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Umeagbalasi |
By
Emeka Umeagbalasi
The centrality of the argument for or against Regionalism
in Nigeria lies in within the confines of National
Question. The question as whether the States will continue to be
retained or be replaced with Regionalism or change or retention of present
revenue formulae, alone, is incapable of arresting and addressing holistically
the age-long disunity and socio-economic backwardness of Nigeria. Therefore,
the arguments of the two schools are out-rightly dismissive and fire-brigade
approach because economic status, alone, being cited by the two schools as sole
reason necessitating clamour for return to Regionalism or otherwise;
is grossly an insignificant ground to alter the existence of “statism” in
Nigeria or creation of new regionalism in the country. That is to say
that clamours for abolition of States and creation of Regionalism for sole
purpose of addressing the economic melt-down of the States, are too parochial,
narrow-minded and lazily premised. If “economic buoyancy” is a fundamental
reason for the existence of sub-national entities or States, or even national
entities or countries; then poor countries like Benin Republic, Macedonia,
Albania, Comoros Island, Djibouti, Laos, Nepal, Haiti, Fiji Island, etc would
have fizzled out long ago and got permanently disbanded out of existence.
The stark realities behind the present economic crises
in most, if not all the States are extensively self-inflicted and self-invited.
There is gross corporate laziness on the part of most, if not all the chief
executives of the affected States. Flamboyancy, over-sized government or
cabinet composition, wasteful spending, parochialism, primitive lust for
property acquisition and lifestyles, greed and graft are also responsible at
large scale. To these States chief executives and their conspiratorial State
lawmakers and their principal leaderships, governance is no longer a call to
serve but an opportunity to loot, plunder and run governance as business
enterprises or private companies.
Take the issue of borrowing, for instance, why must
Nigeria’s rich and middle rich States go borrowing and for what reasons or
purposes? Is borrowing a must? Typical example is Lagos State, which is the
richest State or sub-national entity in Nigeria in terms of non-federal
allocations or IGR and annual cumulative acruals; yet the State is the most
indebted State in Nigeria. Lagos is one of the smallest land-massed States in
Nigeria, measuring about 4,211 square kilometres; yet the most
infrastructurally developed in Nigeria. The State is also the most urbanized in
the country having witnessed infrastructural development as far back as over 150
years ago or 1860s. The State is still heavily indebted and the most indebted
State in the country till date; despite being a N300billion or $1.5billion
annual economy. In 2015, alone, the Federal Board of Statistics reported that
out of N13.1trillion or $65billion borrowed by the 36 States and the FCT from
the commercial banks in 2015, Lagos State borrowed over N1trillion or
$5billion. The question is: Is Lagos State supposed to borrow? Will the State
crash if it does not borrow? Did Anambra State under Peter Obi crash for
refusing to borrow? How come Anambra State under Obi left tens of billions of
naira in cash and investments without borrowing and with appreciable
infrastructural turn-around in the State? What is the size of Lagos State
monthly wage bills? What is supposed to its monthly wage bills? What is the
percentage of infrastructural challenge in Lagos State particularly virgin or
new infrastructures? What will it take Lagos State to run its supposedly
maintenance governance?
The same problems above are also found in other
buoyant States like FCT, Ogun, Kano, Delta, Bayelsa, Akwa Ibom and Rivers
States; a situation whereby richer States are more heavily indebted locally and
internationally than the poorer States of the Northeast, Northwest and
North-central zones and their counterparts in Southeast and Southwest zones.
Their States’ chief executives in conspiracy with their States assemblies have
not milked their States dry, but also mortgaged them in serial indebtedness
with virtually no innovative ideas of how to turn their States around and cut
their coats according to their sizes. What do you make of a State Executive
Council, composed of 600 to over 1000 cabinet size with billions of naira spent
monthly in allowances and media image laundering? How on earth will a
democratic governor elected to serve his people and improve their
socio-economic lives turns himself into a reigning king or queen. A civilian
governor that brandishes a traditional elephant tusk or horse tail with agbada
and is entertained by drummers in all his official governance outings, locally,
nationally and internationally; is nothing but “Festus Okotie Eboh of our
time”; and such a governor is not taken seriously in the scale of real
democratic governance. Also, owing to loopholes and deformities in
Sections 7 (parasitism of LGA system in the hands of States Executives &
Legislatures) and 162 (6) (State-LGA Joint account) of the 1999 Constitution,
80%-90% of statutory monthly LGA allocations are maliciously diverted by the
States and their Legislatures; yet they continuously complain of dearth of
funds. From the foregoing, it is elementarily clear that those clamouring for
Regionalism on sole account of addressing the States’ economic melt-down are
deceiving Nigerians and being economical with the truth.
However, Nigeria as a country is long overdue for a National
Question and its majoritarian answer. Absence of a National
Question has retarded and will continue to retard the national
development, unity and cohesion in Nigeria as a country. From military cabals
of northern oligarchs to Obasanjo’s civilian presidency nurse-maided by a cabal
of ex military generals; to the present “Tinubu/Miyatti Allah oligarchs”, this
long overdue National Question has been vehemently resisted by
the referenced above. But the more it is cabalistically resisted, the more its
immunity to such resistance stirs up unquenchably. In the world over, “rigid
sovereignty or absolute sovereignty” is steadily waning and it is being
out-fashioned by “citizens’ sovereignty or sovereignty as a responsibility”. We
can understand the primordialist and archaic stance of the titular head of the
“Tinubu/Miyatti Allah oligarchy”, Gen Muhammadu Buhari over his crude
opposition to the inevitability of a National Question.
It is on record that since he was ousted by his
co-coupists in 1985, he had spent all his post infantry military career in
crude animal husbandry and had not been opportune or availed himself an
opportunity to upgrade himself and come to terms with modern realities; thereby
making himself an arch exponent of war mongering and violent choice of words
such as “crush, jail, destroy,” etc. A National Question is a
must and inevitable in Nigeria, otherwise the country will continue to rigmarole
in absurdities. A National Question simply means a round table
gathering of all ethnic nationalities through their representatives by way of
proportionality or through the principle of equality; for the purpose of
congregation and aggregation of common views and interests of all nationalities
on how best to live together in peace and giant national development as a great
socio-cultural diverse country or union of regional autonomies; with such
congregated and aggregated agreements put to a general referendum of yes or no
universal adult suffrage.
Such a National Question will
critically and satisfactorily address the geo-political, geo-graphical,
geo-ethno-religious, geo-agrarian, geo-legislative, geo-judicial,
geo-securitization, geo-environmental, geo-demographic, geo-mechanization or
industrialization and geo-resources composition of the country. They
can be factored at the end into optional and agreeable political structure by
way of “confederacy” or “regionalism”, or “federacy” or “union or league
of autonomous States/Regions of Nigeria”; or better still, “independent
States of the former Federal Republic of Nigeria”.
“Doing everything to keep Nigeria together, even with
death”, is a presidential over-statement and akin to Mikhail Gorbachev’s
unheeded early warning signals’ statement in then Union of Soviet
Socialist Republic in the inevitable dying days of the Union; which eventually
died in 1991. When the time for a National Question reaches its
peak and its resistance continues, it can snowball into calamitous consequences
with unquenchable repercussions. That is to say answers to a National
Question have peaceful and violent outcomes, depending on the wisdom
and foresight or otherwise of the managers of the political territory with such
inevitable National Question.
Instances abound. The National Question of
Czechoslovakia was well and peacefully answered leading to its Velvet
Revolution of 29th of December 1989; which gave birth to Czech
and Slovak Republics. That of the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics was
answered under relatively peaceful atmosphere; leading to peaceful dissolution
of the Union and emergence of 15 distinct States of Armenia, Georgia,
Lithuania, Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Moldova, Ukraine, Belarus,
Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Uzbekistan, Estonia, Latvia and Tajikistan on 26th
of December 1991.
Conversely, the National Question of the
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was answered violently (violent
conflict) leading to violent breakup of the country between 1991 and 1992,
leading to emergence of seven violent independent States of Bosnia &
Herzegovina, Croatia, Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia and Slovenia.
(Umeagbalasi
is Board Chairman, International Society
for Civil Liberties & the Rule of Law (Intersociety) & Leader,
Southeast Based Coalition of Human Rights Organizations (SBCHROs))
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