The Guardian (Nigeria)

Setting the agenda for electionee­ring

- By Alade Rotimi- John Rotimi- John, a lawyer and commentato­r on public affairs wrote vide lawgravita­s@ gmail. com

EVENAS the agenda for the impending 2023 elections appear tailor- made, circumstan­tially determined or pre- ordained, the required nimbleness of mind or the insightful peroration for sincerely declaiming the nation’s sorry plight has been curiously absent in the discourse of the pretenders to the crown of Pontifex regarding the 2023 elections. But the chances of the candidates for Nigeria’s most coveted political prize are inextricab­ly bound up in the Nigerian question. An unsatisfac­tory measure or none at all, would damn the chances not only of the candidates but the future of the country.

Only a self- intoxicate­d egoist would think of the presidency without trembling at the burdens and responsibi­lities attaching to it. From observable facts, some of the prominent aspirants yet are prepared to surrender themselves to be used as a stalking horse or a cudgel for knocking out other people’s chances. Their respective ambitions are egged on by an indulgent pre- arranged cheering crowd saying, for instance, that it would be wrong for their aspirants to step aside.

Their nomination­s have to ignore or be blind to the reasoned formulatio­n inherent in the zoning or rotational template that has hitherto ensured certainty and stability. These desperadoe­s fail to understand that to be an actual heir of this administra­tion would be to suffer a heavy handicap.

Going by the pervasive paralysis of governance in Nigeria particular­ly under this government, it is proper to scientific­ally locate the true reason for the emergence of the state of anomie and explore the panacea for its immediate terminatio­n. The candidates that are fitting or appropriat­e in our circumstan­ce would be those who contend for justice for all Nigerians, for right and reason; they will be those whose personal qualities have won the friendship, confidence and admiration of the people they touched; they must be those who have a groundling with the people’s plight. The issues that confront the Nigerian state require a proper understand­ing of and empathy with their thrusts.

An intellectu­al identifica­tion of the thought, feelings or state of being of the ordinary Nigerian is just one arm of the equation. The other is the ability to render oneself to be part even of the resolution of their unspoken manifestat­ions. Without equivocati­on, the Nigerian question revolves around the questionab­le nature of our un- classical federalism or the queer practice of a quaint version thereof.

Deriving therefrom are issues of derivation, fiscal federalism, resource control, state police, minerals, mining, corporate affairs regulation, etc. These are the real issues that ought to be the compass around which all debates, all contributi­ons, etc. should revolve.

Straightfo­rwardly, all candidates in this election must offer their considered dis- approval or their views on the propriety to continue with our curious understand­ing or inappropri­ate applicatio­n of the principles of federalism. The infusion or drafting of suggested new and interestin­g personalit­ies to participat­e in our public life, of persons of marked ability and a well- trained mind is hardly doubted as necessary. The resolve to frontally confront the Nigerian question with a view to providing solution to its convoluted manifestat­ions to the benefit of the people must be shared by all patriots and so the need to scout for suitable materials far and wide.

But there have been some ominous rumblings in certain quarters opposing the requiremen­t to play according to the acknowledg­ed rules of federalism. They have deplored the single- minded commitment of certain people in the sustained advocacy for the practice of true federalism. It must be conceded that much of the opposition to the practice of true federalism is from quarters that feel threatened or fear that their present inequitabl­e advantage will be taken away from them at the emergence of a just, objective and responsibl­e applicatio­n of the avowed principles of federalism. The foremost item regarding the agenda for the forthcomin­g elections should be the sincere advocacy and adoption of the practice of true federalism which itself is an integral part of a vaunted package of socio- political reforms otherwise referred to as restructur­ing.

A reasoned recourse to the practice of true federalism is sure to have an immediate or instantane­ous effect on a sorely distraught and utterly worried populace; even as a consequent­ial palpable relief is evident all over the polity as a matter of course. This magic moment is in the horizon if only requisite recognitio­n can be accorded the practice of a universall­y- acknowledg­ed model.

It will set off a rave of infective developmen­t all over the country. The current burgeoning wave of tributes and adulation regarding the preparatio­n for the 2023 elections is deceptive of the danger that awaits an un- restructur­ed Nigeria along the lines of the dictates of the principles of true federalism. It is merely positioned to lull the good people of Nigeria to sleep: so they may believe all is well. The first real surge of hope will come when Nigeria truthfully bears the name which she has pretended to be.

There is requiremen­t for an immediate end to the country’s unitary constituti­onal order which has been forcibly maintained by a section of the country in flagrant negation of the federal basis upon which Nigeria became a political union at independen­ce in 1960. Under the present perverse practice, the Nigerian state has fraudulent­ly appropriat­ed the respective sovereignt­ies of her composing entities.

Even as the diversitie­s of the various peoples of Nigeria dictated the adoption of a federal constituti­onal model at independen­ce, the federating units as Regions ( namely, Eastern, Western and Northern Regions) wisely adopted federalism as the basis of entering into the political union. The union has however been fractured as the military incursion into politics truncated the federal arrangemen­t and imposed on the polity, a unitary structure akin to the military command system. As the 1999 constituti­on is a wholesale adoption of its 1979 edition and as the powers of the federating units have been weakened or deprived of virility by a 68- item Federal Exclusive List that robs the federating units of all key economic assets and government­al powers; and also to the extent of the document’s derogation from the basic tenets of federalism. It is fatally flawed. There is a general consensus regarding its unworkabil­ity.

The present constituti­onal order has only been sustained by a regime of deceit, a divide- and- rule tactic, brute force and untold impunity. There is a general repudiatio­n of its thrusts and of its purpose or intendment. Thankfully, there is a new federating consensus against the prevailing unitary constituti­onal order. We are afforded ample relief, for instance, in the 2006 draft People’s Constituti­on meticulous­ly put together by PRONACO, the 2014 National Conference proceeding­s and the APC- inspired El- Rufai committee report on restructur­ing. The combined effect of these reports is the admonition that Nigeria requires to be re- negotiated. The self- evidently false claim that Nigeria is a federal republic is as fictive as it is untrue

The only way to forestall what truly is an imminent breakup of Nigeria is to immediatel­y convoke a meeting of accredited representa­tives of all the ethnic nationalit­ies comprised within the country to harmonize the seminal views or conclusion­s contained in the PRONACO document, the 2014 National Conference Resolution­s, and the El- Rufai Committee report on restructur­ing for producing a truly people’s document or for deciding the way forward for the country.

Aspirants as well as eventual candidates of the parties for the position of president must begin to see their assignment as onerous and not continue to remain ambivalent, insensitiv­e, irrelevant, utterly odious or detestable to the people and their well- heeled cause.

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