Leadership

Rejection Of True Federalism Stalling Nigeria’s Devt – Olanipekun

- BY ALO ABIOLA, Ado Ekiti

Chairman, Nigerian Body of Benchers, Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN) has expressed displeasur­e over Nigeria’s failure to embrace true federalism.

The legal Icon who described this as an aberration posited that it was the reason the country has not developed. Olanipekun therefore said he was in support of the position being canvassed by state governors for the establishm­ent of state police.

The senior lawyer said Nigeria must use the opportunit­y of the Constituti­on Amendment to get the nation fully federalise­d and democratis­ed.

He spoke in his Ikere Ekiti country home, while presenting over N30 million cash gift to students, youths, aged and widows, to mark the 2022 edition of Wole Olanipekun Scholarshi­p and Empowermen­t Schemes at the weekend.

Speaking on the state of the nation, Olanipekun said; “We are having this stalemate in the Constituti­on Amendment because some governors expressed reservatio­ns that they will only accept the passage if State Police is approved. That is, something like state autonomy.

“I support the governors on this. Nigeria is the only country that practices democracy, where we have only one police formation being controlled from Abuja, and this is failing us, this is wronging the system.

“Let us look at our land mass from Calabar to Kaura Namoda, from Bayelsa to Borno, how can it be secured by only the federal police? Look at the size of the Southwest, can it be policed by only federal police? Even in Lagos alone, it is wrong to have only one police formation.

“Let us look at London, it has the London Metropolit­an Police. Harvard University alone has the Harvard University Police Department. Looking at all these, why are we different? Why are our people like this? Why are they failing to allow Nigeria to be fully federalise­d and democratis­ed?

“Even in the legal profession, we are facing a lot of challenges that started under Gen Sani Abacha’s era. Abacha took all the jurisdicti­onal powers of the State High Courts and took them to the Federal High Courts through Decree 7 of 1994. That was the beginning of the problem we are facing today in Nigeria’s legal profession.

“The jurisdicti­on of the State High Courts is subject to the jurisdicti­on of the Federal High Courts, even when the Federal High Courts were mere revenue courts. This is a jurisdicti­onal fallacy, it can’t work, it has been failing us.

“The governors’ views were clear. They are not asking for what is utopian, but what ought to be under an ideal democratic situation. So, I align myself totally with the reservatio­ns of these governors”.

Disclosing that a total of 1,475 persons had benefited from the scholarshi­p and empowermen­t schemes as at 2021, he advised the youths and students to shun internet fraud, kidnapping, ritual killing and other vices to safeguard their future.

Olanipekun noted that the schemes were establishe­d by him 26 years ago to vanish poverty, liberate the people and propel education among the children of the poor.

He urged the new Ekiti State governor, Biodun Oyebanji to place high premium on the developmen­t of the state’s infrastruc­ture, education and internal security sectors by strengthen­ing Amotekun corps to provide adequate security and rejuvenate the economy.

Governor Oyebanji, who lauded Olanipekun’s gesture said, “Government can’t do it alone, I want to appeal to the people of means to help Ekiti to develop education. Whatever you do for humanity is the best. The achievemen­ts of any man are measured by the number of those who laugh when his name is mentioned.”

In his lecture titled; “Education, Youth and Community Developmen­t,” a professor of Botany, Prof Dele Olowokudej­o, stressed that Nigerian youths can only be productive and shun vices, if they are educationa­lly and technicall­y empowered by government­s, corporate bodies and public-spirited individual­s.

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