference from the past indifferen­ce and (as we just discovered) misplaced indulgence of rent seeking and self- help as well as influence peddling of some officials employed to help the president. It is commendabl­e that the new SFG crossed the bridge of suspicion to for once have engaged the National Assembly with his unpreceden­ted visit last week, making the point that separation powers indeed means harmonized state responsibi­lities.

But his charity better start with critical labour market issues on the exclusive executive list. Take the current crisis of compensati­on and productivi­ty in the public sector for example: President Buhari has been commendabl­y agonizing over protracted unacceptab­le delayed and non- payment of salaries by some states government­s despite serial bailouts. As such, Mustapha must hit the ground running in getting to the root of this wage/ compensati­on scandal with all the stakeholde­rs, including organized labour with a timetable to clear the arrears. Nonpayment of salaries amounts to what I long described as economicid­e defined as criminal systematic deprivatio­n of means of livelihood for workers.

Nigeria has lost much scarce resources to wholesale looting and corruption. But the country is certainly losing more to low/ no productivi­ty due to criminal wage theft, wage diversions and attendant strikes with human hours losses. The new SFG must impress on the government to constitute labour market institutio­ns such as the tripartite Labour Advisory Council, National Productivi­ty Centre, Michael Imoudu Labour Institute, Industrial training Fund, Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund with eyes on labour market problems solving not political patronage. The Maina saga has been dramatised as a corruption scandal (which certainly it is). But it is also a manifestat­ion of the crisis of corporate governance of public policies with respect to public pensions.

Mustapha should use his good office to impress on the presidency to return to basics with respect to pension funds administra­tion. Never again should there be extra-presidenti­al committees on pension matters, the type that nurtured the likes of Maina. The presidency must strengthen the National Pension Commission (PenCom) by constituti­ng its board and demand for accountabi­lity in pension funds administra­tion. It is a scandal that up till now there is no substantiv­e confirmed director general for PenCom, following the sudden controvers­ial terminatio­n of the incomplete tenure of then incumbent. Many pension scavengers abound. Indeed some pension predators still lurk around the corners using the institutio­ns of state to undermine the nascent, commendabl­e contributo­ry pension scheme. Only a strengthen­ed independen­t PenCom can prevent and apprehend the likes of Maina.

Mustapha’s emergency accelerati­on must also restore the dignity of labour as envisaged by the 1999 Constituti­on. The point cannot be overstated that the dramatised “competence test” for workers and teachers particular­ly in the public schools in some states of the federation is a gross violation of workers’ dignity. State governors must as a matter of right dignify their respective workforce through capacity building, understand­ing and sympathy as demanded by the principles of Decent Work by Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on ( ILO). We should insist on adequate skills and competence without violating the constituti­onally guarantees guaranteed basic human and workers’ rights.

Many states governors observed the constituti­on more in the breach than compliance with respect to non-payment and delayed payments of miserable pay. Governors must also know that they are not just employers but enforcers of labour laws as they apply to both private and public employers. It is unacceptab­le and counter productive dramatisin­g and criminaliz­ing workers’ skill gap when what was required was skills upgrading and skills upliftment. Section 34 (1) of 1999 Constituti­on holds that every individual including working man and women are entitled to respect for the dignity of his/ her person.

Exhibiting so- called failures of teachers or any worker during competence test violates their rights to privacy and dignity. It is debatable if any of the states governors can truly pass the competence/governance tests by Nigerians with their crude approach to reforms, which is provoking more protests and acrimony than the desired changes. Nigeria risks perpetual underdevel­opment if it refuses to treat its workforce better through training and training, better pay, work schedule and enforced discipline. Nations, which hold labour as the most valued factor of production such as China and India are fast developing, while Nigeria which degrades labour lags behind.

Together with the Minister of Labour, the SFG must impress on the president to inaugurate the new minimum wage negotiatio­ns committee. Nigeria’s Economic recovery must be wage led so as to stimulate the economy towards productive spending by enhanced pay for workers, which must go hand in hand with improvemen­t in productivi­ty. Mustapha’s commendabl­e simplicity must be complement­ed with a sense of urgency. Nigeria needs a simple accessible activist SFG such as Chief U. J. Ekaette the 14th SFG, who commendabl­y assisted former President Olusegun Obasanjo to positively manage the labour market issues for economic growth and national developmen­t.

Mustapha’s emergency accelerati­on must also restore the dignity of labour as envisaged by the 1999 Constituti­on. The point cannot be overstated that the dramatised “competence test” for workers and teachers particular­ly in the public schools in some states of the federation is a gross violation of workers’ dignity

 ??  ?? Mustapha
Mustapha
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria