The Guardian (Nigeria)

Falana knocks politician­s over Nigeria’s underdevel­opment

- By Ayoyinka Jegede

POVERTY, unemployme­nt, insecurity, impun ity, corruption and abuse of office due to the nature of the peripheral capitalist system operated by the ruling class have been descried as threat to the nation’s democracy 21 years after, by human rights lawyer, Mr. Femi Falana ( SAN).

The activist made this known in an interview with the Guardian while talking on 21 years of stable democracy in the country. Falana, who stressed that Nigeria has no democracy but had practised civil rule for 21 years, maintained that by denying young people access to education, the nation is battling with terrorism and banditry in the northeast and northwest respective­ly.

His words: “Having failed to address unemployme­nt, the entire country is threatened by armed robbery and kidnapping. And having failed to build ranches, herders are engaged in bloody clashes with farmers in several states. But the solutions provided are further dividing the masses. Instead of ensuring that people have children they can cater for and that every child is given compulsory education, state governors are currently deporting abandoned kids otherwise called almajiris to their states of origin. A number of people in southern Nigeria are opposed to the influx of the almajiris from the north. Meanwhile, they are comfortabl­e with area boys and militants equally abandoned by the ruling class.” He suggested that the way out is to allow the Nigerian people to be in control of their political destiny in line with the provisions of the fundamenta­l objectives and state policy enshrined in chapter two

Constituti­on

“In order to guarantee the security and welfare of the people, the State is mandated by section 16 of the same Constituti­on to harness the resources of the nation and control the economy in such a manner as to ensure the maximum welfare by ensuring that the material resources are distribute­d equitably and the commonweal­th shall not be concentrat­ed in the hands of a few people or a group.

“If these constituti­onal injunction­s are complied with, there will be peace and stability in the country. But over the years Northern and Southern members of the ruling class decided to concentrat­e the commonweal­th in the hands of a few Nigerians and foreigners. The way out is to redistribu­te the commonweal­th peacefully in compliance with the clear ideals and objectives set of the out in chapter two of the Constituti­on,” he said.

Talking on restructur­ing called by some well- meaning Nigerians, Falana said restructur­ing is not a magic wand for political stability in a nation erected on the platform of social injustice and inequality.

He said the debate for restructur­ing has been conducted in a manner that it has become a rationalis­ation for the underdevel­opment of the country, adding that dangerous impression has been created that without restructur­ing dilapidate­d roads, abandoned schools and comatose hospitals cannot be fixed and maintained to serve the people.

His words: “Restructur­ing or power devolution from the centre to the local members of the ruling class will further alienate the people from the governance of the country.

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