The Guardian (Nigeria)

Rotation of presidency central to Nigeria’s future

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SIR: Our Nigerian politician­s are preoccupie­d with selfish and regional interests at the expense of our collective good as a nation. Even when our elected politician­s have hardly provided a pointer to how they would justify their individual and collective mandates, their preoccupat­ions have been about what would come their ways in the distant future. Specifical­ly, their noises have been about where the presidency would be coming from in 2023. The status of the current presidency has yet to be determined by the Supreme Court.

Of course, any student of politics would know that ethnic groups are in perpetual conflict, rivalry or competitio­n with one another. Preoccupat­ion with the destinatio­n of the presidency in 2023 and beyond will always be informed by this understand­ing. There have been calls for the presidency to revert to the South in 2023 - a very legitimate call in every respect. However, any suggestion to the contrary cannot but provoke interventi­on from anyone with interest in the history and future of Nigeria.

That we have continued to have a relatively stable democratic practice from 1999 to date can be attributed to the fact that the presidency has been alternatin­g between the South and the North in the current dispensati­on, with two presidents coming from each of the regions. The relative cordial relationsh­ip between contempora­ry politician­s of the competing regions has been a distant call from the earlier eras, dominated by military politics, when the fear of regional hegemony had tended to pitch one region against the other. The major crises experience­d in the past, the Civil War of 19671970 inclusive, were products of perceived or real hegemony.

The zoning of the presidency between the North and the South, informal though it has been, accounts for the stability of contempora­ry Nigerian politics. Any attempt to jettison this arrangemen­t, as being suggested by Governor Nasir El-rufai of Kaduna State, will revert our nation to the pre-1999 politics of acrimoniou­s regional rela tionships. It will be an understate­ment to say that the very future of Nigeria depends on how fair the federating units believe the system is to them. -

In my honest view, the principle of rotational presidency should now be a subject of serious debate in our National Assembly. To the credit of Nigerians, the importance of this principle had been acknowledg­ed and upheld in past constituti­onal fora, the 2014 constituti­onal debate sponsored by the administra­tion of Goodluck Jonathan being the most recent in this respect.

Should the issue of rotational presidency be visited by the National Assembly, the suggestion from this end is that such an idea would deserve to be given a berth in the Constituti­on. The tenure of the President cannot be anything other than a single term not least because of the illogicali­ty of re-electing a president under such an arrangemen­t.

Moreover, a single-term presidency will reduce the natural impatience of politician­s with aspiration­s for upward mobility in politics - the type of impatience that may have informed the call by Governor Nasir El-rufai for zoning to be jettisoned.

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