The Guardian (Nigeria)

Nigeria must restructur­e its governance system or continue to drift, Anyaoku warns

• Calls for brand new Constituti­on • Says ‘ our constituti­on in 1960s served us better’

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A SNigeria officially celebrates its ( May 29) Democracy Day on a new date ( June 12), former Secretary General of the Commonweal­th, has reiterated the need for new Constituti­on to address the structural problems associated with governance and security.

In this telephone interview with MARCEL MBAMALU, he calls for an overhaul of the current governance structure to reflect true federalism as was the case in the 1960s when the political economy fared much better than it currently does.

Considerin­g that there were long years of agitations before the Federal Government could agree to move the official celebratio­n of Nigeria’s Democracy Day from May 29 ( the day the military handed over power to a civilian government in 1999 after a16- year interregnu­m), what promise does this June 12 new date hold for the country’s progress?

I would say June 12 is a more meaningful date for Nigeria democracy. While I was in office, I received reports on the ( 1993) elections from highly respected observers that included George Robertson, who subsequent­ly became Secretary General of the NATO, that the elections have been generally free and fair. This was why in my meetings with former Head of State General Sani Abacha in January and May 1994, I discussed with him a way of handing over power to the man who won the ( 1993) elections ( MKO Abiola).

Chief Emeka Anyoku, What was General Abacha’s response at the time?

At the meeting in January, he told me he would consider what I was saying; and, in May, he told me that he had decided on a Constituen­t Assembly to discuss Nigeria’s constituti­on, which in effect, meant a rejection of inclusion of my proposal on handing over power to Abiola.

Looking back at those long years of agitations that culminated in the official recognitio­n of June 12 as Nigeria’s Democracy Day, how do you see things playing out, in terms of the country’s socio- political and economic governance structure?

I assume that you know my view, which I have expressed on many occasions, that Nigeria, if it is to face its serious current challenges effectivel­y, it has to restructur­e its governance system. I am strongly of the view that, in order to live more effectivel­y with the challenge of developmen­t, corruption and insecurity, we need to begin to build a truer nation of more viable federating units that would have responsibi­lity for addressing these issues.

How worried are you over the fact that Nigerian politician­s and political leaders are seemingly not ready to buy into this view?

I am aware of that but I haven’t changed my view on that, because my hope is that they will, at some point, realise the wisdom of restructur­ing the politics. Otherwise, we will continue drifting as we are doing at the moment.

Some Nigerians actually think that the country needs to have a new constituti­on for the country to begin to discuss restructur­ing. What is your opinion on having a new constituti­on?

Restructur­ing means a new Constituti­on, adopting a Constituti­on that would be truly people’s Constituti­on, and a Constituti­on that would aim to address these national challenges.

The call for a new Constituti­on has become a cry in a busy market? How do you begin to crystalize these ideas in such a cacophonic atmosphere of political suspicion and hate speech to convince Nigerians that they actually need a new Constituti­on?

If the Executive and the Legislatur­e buy into it, they would take steps to organise a Constituen­t Assembly that would be genuine representa­tives of different sections of this country and the Assembly will discuss and agree on the new Constituti­on.

Yet, some lawyers think that legislator­s are not supposed to be part of a constituti­on amendment or the process of creating a new Constituti­on. Do you agree with those who argue that the National Assembly members should not be part of this discussion for new Constituti­on?

I don’t think that the National Assembly, as it is presently constitute­d, can amend or create the Constituti­on that the country needs. But because it is the National Assembly, the process is that they adopt legislatio­n establishi­ng the real Constituen­t Assembly that will be responsibl­e for determinin­g the new Constituti­on. I do not see it having a proper role in determinin­g the new Constituti­on. Politician­s are busy with permutatio­ns for 2023 general elections, or so it seems. Do you think that this process could be activated before 2023 elections?

A new more proper Constituti­on would determine the electoral cycle. If we proceed to have 2023 elections without the new Constituti­on, you would just be repeating what exists at the moment. And everybody would agree that, at the moment, the country is not faring as well as it should be.

Does the outcome of the 2014 national conference present what could pass as a working document for some of these reforms you talk about?

I do not believe that the sort of Constituti­on that would meet the need of this country emerged from the 2014 conference. It did go some way but it did not create the constituti­on that would address Nigeria’s challenges.

What I am saying is the need to create a Constituti­on that would address Nigeria’s challenges. If you look back at constituti­ons of 1960 and 1962, Nigeria was faring a lot better than it is now. If we had continued with that Constituti­on, Nigeria, by now, would have been in a much developed and in a better state than we have now.

We need to return to a truer Federation, which it was at that time, because what we have now is more of a Federation in name than reality. We should return to a state which we began our Federation under which we fared a lot better than we are faring now.

What aspect of that documents from 2014 conference do you think fits into the idea of what should be done?

My idea of the truer Federation for Nigeria is based on more viable federating units. 2014 conference document did not produce more viable federating units.

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Anyaoku

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