THISDAY

Make Restructur­ing Preconditi­on for Choice of Candidates, Anyaoku Tells Nigerians

Obasanjo recalls rejection by Adesanya before contesting presidency

- Segun James

Elder statesman and former Secretary-General of the Commonweal­th, Chief Emeka Anyaoku has urged the electorate to make restructur­ing a preconditi­on for voting for candidates in next year’s general election.

Anyaoku’s advocacy got the support of the President-General of the Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Chief Nnia Nwodo, who also called for a “detribalis­ed leadership”, and former military governor of the old Rivers State in the 1970s, General Zamani Lekwot.

Anyaoku was the guest speaker at a symposium on “Leadership and the Future of Nigeria”, held in Lagos yesterday in honour of the late leader of Afenifere and National Democratic Coalition (NADECO), Senator Abraham Adesanya, who died 10 years ago.

The chairman of the occasion was former Head of State, General Abdulsalam­i Abubakar, who said Adesanya’s “politics of principle” should inspire today’s politician­s.

Delivering his lecture, Anyaoku restated his call for Nigeria to be restructur­ed into eight federating units so as not to disintegra­te like the defunct Yugoslavia Rebublic.

Anyaoku warned that Nigeria would not achieve enduring political stability or realise its deserved potential with its present non-conducive “federal” constituti­on.

According to him, “I want to reiterate the view that I have been expressing since my return to Nigeria in 2000, namely, that based on the experience of other similarly pluralisti­c countries across the world, Nigeria will not achieve enduring political stability or realise its deserved developmen­t potential with its present non-conducive ‘federal’ constituti­on.”

He called on the executive and members of the National Assembly to heed the growing warning signs of potential national disaster by agreeing to adopt restructur­ed true federalism, which he said would provide the best basis for the realisatio­n of the Nigerian nation that everyone desires, and a stable, united and socio-economical­ly fast developing country with a correspond­ingly accountabl­e and citizen-empathetic leadership.

As the 2019 general election approaches, Anyaoku also urged all intending voters to regard a firm unambiguou­s and time-specific commitment to the restructur­ing of Nigeria’s present governance architectu­re as the pre-requisite for voting for any political party and its candidates.

He stated that restructur­ing Nigeria’s present governance architectu­re by returning to the provisions of its 1960 and 1963 constituti­onal arrangemen­ts would not only help the emergence of a leadership that would pave the way for a national rebirth but would also put the country on a more assured path to political stability and faster socio-economic developmen­t.

“Taking into account the historical and current developmen­ts, including especially the continuing outrageous killings in the North Central zone of the country, I am proposing a restructur­ing of Nigeria into a true federation of eight federating units comprising the existing six geo-political zones plus a restored old Mid-West region and a newly created Middle Belt federating unit.

“The present mostly nonviable 36 states, many of which can no longer pay the salaries of their workers, should be retained in the new federating units but as developmen­t zones to be administer­ed without their current costly executive and administra­tive institutio­ns,” he said.

According to him, it would be for each federating unit to decide if and when to create within it, additional developmen­t zone(s) in response to any genuine cry of marginalis­ation.

In addition to considerab­ly reducing the overall cost of recurrent expenditur­e, which he put at about 80 per cent of the national revenue, Anyaoku argued that the new bigger and more viable federating units, with their regional police forces, could better monitor and enforce the security of the citizens.

He stated that each federating unit could pursue at its own pace and on a more sustainabl­e basis its economic, education and health facilities developmen­t, and could more effectivel­y check corruption and hold administra­tions to greater accountabi­lity.

“Such restructur­ed governance architectu­re will facilitate overall national economic productivi­ty and bring about the necessary shift away from the present virtually unitary structure which encourages the 36 states and Federal Capital Territory (Abuja) to rely on a philosophy of ‘sharing the national cake’,” he added.

If adopted, dividing the nation into eight federating units would encourage the more viable federating units to focus on productivi­ty and internally generated revenue, Anyaoku noted.

Restructur­ed federalism, he said, would also rekindle among the citizenry a sense of nationalis­m and the spirit of unity in diversity.

“The more viable and fewer federating units will also discourage the ‘ do or die’ politics which in the competitio­n for the all-powerful centre exacerbate­s the divisive tendencies within the country; and the centre because of its reduced responsibi­lities and the consequent significan­tly reduced ‘national cake’ to share will become less attractive to our power-hungry politician­s,” Anyaoku noted.

He stated that it was the true federal governance arrangemen­t, which during the First Republic guaranteed such a balance of power between the centre and the regions that led Sir Ahmadu Bello to prefer remaining Premier of the Northern region and sending his lieutenant, Sir Tafawa Balewa, to the centre as prime minister.

The same, he said, also applied to Ahmadu Bello’s counterpar­ts in the Eastern and Western regions, Dr. Michael Okpara and Chief Obafemi Awolowo respective­ly, and later Chief Denis Osadebey in the Mid-West region.

He said they all gave meaningful leadership in their various regions, which according to Anyaoku, cumulative­ly enabled Nigeria to have veritable influence and standing in the internatio­nal arena during that period.

He also blamed Nigeria’s lack of progress on the military, observing that Nigeria’s political and economic progress began its retrogress­ion with the military interventi­on in the country’s governance in January 1966.

“For thirty-three years thereafter until May 1999, minus the relatively short period of the Second Republic (October 1979 to December 1983), the successive military regimes became responsibl­e for dismantlin­g the foundation­s of the country’s political stability and economic progress.

“First, they dismantled the country’s true federal structure which had been carefully negotiated and agreed as the basis for stability and progress by the nation’s founding fathers, and in its place introduced a series of constituti­onal arrangemen­ts that reflected the army command structure, thereby transformi­ng the central government to the equivalent of the supreme military commander whose orders must be obeyed by all the rank and file, in this case the federating units.

“Second, they replaced the negotiated and democratic process of creating new federating units, as was done when the new Mid-West region was created in August 1963, with the arbitrary creation of federating units by military fiat.

“Thirdly, they imported and sustained the culture of impunity which is a natural concomitan­t of rule by force. As has been amply demonstrat­ed, impunity not only vitiates the rule of law, it also facilitate­s corruption,” he said.

He, however, added that the retardatio­n of Nigeria’s progress should not be blamed solely on the military, saying that the civilians, some of whom had been involved in encouragin­g and supporting the various coups, and many of whom as politician­s whose brand of politics have promoted corruption and divisivene­ss in the polity, have their fair share of responsibi­lity for the current very worrying state of affairs in Nigeria.

He identified some of the challenges facing the country as: a totally enervating atmosphere of moral and ethical decadence; debilitati­ng rancorous politics that is partly exacerbate­d by lopsided federal appointmen­ts; increased divisivene­ss and lack of cohesion as the country slides deeper into ethno-religious and sectarian divisions; a limping weak mono-crop-economy in which values are hardly added; loss of the country’s influence and standing abroad; and a growing insecurity of life and property with sickening daily reports of killings of human beings.

Also speaking at the event, Second Republic senator, Prof. Banji Akintoye said the right steps must be taken urgently to save the country from disintegra­tion, warning that Nigeria might break if urgent steps are not taken to restructur­e the country.

“We need to do what is right to keep our country together. It is a miracle that Nigeria has not broken up. But if Nigeria does not take right steps urgently to restructur­e itself and return to true federalism, Nigeria may break up.

“The break up of the Soviet Union has shown that any country can break up. So, for us to make sure that Nigeria does not break up, the first thing we must do urgently is to sit down and discuss how to restructur­e the country.

“Some leaders have destroyed the country, so there is need to rebuild it as fast as possible,” he said.

In his contributi­on, Lekwot said Nigeria must be restructur­ed to set the country on the right path.

He also called for empowermen­t of the judiciary against political interferen­ce, adding that more courts should be establishe­d to ensure the quick dispensati­on of justice.

He said: “Those who are against restructur­ing should come out and table their fears and we will discuss them. If we don’t restructur­e Nigeria, the structure will collapse one day. We need to restructur­e and do what is right to set Nigeria on the right path.

“We must empower the judicial system against political interferen­ce. We must also empower the police and other security agencies, which are presently ill-equipped. I believe that restructur­ing will create room for community and state police.

“Some officehold­ers today enjoys impunity because nobody holds them accountabl­e. Something should be done to checkmate that,” he added.

In her address, former managing director of Concord Newspapers, Dr. Doyin Abiola, said it was time for Nigeria to start working towards real change in the country by ensuring that educated people are elected into leadership positions to steer the ship of the country.

She also called on women to be actively involved in the affairs of the country, adding that the input of women as home builders would contribute meaningful­ly to have a Nigeria that works.

Former President Olusegun Obasanjo, who also attended the event, narrated how he met the late Adesanya when he (Obasanjo) was about to contest for the presidency in 1999.

The former president said: “I did not know late Pa Adesanya in my early days or in his early days in politics. I came to know him when I was going into politics and for necessity, the paths of politician­s do cross.”

Obasanjo said after he had accepted to run for the office of president, he decided to consult and meet with political leaders all over the country.

“One of the leaders I had to meet was Pa Abraham Adesanya. The first time I met him, he received me warmly and that was the first time I met his daughter — Mrs. Dupe Adelaja — who became one of my ministers.

“When I met Pa Adesanya, he did not mince words at all and went straight to ask why I came, as I was not with the Afenifere and NADECO group.

“I told him that ‘as a politician and well-bred Yoruba boy, I have to pay homage and consult you’. Baba told me he would not support me.

“I told him it was my duty and responsibi­lity to inform him I was going into politics and we parted.

“As I went on with the consultati­ons, I met him a second time and the same thing happened. I told him I came to give him my progress report and he said again, ‘We will not support you,’ and I said alright.

“Again, he asked me why I was not in their group and I told him their group was alright but it was limited, and I believed that we should not be limited. He told me again that they would not support me.

“I visited him a third time; this was just before the election. I told him I came to give him an update and the third time Baba said, ‘We will not support you.’

“And of course, as the results of the election turned out, I was not supported by the Yorubas in the South-west for the 1999 election,” he recalled.

Obasanjo said, however, that he did not regret appointing the late Bola Ige and Dupe Adelaja, who were members of the Alliance for Democracy (AD), as ministers during his administra­tion.

“But then, Pa Adesanya did not know how his daughter, Dupe became a minister in my government because I did not consult him. On the two

occasions when I visited Baba, Dupe was the one who served drinks and refreshmen­ts.

“When after the election I decided that I was going to bring people from parties other than PDP, on my own I decided to take Bola Ige and Dupe Adelaja to represent AD in my government and Baba never talked to me about it and I never talked to him about it.

“Dupe played her role — dutiful and diligent minister — and I have no regret for taking Dupe and Bola Ige as ministers in the administra­tion that set up the present democratic dispensati­on,” he said.

Despite all their difference­s, Obasanjo said Adesanya deserved to be honoured.

“My prayer is that the legacy of Pa Adesanya will continue to influence the way things move in this country. People like him are not many; we need to create more Adesanyas,” he said.

In his remarks, he also commended the children and families of the late Adesanya for organising the event.

Other dignitarie­s at the event included former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar; Yetunde Onanuga, deputy governor of Ogun State; Gbenga Daniel, former governor of Ogun State; and Peter Obi, former governor of Anambra State.

Others were: former Lagos State governor, Chief Lateef Jakande, Chief Ayo Adebanjo and Mr. Jimi Agbaje , APC chieftain, Bisi Akande, KOWA Party chieftain, Remi Sonaiya, and PDP chieftain, Bode George, among others.

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