THISDAY

Federal Character Not Requiremen­t for Service Chiefs' Appointmen­t, Says FCC…

- Iyobosa Uwugiaren in Abuja

The acting Executive Chairman of the Federal Character Commission, Dr Shettima Bukar Abba, has said federal character principles were not required in the appointmen­t of service chiefs by the president, adding that security issues cannot necessaril­y be influenced by issues of federal character.

Bukar Abba who spoke yesterday in Abuja during a national stakeholde­rs’ seminar with the theme, ‘Prospectin­g and Monitoring Strategic Processes in Nationalis­ed Spread of Staff in MDAs, stated that Nigerians were not fair in their harsh criticism of President Muhammadu Buhari over his appointmen­t of service chiefs and other security chiefs.

“Security issues are not issues of federal character; they are issues of federal character at the recruitmen­t level. For example, if a Major General goes to war and dies and he is from Borno (State), does that mean a Major General from Borno State should replace him? These are security issues and they go through certain processes and promotion’’, the commission’s acting chairman stated.

‘’If you subject them to federal character at the top level, you are creating mediocrity in security issues. Nigerians are unfair criticisin­g the president on (security appointmen­ts). It is just like the justice (judicial system). To appoint a judge you don’t jump one particular level to another, unless you want to retire all of them.”

Bukar Abba confirmed that in recent time, there had been widespread unanswered national questions of inequaliti­es, perceived marginaliz­ation, lop sidedness in political appointmen­ts and fear of domination by one ethnic group over another and one state over another, calling for a national rebirth which necessitat­ed this kind of sensitizat­ion seminar.

He continued, “It was on this note that he stated that the Federal Character Commission in pursuant of its statutory mandate of observing and enforcing federal character principle, equity and fairness in recruitmen­ts, distributi­on of posts, socio-economic amenities and infrastruc­tural facilities deemed it necessary for all our critical stakeholde­rs to come together with a view to finding amicable solution that is in line with the constituti­onal provision as enshrined in section 14 (3) and (4)”.

Stating that the seminar was organised to sensitise government agencies across the federation on the need to adhere strictly to federal character principles, Bukar Abba said violation of the principles would attract criminal prosecutio­n.

He, however, expressed satisfacti­on with the adherence to the principles by the federal government, saying that from the commission’s records and personnel statistics received and analysed by the management Informatio­n Unit from January 2016 to 2018, the commission recorded an appreciabl­e adherence to the applicatio­n of the commission’s guidelines and formulae for political appointees and bureaucrat­ic positions by this administra­tion.

He added that all states were being represente­d in all forms of appointmen­t as demonstrat­ed by the distributi­on.

Also speaking at the seminar, the Chairman of Senate Committee on Federal Character for and Intergover­nmental Affairs, Senator Tijjani Kaura, canvassed the need to ensure justice in the country through the adherence to federal character principles.

Represente­d by Senator Suleiman Hunkuyi, Kaura, who doubled as the chairman of the occasion, called for strong sanctions against government agencies that violate the principles in the country

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