Daily Trust Saturday

Abused Decree No. 34 and the demand for restructur­ing

- By Eric Teniola Eric Teniola, a former director at the Presidency, wrote from Lagos.

Sunday May 24th was the 54th Anniversar­y of the Promulgati­on of Decree number 34 by Major General Johnson Thomas Umanakwe Aguiyi Ironsi (3rd March 1924- 29th July 1966). Few people remembered. It was the decree that transferre­d all the autonomous power of the four regions then to the centre. The regions then were Northern Region, Eastern Region, Western Region and Mid-Western Region. Decree 34 came into force on 24th May, 1966. Under it Nigeria formally ceased to be a Federation and was renamed the ‘Republic of Nigeria’, the Federal Executive Council became the ‘National Military Government’, the Federal Executive Council simply became the ‘Executive Council’ and Lagos the ‘capital territory’. The Regions were formally abolished, but the Provinces (the next largest administra­tive division below the Regions) were grouped into ‘the Northern Group of Provinces’, the ‘Eastern Group of Provinces’, etc. These Groups correspond­ed exactly with the previous Regions and the four Military Governors continued in office administer­ing the same area as before. The Military Governors however lost the power to incur expenditur­e on their own responsibi­lity without prior consent. The federal and regional public services were unified into a single ‘National Public Service’. Control over the most senior posts was centralize­d. The power to appoint and dismiss ‘persons to hold or act in the office of permanent secretary to any department of government of the Republic or any other office of equivalent rank in the National Public Service’ was vested in the Supreme Military Council. The National Public Service Commission was to be consulted before any such appointmen­ts were made. The power to appoint, promote, dismiss and discipline in relation to all other administra­tive posts was vested in the National Public Service Commission. This power was delegated except for the most senior posts to Provincial Public Service Commission­s. The power to appoint the members of the Police Service Commission was vested in the Head of the National Military Government (under Decree No. 1 it had been in the Federal Executive Council).

There was this fear among Northern elites especially among those of them in the civil service at that time that a unitary system of government will lead to the domination of the Federal Public Service by the Easterners. The fear was grounded on the assumption among the Northern elites that under Decree No. 34, they will lose out and that the Easterners will exploit, dominate and control the entire public service. Ironically, the reverse is the case in today’s Nigeria.

Decree No. 34 was the albatross of General Ironsi. And that was one of the reasons why he was killed.

To further cement the mighty powers in the centre the military in 1978 and 1999 establishe­d those powers in the exclusive legislativ­e list in the constituti­on. Today no doubt those powers have been abused, hence the urgent demand for restructur­ing. If not for the obloquy or rather the scurrility of the mighty power in the centre under the guise of this is our turn syndrome, there would not have been a demand for restructur­ing.

If we talk about restructur­ing today, it was caused by decree 34 and its exploitati­on. Restructur­ing is a protest demand on the mighty power of the central government and its exploitati­on. Restructur­ing is a legitimate protest of the inequality that exists in today’s Nigeria. Every Head of State or President or even the Head of Interim Government that have headed the central government since 1966 have failed to return the power back to the regions. If not for decree 34 maybe and just maybe we could have been in the same shoes like Switzerlan­d, Belgium, Serbia or Netherland­s whose regions or groupings are sovereign. To add more to the mighty power of the central government, General Yakubu Gowon in 1970 promulgate­d decree No. 13 with the effect of shifting the bulk of the federally collected revenues to the Federal Government. Thus, the States got only 60 per cent instead of 100 per cent of export duty revenue, 50 per cent instead of 100 per cent of duty on motor fuel, and 50 per cent of exercise duty revenues. The balances went to the Federal Government, which also got 5 per cent of mining rents and royalties taken out of the 50 per cent that went to the States by derivation.

For the shares among the States, this Decree explicitly adopted a two-factor formula giving equal weight to the principles of population and equality of States. Whether the States were satisfied or not could not readily be identified in view of the command structure of the Military Government. In 1971 the same General Yakubu Gowon promulgate­d Decree No. 9 which gave total revenue to the offshore oil production to the central government. The present might of the Central Government has its root to Decree No. 34 of General Aguiyi Ironsi.

When General Ironsi promulgate­d the decree he also banned the eightytwo political parties that existed before the coup of January 16, 1966. The parties were NCNC, Action Group, Afenmai Peoples’ Congress, Awo National Brigade, Bornu Youth Movement, Calabar Emancipati­on League, Calabar, Ogoja, River State Movement, Common Peoples Party of Nigeria, Communist Party of Nigeria, Democratic Party of Nigeria, Dynamic Party, Eastern Nigeria Liberation Movement, Eastern Peoples’ Congress, Ghana-Nigerian Socialist Group, Habe Peoples’ Party, Ibadan Crusaders of Freedom, Ijumu Progressiv­e Union, Kalabari Peoples’ Congress, Kano Peoples’ Party, Kano State Movement, Lagos Citizens Rights Protection Council, Lagos and Colony Peoples’ Congress, Lagos Separate State Movement, League of Northern Yorubas, Mabolaje Party, Middle Belt Congress of Nigeria, Middle Belt Peoples’ Party, Mid-West Democratic Front, Mid-West Youth Associatio­n, Moslem Peoples’ Party, Movement for Colonial Freedom, Muslim United Party, National Convention of Nigeria Citizens, National Emancipati­on League, National Youth Council of Nigeria, National Youth Front, Niger Delta Congress, Niger Delta Volunteer Service, Nigerian Communist Party, Nigerian Council for Peace, Nigerian Labour Party, Nigerian Marxist Group in Germany (GDR), Nigerian National Alliance, Nigerian National Democratic Party, Nigerian National Youth Brigade, Nigerian Peoples’ Party- The New Nigeria, Nigerian Socialist Group, Nigerian Workers Liberation Movement, Nigerian Youth Congress, Northern Elements Freedom Organisati­ons, Northern Elements Progressiv­e Union, Northern Elements Women’s Associatio­n, Northern Opposition United Party, Northern Peoples’ Congress, Northern Peoples’ Congress Youth Associatio­n, Northern Progressiv­e Front, Northern United Party, Northern Youth Movement, Okpara Youth Brigade, Oshun United Party, Oyo United Party, Peoples’s Party, Peoples Progressiv­e Front, Republican Party, Rivers State Movement, Socialist Labour Party, Socialist Movement of Nigeria, Socialist Party of Nigeria, Socialist Workers and Farmers Party, Socialist Youths of Nigeria, Tarka Youth Pioneers, Tiv State Party, United Action Committee, United Middle Belt Congress, United National Independen­ce Party, United Progressiv­e Grand Alliance Youth Front, United Peoples’ Party, United Progressiv­e Grand Alliance, United Working Peoples’ Party of Nigeria, Zikist Movement and Zikist National Vanguard.

In the decree, General Ironsi also banned the following tribal and cultural associatio­ns. They were Bornu State Union, Egbe Atunlase Ibadan, Egbe Igbomina Parapo, Egbe Omo Oduduwa, Egbe Omo Olofin, Egbe Omo Yoruba, Egbe Yoruba Parapo, Ekiti Northern, Ibadan Parapo,Ibibio State Union, Ibo State Union or Ibo Union, Ibo Youth Congress, Ibo Youth League, Idoma Tribal Union, Igbira Tribal Union I and II, Ijaw Progressiv­e Union, Kajola Society, Lagos Aborigines Society, Oganiru Society, Okaa Society, Oshun Parapo, Otuedo, Oyo Parapo and Yoruba State Union.

When General Ironsi promulgate­d the decree, he had the backing of some key people. Thus Peter Pan (Peter Enahoro) produced a series of articles in the Daily Times exhorting General Ironsi to push forward without fear, ending with the call ‘to the battlement­s, my General’--- a rendezvous with death.

On May 26, 1967, the Military Governor of the then Eastern Region, LtColonel Odumegwu Ojukwu addressed the joint meeting of the advisory committee of Chiefs and Elders and the consultati­ve assembly of the Eastern Region in Enugu. He declared on that day “the ill-fated Decree No. 34 was promulgate­d after it had been discussed and approved by General Aguiyi-Ironsi’s Supreme Military Council which composed as follows: Lt-Col Hassan, Lt-Col Gowon, Lt-Col C. Odumegwu Ojukwu, Lt-Col G.T. Kurabo, Lt-Col F.A. Fajuyi, Commodore J. Wey, Brigadier B.O. Ogundipe, Lt-Col D. Ejoor, Alhaji Kam Salem, Mr. L.E. Edet and Major M. Johnson.”

In his observatio­n then, Mr S.K. Panter-Brick, a notable British Historian of the London School of Economics, wrote that “General Ironsi’s assurance that the constituti­onal review committee was hard at work and that the unificatio­n accomplish­ed by Decree No.34 in no way prejudiced its findings was, in the circumstan­ces, no assurance at all. It would be difficult to organize any expression of opinion while such ban remained in force. It was, however, the ‘unificatio­n decree’, and that part of it which related to the civil service, which caused most immediate concern. Northern civil servants had already shown their anxieties n this score two months earlier when Lt-Colonel Hassan Katsina, in Lagos for a meeting of the Supreme Military Council, was reported to have ‘condemned’ the policy of Northernis­ation’ in the making of appointmen­ts. On his return to Kaduna he was besieged with demands for an explanatio­n. It was feared that in a unified service Northerner­s would be at a disadvanta­ge. It was no consolatio­n that the Decree provided for the delegation of appointmen­ts and promotions, except the most senior, to Provincial Civil Service Commission­s. It was the senior officials who controlled the administra­tion. Moreover there was no assurance as to the qualificat­ions which were to be taken into considerat­ion when making appointmen­ts and promotions. If only formal educationa­l qualificat­ions were to be taken into considerat­ion, to the exclusion of experience, local knowledge, and character, then it was feared that the majority of the senior positions would be filled by the southerner­s, unversed in and unsympathe­tic to the ways of those they were administer­ing. These fears may have been exaggerate­d but they were real. They were accentuate­d by the knowledge that Mr. Nwokedi had made his report on the unificatio­n of the civil service to General Ironsi without having had it approved by the other members of the committee. This manner of proceeding was taken as a demonstrat­ion of the scant attention likely to be given to the claims of Northerner­s when it came to making appointmen­ts.” He went further to state that “Yet the fact that General Ironsi was caught in this kind of dilemma merely underlines the folly of centralizi­ng the administra­tion in advance of some agreement on the prior constituti­onal issues. This was compounded when he sought to overcome opposition by announcing his intention to stay in power for three years and at the same time prohibit all political activities. There was no lack of warning of the probable consequenc­es. Lt-Colonel Hassan Katsina, returning from the meeting of the Supreme Military Council immediatel­y preceding the promulgati­on of Decrees Nos. 33 and 34, remarked that the egg was about to break. It cracked and then finally broke, under the impact of two opposing forces: a Military Government set on imposing its own form of centralize­d command, at least as an interim measure, and an opposition movement, less clearly led openly asserted, but sustained by growing feats of a fait accompli.”

A few months before promulgati­ng Decree No 34, General Aguiyi Ironsi on February 21, 1966, addressed the press. On that day he declared “the public would like to know the kind of administra­tive reforms we intend to undertake and then we propose to establish in order to attain our objectives. As a first step, administra­tive reforms are essential in order to lay a solid foundation not only for the present but for the future as well. Here the Press should reflect the thinking of the people and provide a forum for public discussion and constructi­ve suggestion­s. The country needs a sort of nerve centre which will give the necessary direction and control in all major areas of national activities so that we will be in a position to plot a uniform pattern of developmen­t for the whole country. Matters which were formerly within the legislativ­e competence of the regions will need to be reviewed, so that issues of national importance could be centrally controlled and directed towards overall and uniform developmen­t in the economic and social field; effective liaison and co-ordination should be establishe­d between the Federal authority and its provincial counterpar­ts, if we are to avoid the pitfalls of the recent past and make a more significan­t impact both internally as well as externally. The works programme of the Supreme Military Council and the Federal Military Government will necessaril­y include the establishm­ent of certain essential organs which are indispensa­ble for accelerate­d developmen­t in some major and sensitive areas where proper planning has been neglected, haphazard or unco-ordinated. We are undertakin­g a review of commercial and industrial developmen­t, details of which will be announced shortly. Other equally important problems requiring early attention are: the formulatio­n of an education policy related to the needs of a developing country such as Nigeria, manpower training tailored to meet the demands of the country, unemployme­nt and its attendant social evils. The solution to the problems, you will admit, cannot be effected overnight. The new regime should be given time to tackle the heavy programme of work kit has been called upon to shoulder. We need maximum co-operation from all sections of the country and resources to the utmost in order lay a proper foundation for the present as well as for the future.

On the question of the political future of the country, the experience­s and mistakes of the previous government­s in the Federation have clearly indicated that far-reaching constituti­onal reforms are badly needed for peaceful and orderly progress towards the realizatio­n of our objectives. I have already touched on some of the major issues involved in my recent broadcast to the nation. It has become apparent to all Nigerians that rigid adherence to ‘regionalis­m’, was the bane of the last regime and one of the main factors which contribute­d to its downfall. No doubt, the country would welcome a clean break with the deficienci­es of the system of government to which the country has been subjected in the recent past. A solution suitable to our national needs must be found. The existing boundaries of government­al control will need to be re-adjusted to make for less cumbersome administra­tion. We are determined that constituti­onal changes, which are prerequisi­te to the reestablis­hment of parliament­ary system of government, will be undertaken with the consensus of various representa­tives of public opinion. Proposals for constituti­onal changes will involve careful and detailed analysis, so that the nation will eventually have a system of parliament­ary government best suited to the demands of a developing country in modern times. We expect that when the system of government acceptable to the people of Nigeria has been formulated, all elections to parliament will be by universal adult suffrage.”

According to the decree, the Federal Military Council shall comprise of Head of the Federal Military Government and Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, Chief of Staff, Supreme Headquarte­rs, Chief of staff, Nigerian Armed Forces, Head of the Nigerian Navy, Head of the Nigerian Air Force, Military Governor, Northern Provinces, Military Governor, Eastern Provinces, Military Governor, Western Provinces and Military Governor, Mid-Western Provinces. The Central Executive Council shall comprise of Head of the National Military Government and Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces (President), Chief of Staff, Supreme Headquarte­rs, Chief of Staff, Nigerian Army, Military Governor, Eastern Provinces, Military Governor, Western Provinces, Military Governor, Mid-Western Provinces, Military Governor, Northern Provinces, Administra­tor of the Capital Territory of Lagos, Head of the Nigerian Navy, Head of the Nigerian Air Force, Inspector General of Police and Deputy Inspector-General of Police.

The ghost of Decree No. 34 is still haunting us today. Whatever merits that influenced the promulgati­on of that decree, it has turn to demerits. The decree has been exploited and abused. Restructur­ing is inevitable.

 ??  ?? Late Maj Gen Aguiyi Ironsi
Late Maj Gen Aguiyi Ironsi

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