The Guardian (Nigeria)

My ‘ unpopular’ propositio­ns ( 2)

- By Edwin Madunagu

AND it continued: “There is no objective conflict between an Efik worker and an Ibibio worker, between an Ogoja market woman and an Annang market woman, between an Oron peasant and an Ibibio peasant, or indeed between “night- soilmen” of different ethnic groups! But their self- appointed leaders say there are difference­s, and go further to mobilise them in defence of these false difference­s, whereas the only fundamenta­l social difference is that existing between the masses ( from all ethnic groups) and their exploiters.”

The relevant excerpts of the 1979 article ended: “We are not saying that there are no minority ethnic groups in Nigeria; neither are we saying that there is no ethnic- based oppression. What we are saying is that the bourgeoisi­e cannot lead the struggle for genuine ethnic equality precisely because their interests conflict with popular interests.” End of ex

cerpts.

Thus, the central position taken in my 1979 article on “national unity” and the “national question” in Nigeria was that the ruling class was not capable of resolving the issues on account of its class interest and class practices including its bitter intra- class struggle for primitive ( primary) capitalist accumulati­on. This position remained essentiall­y unchanged until I went into the Political Bureau in January 1986. Here we may recall that the 17- member body, in which I was mysterious­ly included was asked by General Babangida to organize and conduct public political debates across the nation and, on the basis of the outcome of this national debate, prescribe a new “social order” for the country.

It will also be recalled that the Bureau came out 15 months later with a prescripti­on of Socialism. My own “Minority Report” was also that Nigerians chose Socialism as a new Social Order. The difference between my “Minority Report” and the Main/ Majority Report was that mine was more categorica­l and included the introducti­on of Collective Presidency and reports on debates and crises within the Bureau itself, including how we arrived at the “Verdict” of Socialism. It was also very clear to all of us – Right, Left and Centre – that only the cases for the creation of Akwa Ibom State and Katsina State were unrefutabl­e. And the two states were created by General Babangida in September 1987, raising the number of states from 19 to 21. However, at a personal political level, the impact of the Bureau on me was that it made me go from mere ideologica­l criticism of the ruling class and its government­s to now include concrete demands and prescripti­ons on several issues in politics and governance. These concrete demands and prescripti­ons included those on the resolution of the “national question” and the question of “national unity.”

Let us now make a 31- year leap from my “Minority Report” on the National Political Debate of 1986/ 1987 to April 12, 2018 when my article “Restructur­ing: propositio­ns summarized” appeared in The Guardian and several other media. I shall reproduce a large part of the article because it embodies what is in the 31- year period. I request readers to follow the following excerpts from the April 2018 article:

“The aim here is to summarise my current position on the question of geopolitic­al restructur­ing of Nigeria. I say “current” because as far as I can remember, I started thinking seriously – and then debating and writing – about restructur­ing from 1986 as a member of the Political Bureau. Today, 32 years later, I am still thinking and writing on the subject. The present piece is implicitly a draft memo on this important political subject to the Nigerian Left.” What I consider my current aggregate position on restructur­ing of Nigeria is constitute­d by several propositio­ns articulate­d and refined over a fairly long period of time. For the purpose of this piece the propositio­ns can be grouped under the following five broad headings: the impossibil­ity of purely ethnic separation; redeployme­nt and redistribu­tion of national resources; levels of exercise of power and responsibi­lity; principles of triple balancing; and popular- democratic restructur­ing at a glance. The propositio­ns are not of the same status. Some of them are issues which the Nigerian Left should struggle to have inserted in the Constituti­on of Nigeria and others are those that the Left should insert in its programmes, manifestoe­s and occasional platforms. I shall now take the groups of propositio­ns one after the other.

“First cluster of propositio­ns: A little over 20 years ago, on December 3, 1997, when General Sani Abacha was still in power, I attended and contribute­d to a seminar organized in Calabar by the Cross River State Council of the Nigeria Union of Journalist­s ( NUJ). The seminar was one of NUJ’S contributi­ons to Abacha’s transition programme after the collapse of Babangida’s experiment. I was asked to speak on the topic, “The ethnicity syndrome: How it affects the developmen­t of Cross River State.” But I enlarged the topic to “The national question, the power blocs and popular- democratic transforma­tion of Nigeria,” explaining to the organisers that this would put the subject in a historical and national perspectiv­e.

“In the preamble to my contributi­on I said: “If a 100kg bag of beans and a 100kg bag of rice are mixed, it will be possible, with patience and perseveran­ce, for a school boy or school girl to separate the grains.” I then went on to say that it would be easier for that unfortunat­e young person to perform the feat than for any political authority or forces to separate Nigeria into pure ethnic components! Two years later, on November 4, 1999, my piece, Impossibil­ity of ( pure) ethnic separation appeared in my column in The Guardian. The article was essentiall­y a review of the late Chief Anthony Enahoro’s propositio­n on restructur­ing the federation. But simultaneo­usly the article appeared as a re- statement of my December 3, 1997 propositio­n.

“I am not saying that Nigeria cannot disintegra­te. Of course, the country can disintegra­te if it pushes itself or is allowed to be pushed beyond certain limits by those who have the means and the power. Nigeria can disintegra­te in a manner worse than that of the former Soviet Union, the former Yugoslavia, the former Czechoslov­akia, the Greater Ethiopia ( before Eritrea broke off), the Greater Somalia ( before the current catastroph­e), and Yemen, a bleeding country which has seen separation and unificatio­n several times. All I am saying is that if Nigeria disintegra­tes – as it can disintegra­te if the Nigerian Left does not step in – it will not be along ethnic lines. If Nigeria disintegra­tes the more powerful war juntas will simply carve up the country – with each component reproducin­g Nigeria, that is, recreating majorities and minorities, the dominating and the dominated.

“The second cluster of propositio­ns relates to class- to- class redeployme­nt and redistribu­tion of national resources or, simply, the restructur­ing of class appropriat­ions. By this I mean the massive movement of resources from Nigeria’s ruling class and its blocs and forces to the popular masses through people- oriented radical reforms in employment, wages, education, health, housing, transporta­tion, taxation and levies, etc. Class appropriat­ions, by the way, include not only the monies, properties and businesses recovered from “looters” but also proceeds of state and class robberies which may have been covered by obnoxious legalities. The class- toclass redeployme­nt is the sociologic­al and logical complement of horizontal, state- to- state distributi­on which - as it is now – is essentiall­y a distributi­on within the ruling class and its blocs and various segments.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria