THISDAY

To Keep Nigeria One

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How time flies. When Major Abubakar Umar was appointed military governor of Kaduna state by Gen Ibrahim Babangida in 1985, he was just approachin­g his 36th birthday. He was fresh-faced and handsome, with the trademark well-arranged moustache — the trend at the time. Beyond his looks, Umar came across as a progressiv­e, one who cared about the ordinary people, one who viewed society with a pair of liberal eyes despite having royal blood. He voluntaril­y resigned from the army as a colonel in 1993 after being detained without trial for allegedly seeking to undo the June 12 annulment. Now 70, he is in a good place more than many of us to comment on national affairs.

To start with, Kaduna state is one of the most complex to govern in Nigeria because of the eternally bitter ethno-religious divide. As governor, Umar watched as age-long, pent-up ethno-religious sentiments exploded in Kafanchan town in March 1987. When the dust settled, there were 19 dead bodies on the ground. Hotels, vehicles, churches and mosques were set on fire as the riots spread to the neighbouri­ng cities of Kaduna, Katsina and Funtua. And 33 years after, the dead bodies are still piling up. We still don’t know when the burning and killing will end but we definitely know that the last one is not the last one. That is what unresolved resentment does to a society.

Umar, a Fulani Muslim from Birnin Kebbi, needed to carefully tip-toe through the mines as governor. If he acted one way, Christians would scream “bias”. If he acted another way, Muslims would shout “Judas”. It was not a pretty situation. At a time in Nigeria’s history, Kaduna represente­d nothing but killings, killings and killings. Everyone predicted that a religious war would start in Kaduna, engulf the entire north and tear Nigeria to pieces. But, as Umar once warned, if you win a religious war, “you cannot win religious peace. Since the killing started how many Christians have been converted to Islam? How many Muslims have been converted to Christiani­ty? It is an exercise in futility”.

In an open letter last week, Umar warned President Muhammadu Buhari on the dangers of lopsided appointmen­ts and took him on a historical excursion into how Nigeria’s delicate ethnic and religious balance has been managed in times past. He referred to the choice of the army chief in 1965 and how an Igbo officer, Gen JTU Aguiyi-Ironsi, was appointed on the basis of seniority even when some northerner­s were rooting for Gen Zakariya Maimalari, who was equally qualified. The Northern People’s Congress (NPC), led by Sir Ahmadu Bello with Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa as the prime minister, could have chosen Maimalari and damned the consequenc­e, Umar said.

In 1976, according to Umar, Gen TY Danjuma, a northern Christian, willingly gave up being second-in-command to Gen Olusegun Obasanjo, a southern Christian, for national harmony. Lt Col Shehu Musa Yar’Adua, a Fulani Muslim and Danjuma’s junior, had to be given double promotion and made second-in-command to balance the equation. Umar said two northern Christians, Chief Sunday Awoniyi and Dr Ishaya Audu, served as close aides to Ahmadu Bello. In fact, Audu was Bello’s personal physician. Umar warned Buhari that legacy is not just about the tangible, such as infrastruc­ture, but also the intangible — the lasting impression about his sense of equity and justice.

The immediate trigger for Umar’s letter was apparently the ongoing drama on the choice of the president of the Court of Appeal. Despite being nominated by the National Judicial Council (NJC), Justice Monica Dongban-Mensem, a northern Christian, has continued to occupy the position in an acting capacity as Buhari has not sent her name to the senate for confirmati­on. What we are hearing is that Justice Mohammed Lawal Garba, a Muslim from Kano state, is being preferred to Dongban-Mensem. Umar wrote: “If she is bypassed in favor of the next in line who happens to be another northern Muslim, that would be truly odd.”

Umar was commended or condemned, depending on the camp. The southern and middle belt “leaders” who have sentenced the Fulani and Muslims to hell fire suddenly started hailing Umar — forgetting that he is also a Fulani and a Muslim. Well, his view serves the purpose, so that’s fine. Let the same Umar come out tomorrow and state the obvious fact that Fulani herdsmen are also a big problem for northern farmers and he will be called names. That’s the way life goes. Most of those condemning Umar are, of course, Buhari’s supporters; how dare Umar accuse Buhari of lopsidedne­ss? Surely, they said, he’s always had personal scores to settle with the president!

Where do I stand on Umar’s letter? Let me make preliminar­y comments first before I go into the substantiv­e issue. Anybody who knows me very well or has followed my writings over the years will remember one line of argument I always make: that in any multiethni­c, multi-religious society, you can never achieve harmony and integratio­n when any part genuinely feels marginalis­ed or excluded. Those who developed the federal character principle are not idiots, no matter what they tell you on Twitter. The principle behind federal character, to my understand­ing, is to make sure Nigeria’s ethnic, regional and religious make-up is reflected in federal appointmen­ts.

However, there are those who argue against federal character on the ground that it promotes mediocrity. I have read comments that the principle was developed to favour northern Nigeria in federal appointmen­ts because they cannot compete on merit. I do not know if this was the basis for the developmen­t of the federal character principle in the first place, but it is absolute nonsense to say the north of today does not have qualified people.

There is no field of human endeavour that the north does not have capable people. It is very condescend­ing — and patently false — to suggest that a northerner can only get a job if he does not compete with a southerner.

Even when we look at the complaints about Buhari’s appointmen­ts, I have not seen anyone provide evidence that the northern appointees do not have the qualificat­ion and experience and are, thus, incompeten­t; at least on paper. The Justice Lawal that is being pushed to become the president of the Court of Appeal is as qualified as Justice Dongban-Mensem, so the question is not about the CV. The question is about what is right and what is fair. Why bypass the most senior judge, who is eminently qualified and who has been screened and recommende­d by the NJC, and pick someone else? That, to me, should be the question in this case — not the religion, not the ethnic origin.

Those who oppose federal character often tend to argue that it is the opposite of merit. Again, I disagree completely. There is no region, religion or ethnic group in Nigeria today that does not have competent and qualified people. I challenge anybody to name just one ethnic group or state that does not have competent engineers, accountant­s, lawyers, doctors, communicat­ion specialist­s, educationi­sts, quantity surveyors, architects, and such like. The troubling issue is: do we nominate our best even in the applicatio­n of federal character? It is untrue to suggest that all the competent people in Nigeria are from one region, or that one ethnic group has monopoly of merit.

Meanwhile, shortly after Umar’s letter was published, a list of Buhari’s appointees was circulated on social media to suggest that indeed, southerner­s have got more appointmen­t than northerner­s. In fact, the south-west has the lion’s share. When you look at the long list, though, it is populated by special assistants, senior special assistants and special advisers. Ministers are also there — but that is a constituti­onal requiremen­t that nobody can do anything about. However, I thought the general argument, even before Umar’s letter, was about heads of federal agencies. That is the list they should circulate to counter Umar, not the catalogue of special assistants.

In his THISDAY column on Thursday, Olusegun Adeniyi wrote and I quote: “While no president should be held hostage by those who maliciousl­y reify ethnic or religious prejudices or those who still bellyache five years after suffering an electoral defeat, the pursuit of equity in the distributi­on of opportunit­ies in a plural society offers not only emotional satisfacti­on and a psychologi­cal sense of belonging to all groups but aids national cohesion and developmen­t as well.” I align myself with his position. In the end, it is not as if distributi­ng appointmen­ts benefits the ordinary people, but there is a place for optics and emotional satisfacti­on in nation-building. This is a natural fact.

I eagerly await the office of the SGF to release the full list of agency heads to prove the critics wrong — or right — on the distributi­on of positions. There can never be peace in any society where some parts feel they don’t belong or they are only being tolerated. Resentment and bitterness build up this way. Umar knows the devastatin­g consequenc­es of pent-up ethnorelig­ious sentiments. He was governor of Kaduna state. He saw it all. Buhari is doing very well in infrastruc­tural developmen­t, no questions about that, but Nigeria is fractured and needs healing. Nigeria needs to be united. Buhari must start applying the balm today. Otherwise, the resentment will keep building up.

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