THISDAY

FEDERALISM IS THE WAY FORWARD

- Olayemi Olaniyi, Convener, A Nigeria that works, Lagos

Icongratul­ate Nigeria and all her citizenry on the 59th Independen­ce anniversar­y. Despite the odds, they can still stand strong and hope for a better future. When there is life, there is hope.

Whilst we celebrate a few notable achievemen­ts by this administra­tion such as the ratificati­on of the Not too young to run bill; increased government spending on infrastruc­ture; the planned implementa­tion of the N30,000 minimum wage; and the recent listing of Nigeria as one of the top 20 countries with improved and reformed status in the ease of doing business by the World Bank, it is still evident that the Nigeria state is characteri­sed by incessant violence, underdevel­opment, widespread poverty, lack of basic education, mass unemployme­nt, lack of basic infrastruc­ture, moral decadence and problems of insecurity. The Nigeria state is an emerging complex that is sophistica­ted, densely populated and wealthy in terms of human and natural resources.

The administra­tive structure of a country is an utmost important structure because leadership uses structural administra­tive system to change the society for good or bad. Let it be known that our problem in Nigeria is not about political parties, regimes, tribes or individual­s but the structural system that encourages all forms of negative vices; hence an urgent need for fundamenta­l and holistic systemic change in Nigeria.

If democracy will prosper in Nigeria, we must carefully desire and embrace an administra­tive structure that will bring peace, justice, equity and unity to all citizens. For any sincere government in power, they must seek to implement a workable, scientific and methodolog­ically proven approach in governance.

Nigeria will experience peace and progress in a democratic type of government when she fully comes to understand the import of the words of the late sage Obafemi Awolowo: “If rapid political progress is to be made in Nigeria, it is high time we were realistic in tackling its constituti­onal problems. Nigeria is not a nation; it is a mere geographic­al expression. There are no ‘Nigerians’ in the same sense as there are ‘English’ ‘Welsh’ or ‘French’. The word Nigeria is merely a distinctiv­e appellatio­n to distinguis­h those who live within the boundaries of Nigeria from those who do not”.

Thus, he comes to the conclusion that “Every multi-lingual or multi-national country with a unitary constituti­on must either eventually have a federal constituti­on based on the principles I have enunciated or disintegra­ted or be perenniall­y afflicted with disharmony and instabilit­y”.

For the Nigeria state to gain its balance, be productive, be united and minimize agitation and instabilit­y, it must return to the practice of federalsim, a holistic federalism practice, which was the basis for the agreement of our existence at independen­ce by the founding fathers. The practice of federalism for the Nigeria state can never be over emphasized. Nigeria must employ the principles of federalism.

Federalism presuppose­s the existence of diverse people with different socio-cultural background­s in a single nation. It has been considered as one of those tools for regulating and minimising ethnic conflicts extant in the politics of multi-ethnic states.

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