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ISSUES IN RESTRUCTURING
CORPORATE
NIGERIA
By Sanusi Lamido Sanusi
Assistant General Manage
Credit Risk Management and Control Div.
United Bank for Africa PLC
57, Marina, Lagos
Being
a paper presented at the “National Conference on the 1999 Constitution”
jointly
organised by the Network for justice and the Vision Trust Foundation,
at the
Arewa House, Kaduna from 11th –12th September, 1999.
I.
Introduction : On
Restructuring The Superstructure
“Restructuring
the Federation” is a
term which has gained wide currency in the nation’s political
discourse, having
been popularised through its indiscriminate and lugubrious use by the
most
vocal sections of the Nigerian elite. Like all popular concepts, it has
hardly
ever been clearly defined and its nebulousness has been congenial to
the
slippery nature of its proponents. “Restructuring” has come to
represent, in
reality an omnibus word for all forms of adjustments, alterations and
cosmetic
manipulations aimed at changing the formula on the basis of which
economic
resources and political power are shared or distributed among the
Nigerian
elite. Each section traditionally defends the area of its comparative
advantage
at any given time, standing by the status quo when it serves its
purposes and
asking for “restructuring” when it does not.
Let
me illustrate these introductory
remarks by sharing with the audience a recent experience I had in
Lagos. It
will be recalled that before the elections which brought Obasanjo to
power, the
Alliance for Democracy and Afenifere had made strident calls for
“restructuring” the Nigerian Armed Forces. They were of course very
unclear
about what exactly was meant by “restructuring”. Initially, it sounded
like
they wanted regional armies. Subsequently, leaders of Afenifere denied
this and
insisted they wanted regional commands. Reminded that the nation had
commands
in Kaduna, Jos, Enugu, Ibadan and Lagos, they said the commands should
be
manned and headed by “indigenes” while denying that this was the same
as a call
for a regional army.
Now,
a day after Gen. Obasanjo
announced his top military appointments I was at a small get-together
in Lagos.
As I sat there quietly listening to groups conversing, my attention
came to and
settled on a particularly excited Yoruba friend who was briefing his
audience
on the military postings which he said amounted to a “complete
restructuring of
the Armed Forces. Kosi Aausa kpata kpata.” In this friend’s view,
Obasanjo had
restructured the Armed Forces by not appointing “Aausa” to the top
commands. In
actual fact Obasanjo has restructured nothing. He has merely
reallocated
offices (and the spoils of those offices like contracts and licences)
to his
own preferred sections of the elite. Those complaining now are sections
which
have now been eclipsed through what they see as prestidigitation.
I
recall this experience because it
is instructive and illuminating. It dramatises the reality that
restructuring
is primarily about providing a constitutional frame-work, a formula for
sharing
the spoils of power. It is about ensuring that the spoils of office do
not go
to Mohammed, Abubakar, Musa and Umar but to Mohammed, Obafemi,
Chukwuma, Ishaya
and Ekpeyong.
This
notwithstanding, it is a
subject that must be discussed. It is true that conferences cannot on
their own
ever solve the fundamental problems of nation-building and national
unity. It
is also true that those currently championing for a conference and some
paper
restructuring of the superstructure know this. But it is also true that
this
nation has the misfortune of having produced an elite whose selfishness
and
greed know no bounds. Unless they are able to agree on how to
accommodate each
other they are willing to tear this country apart and lead us into a
meaningless war.
But
there is a second, perhaps more
fundamental reason, for discussing the structure of the federation. It
is the
reality that the elite merely exploit or manipulate the secondary
contradictions in our polity. They neither created nor concocted them.
The
contradictions are in themselves a historical reality. We are all
Nigerians.
But we are also Fulbe, Yoruba, Igbo, Kanuri, Efik, etc. as well as
Muslims,
Christians, animists, etc. The historical process which brought
together these
heterogeneous groups was never destined to achieve a magical and
immediate
erosion of their histories and a total submersion of their individual
identities
into a common national milieu. Several facets of counterposing cultures
and
beliefs were always bound to be incompatible, if not irreconcilable.
Many of
the groups forming the new nation would jealously guard what they
considered to
be essential aspects of their primary identity. The task of
nation-building does not lie in ignoring these differences, as the
military
have tried to do. Unity is not necessarily synonymous with uniformity.
But it
also does not lie in a defeatist attitude of despair, or a return to a
nihilist
era of ethnic agendas and tribal warfare. It lies, instead, in an
intelligent
appreciation of the complexity of the problem, a capitalisation on
areas of
core concurrence, a sober reflection on areas of distinction and a
partial liberalisation
of constituent parts all within the context of a sincere and total
commitment
to our corporate existence as a unity.
When
we blame our elite for ethnic
chauvinism and religious intolerance, therefore, we blame them, not for
the
caducity, but for the endurance of these reactionary ideologies.
The
tragedy of Nigeria does not lie in its diversity, nor in its
population, nor in
its resources. Our tragedy lies in the lack of a truly nationalist and
visionary leadership, an elite that harnesses the diverse streams that
flow
into the melting pot called Nigeria. The loudest proponents of a
conference
today are those sections of the elite who are incapable of imagining a
nation
that is greater than their tribes, who take pride in being leaders of
their own
primary nationality, and who have long ago given up all hope of
acquiring the
positive attitudes of broad-mindedness and sincerity without which
broad-based
acceptance is impossible. I doubt that the present crop of leaders has
what it
takes to address these questions fully and honestly. Nevertheless, I
will try
to the best of my ability to share with you some of my views on
restructuring
the federation.
II.
Restructuring the Federation: A
historical perspective.
The
term "restructuring"
presupposes the existence of a "structure", which we can reasonably
understand to mean a set format defining the corporate entity in terms
of two
principal elements:
1)
the delineation of its individual
parts and 2) the nature and limits of their interconnectivity.
Most
of the discussion on
"restructuring” has focussed on the second of these elements, and even
then in an oblique and reactionary manner. In the first Republic there
clearly
were divergent views among leaders of the various regions on precisely
how the different
power-centres in the country were to be positioned or balanced. It
seems, in
the main, that northern politicians preferred very strong regional
capitals and
a relatively weak centre, a view that is consistent with what is
currently
bandied around as "loose Federation". To indicate this, the Northern
Premier, Sir Ahmadu Bello, having won national elections, chose to
remain in
Kaduna as Premier while letting his deputy head the Federal Government
as Prime
Minister. Ahmadu Bello and his NPC were then labelled "feudalists"
and "reactionaries" whose nationalist and patriotic credentials were
questionable.
Southern
politicians, on the other
hand, (who were considered" progressive") were in the main, in
support of a strong Federal Centre and faster national integration.
Chief
Awolowo and Dr Azikiwe both left the regions for Lagos, allowing more
junior
officers in their respective parties' hierarchies to run regional
affairs as
premiers in Ibadan and Enugu. They thus indicated the direction in
which they felt
power should gravitate: to the centre.
Contemporary
wisdom now tends to
suggest that this difference in position had nothing to do with Ahmadu
Bello
being "reactionary" or Chief Awolowo and Dr Azikiwe being
"progressive". Otherwise we should be constrained to label the
Alliance for Democracy which is now canvassing for the same position
held by
Sardauna as a reactionary and retrogressive element in Nigerian
politics, a
label that will most certainly be met with an attitude of complete
repudiation
and considered a slanderous affront to the country's "most progressive
nationality". It reflected, it is now said, the perception of
leaders on where the advantages lay for the elite of their respective
regions
in the political equation.
The
north was the largest region, in
terms of size, population and economic resources. Unfortunately it
lagged
behind in terms of infrastructure and, most important, qualified
manpower. The
interest of the Northern elite therefore lay in a closed region, which
afforded
the north the opportunity of deploying its resources to the rapid
development
of its own manpower, and infrastructure - in other words exploit its
areas of
strength for purposes of addressing its areas of weakness ( and thus
play
" catch-up".)
For
the South, on the other hand,
the converse was true. Rich in qualified personnel, the regional set-up
was a
constraining factor for the elite. The Igbos in particular ( and to a
much
greater extent than the Yoruba) had neither the natural economic
resources to
exploit nor the history of political and social organization which
tends to
blunt the edges of poverty and create a form of social contract between
the
individual and the society that facilitates provision for the welfare
of the
deprived.
It
is, therefore, not surprising
that the Igbo were the prime movers of the first successful military
mutiny
which eliminated the political leaders and senior officers of the North
and
West while letting-off those of the East. It is also not surprising
that the
transformation of the polity from a Federation to a Unitary State was
the
handiwork of an Igbo leader, Gen. Ironsi by military decree (Decree No
34 of
May, 1966). These developments were viewed with fear and suspicion by
the North
as an attempt by a predatory Southern elite to gain control of all
aspects of
national life and thus marginalise the Northern elite. Decree No.34 and
a
leaked document called Cabinet Paper No.10, represented the
articulation of
this attempt at "restructuring" the Federation in a manner unacceptable
to the North.
The
consequences of these policies
which were seen as part of the effort to complete what had been started
by
Operation Damisa on 15th January, 1966 by implementing, at later
stages,
Operation Kura, Operation Zaki and Operation Giwa which would allegedly
culminate in the murder of northern emirs and top civil servants led to
the
pre-emptive counter-coup of 29th July, 1966 and the civil war. The rest
is now
history. The point, however, is that Ironsi's political programme, as
far as
the structure of the Federation was concerned, seems to have met with
the
approval of the political leadership of the South. For this reason, the
South
supported the military and saw in the government an opportunity for
progress.
The north, on the other hand, led the protests against military
government
insisting that the government was illegal and that a referendum was
required
before the Unitary system could claim legitimacy. Riots occurred
in Kano,
Kaduna, Zaria, Katsina, Jos, and Bukuru. This point becomes clear to
the
student of history on going through Peter Pan's column in the Daily
Times of 26
April, 1966. The editorial stated that in the South, most people
regarded army rule as
the
beginning of a brighter future. In the North, however, political
thinking had
not faded and there was an undercurrent of dissatisfaction.
Many
northerners would like to claim
that this was evidence of the democratic credentials of northern
politicians.
Unfortunately, this is not so. In 1966, Northern society stood for
democracy, organized
riots and fought against a military dictatorship it did not control and
which
seemed to encroach on the privileges of its elite. This elite,
(including
Emirs), was in the vanguard of protests against the abolition of
regions and
the “restructuring” of the Federation in the manner pursued by Ironsi.
Thirty
years later, by 1996, the
Southern elite became the vanguard for a democratic society, rioting
and
demanding for a restructured federation, for a return to the first
Republic and
that mythical epoch where the regions developed in what is now called
"healthy rivalry". All of this against a Military Dictatorship
seemingly dominated by the North. Meanwhile, the northern
political class
was the main accomplice of these latter day dictators.
In
1966, the security services
ransacked and searched the houses of prominent northern
politicians-among them
Inuwa Wada and Ibrahim Musa Gashash (NPC) and Aminu Kano and Abubakar
Zukogi
(NEPU). These were political opponents who had found a common
denominator in
their "northernness" when faced with a strong Federal Government
dominated by non-northerners. We may consider these leaders of NADECO
of 1966. In
much the
same way, the radical and reactionary wings of the Yoruba political
class have
recently managed to find common ground under the tribal umbrella of
Afenifere
when faced by a northern-dominated military government.
The
point, therefore, made by
conventional wisdom is that neither northerners nor southerners have a
monopoly
of love for democracy or progress and the call for "restructuring" is
usually a clarion call raised by the section of the elite which feels
disadvantaged in the status quo. The elite in different parts of the
country,
like chameleons, change their colour and their ideology when it suits
them.
It is
my considered view, however,
that conventional wisdom misses the point. We may conclude from the
above
analysis that the Nigerian political elite in the main, lacks
consistency and
that no section can claim to have monopoly of principles. The recent
political
acrobatics of the AD, and their seeming mollification once Bola Ige and
the two
First Daughters (Miss Awolowo and Miss Adesanya) landed plum jobs is
sufficient
evidence of this. But this inconsistency must not be confused
with the
particular views held at various times in themselves.
The
truth is that irrespective of
the motives which drove Chief Awolowo and Dr. Azikiwe to hold strong
nationalist views, their position was indeed progressive. Similarly,
irrespective of the motives that drove Ahmadu Bello and the NPC to
emphasize
the differences between our peoples and resist the progress towards
integration, those views in as far as nation-building is concerned,
were
reactionary. The fact that Afenifere and AD are today championing the
views of
the Sardauna should not lead us down the path of historical
revisionism. Ethnic
and Religious chauvinism, in all epochs, are reactionary doctrines.
Nationalism
and the quest for an egalitarian society are progressive doctrines. Zik
and Awo
were in this case, progressives. This is not to say that they were not
leaders
of their tribes. But they had a vision of a Nigeria that was greater
than their
regions. Unlike the Sardauna, neither Awo nor Zik could have even
contemplated
being a Premier rather than Prime Minister. Those championing for
restructuring
the Federation, restructuring the Armed Forces, tribalization of the
political
process, zoning of the presidency, etc, even if they claim to be Awo’s
successors, have not kept faith with his nationalist ideology, and are
therefore, ideological successors of the northern feudal establishment
whom
they so much detest. It is against this background that my
recommendations in
this paper are to be viewed. I do not believe that either Chief Awolowo
or Dr
Azikiwe ever wanted a Unitary State of the type started by Ironsi and
which we
seem to have had up to Obasanjo I and still have under Obasanjo II
(with the
President still talking about UPE and environmental sanitation).
What
they wanted was a federation,
but not quite the “loose” federation being canvassed today by Afenifere
and AD.
They both wanted retention of exclusive jurisdiction for states/regions
in
their areas of primary competence: Health, Agriculture and Social
Welfare, for
example. However, they knew that a strong Federal Government was
indispensable
to national unity and integration. True, it would also serve as a
vehicle
for the emergence of the South as the dominant political power. What we
need,
as a nation, is to develop this Federation of their dreams, but
stripped of the
desire by a section of the elite to dominate others.
But
to develop this argument step by
step, we should start at the beginning, with the “structure” of Nigeria
in the
First Republic, and which we all seem to be looking back to with
misguided
nostalgia, in spite of the tragic end of that structure.
III
The “ Loose” Federation: Between
Myth and Reality
In
the last section, I defined the
structure, for our purposes, in terms of two principal elements:
1.
The delineation of individual
parts and
2. The nature and limits of their interconnectivity.
We
can therefore say, that the
“structure” of Nigeria, in 1966 was as follows:
a) A
country made up of four
regions. One of them, the North, was a virtual monolith, bigger,
geographically, than the other three combined and larger in terms of
population, resources and income than any other region.
b) A
legal system which conferred
all residual legislative powers on the regions, subject only to the
paramountcy
to the Federal Law in case of any conflict of interest with regional
law.
Federal government had exclusive competence in a very restricted list
of
subjects of a fiscal or semi-technical nature. The only politically
sensitive
areas among these were Defence, Emergency Powers over
regions and
Foreign Relations. All other areas were either exclusively regional, or
on the
Concurrent list.
What
we propose to do is to
critically review the strengths and weaknesses of this “structure”, to
guide us
in our discussion of restructuring the Federation. To facilitate
analysis, it
is broken into one of “objective” and “subjective” variables. The first
deals
with material issues, removed from secondary contradictions. The second
deals
with the complex interplay of ethnic and religious identities.
Objective
Variables
First,
the Federating units.
1. We
note that one of the major
strengths of the structure of Nigeria in 1966 was that it was made up
of
economically viable and self-sufficient Federating units. It is indeed
true, as
later developments showed, that each unit could even be broken into
sub-units
and with each remaining viable. However, this process which, in my
opinion,
should have stopped with the creation of 12 states by Gowon, continued
in
a ridiculous fashion until we find ourselves today with 36 glorified
latifundia
called states and a Federal Capital Territory. Each state has a bloated
civil
service, a governor and his deputy, commissioners, state assembly,
Judiciary,
etc, such that its total revenue is insufficient for prompt payment of
salaries
and the states have to run to the Federal Government or to banks
for
assistance or loans.
As my
own bank’s Credit Risk
Manager, the moment a borrowing company is not doing the business it
was set up
to do, and needs an overdraft to pay salaries, I know that that company
is
bankrupt and it is time to appoint a receiver for its liquidation. I do
not know how long it will take for our politicians to face this
reality
and abolish many of these small-holdings and fiefs by reconsolidating
them into
viable entities. This is what I meant at the beginning of the last
section when
I said no one seems to be paying attention to the first component of
structure,
i.e. the Federating Units themselves. The sine qua non for any viable
“restructuring” is a viable “structure” which is , by definition,
impossible if
its constituent parts are not themselves viable.
2. A
second objective factor in the
structure of the First Republic which is, this time, a draw-back, was
the lack
of equity in the delineation of its constituent parts. The North was
too large
compared to the other regions and it was, in reality as well as
perception,
preponderant and overbearing. By his refusal to go down to Lagos and
his
decision to send Tafawa Balewa to be Prime Minister, the Federal
Government
itself seemed subject to dictation from Ahmadu Bello in Kaduna.
Northern
politicians staunchly deny that the Sardauna controlled Federal Policy
from his
Northern base. It is however, difficult to believe this fully,
especially in
view of certain instances of bias.
As an
example, Mid-Western Region
was carved out of both the Western and Eastern regions in 1965
ostensibly to
fulfill the desire of the minorities for self government and free them
from
marginalisation from the dominant Yoruba and Igbo. However, despite the
very
large area covered by the North and in spite of tensions and perennial
crises
led by the United Middle-Belt Congress and the Borno Youth Movement,
neither
the middle-belt nor old Bornu was able to obtain autonomy from
subjugation to
the old Sokoto Caliphate. The Tiv riots were brutally suppressed and
Sardauna,
officially a leader of
the whole North, carried on for all intents and purposes as the
inheritor of
the mantle of Uthman Danfodio with little regard for the sensitivities
of
citizens of those areas like Bornu and to a larger extent, the Middle
Belt
which were never conquered by his ancestors and their Fulani protegees.
The
West and East can therefore be forgiven for taking all arguments
proffered for
creation of the Mid-West with a pinch of salt given that the same
objective
conditions obtained in the North, and no similar action was taken.
A
second example is the crisis in
the Western region which created a fertile environment for the
Nzeogwu-led
intervention. Irrespective of what the facts of the case were, the
position, as
far as the Action Group was concerned, is that elections were being
consistently rigged in favour of allies of the dominant North. There
was also
the wide perception, perhaps unfounded, that the Federal Government was
unable
to take decisive actions and remedial steps because the Premier in
Kaduna had
not yet firmed up on a decision to dump his ally, Akintola, as a
sacrificial
lamb for bringing peace to the region.
The
lesson in all of this is that
the Federating Units must be such as not to give any one unit or group
of
units, dominance over others. It is my opinion that this condition can
only be
fulfilled with a strong Federal Government. In a “loose” Federation,
with a
weak centre, the various units forming a historical block will just as
soon
conglomerate into something similar to what obtained in 1966 and negate
the
very purpose of their delineation.
We
therefore take with us from the
discussion so far the following points:
1.
That the first point of departure
in restructuring Nigeria is the reconsolidation of its balkanized
constituent
parts into individual entities that are economically viable and
amenable to
smooth administration. Only such units would be able to carry out
functions
assigned to them.
2.
That these entities must be
balanced and none of them should be able to dominate or destabilize
others, or
make possible the unjust oppression of ethnic and religious minorities.
This
condition is best fulfilled where the monopoly of instruments of
repression is
in the hands of a broad-based and representative federal government.
This,
in turn, immediately leads to
a number of other issues. First, the creation of states based primarily
(or
solely)on the desire to achieve ethnic or religious homogeneity only
serves to
provide a platform for effective domination of ethnic and religious
minorities
by more populous groups. There is no doubt that, especially with large
groups,
some states will turn out to be ethnically or religiously homogeneous
e.g.
Yoruba in the south-west, Muslim in the far north, Igbo in the
south-east,
Christian in the south-south, e.t.c. However, this should not be the
primary
objective and the tendency of “like” states to come together as a group
perpetuates the sense that we are not one nation but a collection of
tribes. I
would strongly advise outlawing tribal and sectional groups with overt
political agendas such as Northern Elders' Forum, Afenifere and
Ohaneze. These
are dubious organizations that have only served to breed tension and
disharmony
in the country.
A
second issue that comes up is the
recent decision by the Federal government to support amendments to the
constitution aimed at allowing states set up their own police force. No
doubt
this reflects general dissatisfaction with a corrupt and incompetent
Federal
Force. The decision is however precipitate. Historical ex perience with
the
N.A. police in the north for instance, was that the police was a mere
extension
of the palace, often the instrument for harassing radical
elements. A
police force funded by a state, manned and controlled by
indigenes, can
never protect the interest of ethnic, religious and ideological
minorities.
What do we expect a Yoruba police force to do if Oodua Peoples’
Congress
area boys decide to attack the Hausa or Ijaw community? What will a
Hausa,
Muslim police force do if Kano urchins decide to attack
Christians?
It is
clear to me that the relations
between various ethnic and religious groups contributed, as much as (
if not
more than) objective defects to the collapse of the First
Republic. In
1999, the country is faced with the same generic problems although they
clearly
vary in concrete and specific historical form. These problems,
which the
nation has to address as an integral part of any restructuring are the
subject
of the next sub-section.
Subjective
Variables
The
former civilian governor of
Kaduna State, Alhaji Abdulkadir Balarabe Musa, in a recent Newspaper
interview,
declared that the Northern Bourgeoisie and the Yoruba Bourgeoisie were
Nigeria’s principal problem. Of the two, he said the Yoruba Bourgeoisie
are an
even greater problem because of their tribalism and selfishness.
I
will take this as my basis for my
analysis of subjective factors. Let us begin by stating that the
bane of
the Nigerian elite can be condensed into three elements:-
1.
Ethnic chauvinism and Religious
Intolerance;
2. Selfishness and the inordinate desire for dominating others, and
3. Short-sightedness.
As we
prepare for the possibility of
a national conference, I believe four issues will remain central to the
success
or otherwise of whatever Federal Structure comes up. I also agree with
Balarabe
Musa that the Northern bourgeoisie and the Yoruba bourgeoisie
hold the
key to these issues and the manner in which they are handled will to a
large
extent determine progress made towards our ideal structure. These
issues are:-
i.
The Sharia and religious
intolerance in the North;
ii. The Yoruba elite and area-boy politics;
iii. Igbo marginalisation and the responsible limits of retribution;
and
iv. The Niger-Delta and the need for justice.
i.
The Sharia and religious
intolerance in the North
The
Islamic faith has never accepted
the dichotomy between Religion and Politics. Political life for a
Muslim is
guided by Sharia and in all those aspects of law where an explicit
religious
injunction exists, a Muslim expects this to be held as valid above any
other
law. Fortunately, most of the areas of conflict between Islamic Law and
Secular
Law have to do with the law of personal states (including inheritance),
some
aspects of contract, and criminal law, especially as it pertains to
capital
punishment. If muslims wish to have these laws applied on them, and
promulgated
by their elected representatives, there is no reason why this should
pose a
problem. There is likely to be a problem however, with punishment for
certain
civil and criminal offences such as libel, theft and adultery if a
non-Muslim
is involved. My own feeling is that anyone living in a state should
acquaint
himself with the operative law in that State before committing a crime.
We are
all subject to that when we go to other countries. Indeed, the law we
have in
Nigeria is made for us and we are subject to it. This is one major area
that
needs to be talked about at any conference and this explains why the
Sharia
issue always comes up in constitutional conferences. To ask Muslims to
abandon
Sharia in the name of a Secular Nigeria is to give them an unjust
choice. The
matter is not one of being either Muslim or Nigerian when they can be
both
Muslim and Nigerian. The attempt to turn Nigeria into a Secular State
seeks the
erosion of Muslim identity and history. This will continue to be a
source of
conflict as Muslims will always resist it, with justification. Nigeria
is a
multi-religious state which should, however, ensure that no religion is
given
preference over others.
While
the insistence of Muslim North
on Sharia is thus understandable, it however, seems that all too often,
the
northern bourgeoisie ignores a number of key points. First, the Sharia
as far
as the government is concerned, is not just about the courts and
sanctions. It
is primarily about providing the people with the best material and
spiritual
conditions the resources of state can provide. It is about honestly
managing
their resources, about giving them services in education, health,
agriculture,
etc. It is all well to ban the sale of alcohol, but this does not take
the
place of, or have priority over, meeting the material needs of the
people. Our
elite use the Sharia debate to divert attention from their own
corruption,
nepotism, abuse of office and un-Islamic conduct.
The
second point, which the Muslim
elite ignores, is the dividing line between commitment to Sharia and
encroachment on the religious rights and dignity of others.
I
will give a few examples:-
Very
recently, the Katsina State
Government tried to pass Bills banning the sale of alcohol and the
operation of
whore-houses in the metropolis. As a consequence of this move (and, it
is said,
failure of the House to approve the Bill), irate Muslim youth, shouting
Allahu
Akbar decided to burn not just beer parlours, hotels and whorehouses,
but also
Christian churches.
Now,
the Qur’an (Hajj. (ch. 22): 40)
specifically forbids tearing down monasteries, churches, synagogues and
mosques. Yet the leaders of Muslims have not come out strongly enough
to
condemn this violation of the rights of Christians, nor considered the
implications
of Christians in turn burning mosques in retaliation. It is also worthy
of
note, that christian morality does not approve of alcoholism and
prostitution.
A
second example is the recent
furore over Obasanjo’s appointment of northern Christians into his
cabinet. I
have elsewhere made my views on this known although several people have
branded
me, and others like Col. Umar, anti-Islamic or anti-north for not
joining this
hypocritical farce
In
failing to rise above bigotry and
chauvinism, northern Muslims act against injunctions of their faith.
The Qur’an
expressly preaches freedom of religion [see, for example: Al-Baqarah
(ch.2):
256; Yunus (ch.10): 108; Hud (ch.11): 121-122; Kahf(ch18):29;
andAl-Ghashiyah (ch.88) :21-24]
It is
also pertinent for those who
criticize us to recall that Allah specifically instructed that trust
and
leadership should be given only to those worthy of them and to judge
between
men with justice (Al-Nisa (ch.4): 58). Also, if anyone believes that
false
witness should be given for or against a man simply because he is a
Muslim or
Non-Muslim, he should read [Al-Nisa (ch4): 135; also 105and Al-Ma’idah
((ch.5):
6]. Finally for those who object to our inviting good muslims and good
christians to come together and give the poor people of this country
the good
government preached by both faiths, please read [Al-Imran (ch3): 64]
which
provides a basis for coming together on common ground.
I do
not mean by this that only
Muslims show intolerance in the North. Muslims in certain areas have
been the
subject of Christian attacks, such as what happened in Zangon-Kataf and
Kafanchan. In the main, those attacks seem to have taken two major
forms. The
first, and this is common, reflects attacks instigated by Christian
leaders who
are looking for political and economic space in the North. Retired
Christian
generals, from Takum to Zangon-Kataf, who find themselves overshadowed
by more
junior, but Muslim, generals in the North, take out their frustration
by
financing and co-ordinating religious conflicts. One of them has
already been
convicted once.
The
second form they have taken is
one of a genuine protest, an expression of frustration with their
consignment
to the role of second-class northerners in their homeland, in spite of
everything they have given for the North. They have sacrificed their
sons in
the war against Biafra. They have organized and toppled coups to bring
and
sustain Northern Muslim generals to and in power. Yet, they are treated
with
disdain and derision, as we saw in the recent ministerial lists. The
violence
of northern Christians, therefore, while we condemn it, may be seen as
sometimes, being a reaction to the violence inflicted on them, like the
violence of the native in Frantz Fanon’s “ The Wretched of the Earth”.
In
the history of the world, it has
long been established that intolerance and religious bigotry stultify
the
development of society. One of the secrets of the greatness of Rome in
antiquity lies in the religious tolerance of the Barbarians and their
ability to
look for common grounds among their faiths.
In
the ‘History of the Decline and
Fall of the Roman Empire’, Edward Gibbon tells us:
“
Such was the mild spirit of antiquity, that the
nations were less attentive to the difference, than to the resemblance,
of
their religious worship. The Greek, the Roman, and the Barbarian,
as they
met before their respective altars, easily persuaded themselves
that
under various names, and with various ceremonies, they adored the
same
deities. The elegant mythology of Homer gave a beautiful, and
almost
regular form, to the polytheism of the ancient world” (Vol.
1:p.57)
Similarly, those who fail to recognise virtue and merit, and adopt
it
wherever it is found in the interest of the ambitions of their nation,
will never find progress.
Again,
Gibbon tells us in the DF:
“ The
narrow policy of preserving, without any foreign
mixture, the pure blood of the ancient citizens, had checked the
fortune,
and hastened the ruin, of Athens and Sparta. The aspiring genius
of Rome
sacrificed vanity to ambition, and deemed it more prudent, as
well as
honourable, to adopt virtue and merit for her own wheresoever
they were
found, among slaves or strangers, enemies or barbarians” (Vol.1:
p.61)
How
much lower can a people sink, when
they need lessons in culture and civilization from the history of
barbarians?
Muslims will recall that the freedom and tolerance of the Islamic State
was
what led to the glory and flourishing of the Caliphate in both the
early
Abbasid and Ottoman phases, while Rome declined with the intolerance
and
bigotry of the Catholic Church.
Indeed,
one of the acclaimed
attributes of the late Sardauna is that in spite of his very open
commitment to
and zeal for Islam, he did not show intolerance for other faiths or
disdain for
others simply because they did not share his faith. This has been
acknowledged
widely by northern Christians like Jolly Tanko Yusuf, Ishaya Audu, and
Sunday
Awoniyi. Present-day northern leaders, however, seem characterized by a
fake
commitment to their religions which only finds expression in
antagonising other
faiths. They sing the Sardauna’s praises but cannot live up to his
standards,
like the Greeks of Constantinople described by Gibbon in the following
words:
“
They held in their lifeless hands the riches of their
fathers, without inheriting the spirit which had created and
improved
that sacred patrimony: they read, they praised, they compiled,
but their
languid souls seemed alike incapable of thought and
action”.
(Vol III: P.420)
So much for our new-breed northern leaders, now to their opposite
numbers in
the South-West.
ii.
The Yoruba Factor and “Area-boy”
Politics.
My
views on the Yoruba political
leadership have been thoroughly articulated in some of my writings,
prime among
which was “ Afenifere: Syllabus of Errors” published by This Day (The
Sunday
Newspaper) on Sept 27, 1998. There was also an earlier publication in
the
weekly Trust entitled “ The Igbo, the Yoruba and History” (Aug.
21,
1998).
In
sum, the Yoruba political
leadership, as mentioned by Balarabe Musa, has shown itself over the
years to
be incapable of rising above narrow tribal interests and reciprocating
goodwill
from other sections of the country by treating other groups with
respect.
Practically every crisis in Nigeria since independence has its roots in
this
attitude.
The
Yoruba elite were the first, in
1962, to attempt a violent overthrow of an elected government in this
country.
In 1966, it was the violence in the West which provided an avenue for
the putsch
of 15th January. After Chief Awolowo lost to Shagari in 1983 elections,
it was
the discontent and bad publicity in the South-West which led to the
Buhari
intervention. When Buhari jailed UPN governors like Ige and Onabanjo,
the
South-Western press castigated that good government and provided the
right mood
for IBB to take over power. As soon as IBB cleared UPN governors of
charges
against them in a politically motivated retrial, he became the darling
of the
South-West. When IBB annulled the primaries in which Adamu Ciroma and
Shehu Yar
Adua emerged as presidential candidates in the NRC and SDP, he was
hailed by
the South-West. When the same man annulled the June 12, 1993 elections
in which
Abiola was the front-runner, the South-West now became defenders of
democracy.
When it seemed Sani Abacha was sympathetic to Abiola, the South-West
supported
his take-over. He was in fact invited by a prominent NADECO member to
take over
in a published letter shortly before the event. Even though Abiola had
won the elections
in the North, the North was blamed for its annulment. When Abdulsalam
Abubakar
started his transition, the Yoruba political leadership through NADECO
presented a memorandum on a Government of National Unity that showed
complete
disrespect for the intelligence and liberties of other Nigerians.
Subsequently,
they formed a tribal party which failed to meet minimum requirements
for
registration, but was registered all the same to avoid the violence
that was
bound to follow non-registration, given the area-boy mentality of
South-West
politicians. Having rejected an Obasanjo candidacy and challenged the
election
as a fraud in court, we now find a leading member of the AD in the
government,
a daughter of an Afenifere leader as Minister of State, and Awolowo’s
daughter
as Ambassador, all appointed by a man who won the election through
fraud.
Meanwhile, nothing has been negotiated for the children of Abiola, the
focus of
Yoruba political activity. In return for these favours, the AD solidly
voted
for Evan Enwerem as Senate President. This is a man who participated in
the
two-million-man March for Abacha’s self-succession. He also is reputed
to have
hosted a meeting of governors during IBB’s transition, demanding that
June 12
elections should never be de-annulled and threatening that the East
would go to
war if this was done. When Ibrahim Salisu Buhari was accused of
swearing to a
false affidavit, the Yoruba political elite correctly took up the
gauntlet for
his resignation. When an AD governor, Bola Tinubu, swears to a false
affidavit
that he attended an Ivy League University which he did not attend, we
hear
excuses.
For
so many years, the Yoruba have
inundated this country with stories of being marginalised and of a
civil
service dominated by northerners through quota system. The Federal
Character
Commission has recently released a report which shows that the
South-West
accounts for 27.8% of civil servants in the range GL08 to GL14 and a
full 29.5%
of GL 15 and above. One zone out of six zones controls a full 30% of
the civil
service leaving the other five zones to share the remaining 70%. We
find the
same story in the economy, in academia, in parastatals.
Yet
in spite of being so dominant,
the Yoruba complained and complained of marginalization. Of recent, in
recognition
of the trauma which hit the South-West after June 12, the rest of the
country
forced everyone out of the race to ensure that a South-Westerner
emerged, often
against the best advice of political activists. Instead of leading a
path of
reconciliation and strong appreciation, the Yoruba have embarked on
short-sighted triumphalism, threatening other “nationalities” that they
( who
after all lost the election) will protect Obasanjo ( who was forced on
them).
No less a person than Bola Ige has made such utterances. To further
show that
they were in charge, they led a cult into the Hausa area of Sagamu,
murdered a
Hausa woman and nothing happened. In the violence that followed, they
killed
several Hausa residents, with Yoruba leaders like Segun Osoba,
reminding
Nigerians of the need to respect the culture of their host
communities.
This would have continued were it not for the people of Kano who showed
that
they could also create their own Oro who would only be appeased through
the
shedding of innocent Yoruba blood.
I say
all this, to support Balarabe
Musa’s statement, that the greatest problem to nation-building in
Nigeria are
the Yoruba Bourgeoisie. I say this also to underscore my point that
until they
change this attitude, no conference can solve the problems of Nigeria.
We
cannot move forward if the leadership of one of the largest ethnic
groups
continues to operate, not like statesmen, but like common area boys.
iii.The
Igbo Factor and the
Reasonable Limits of Retribution.
The
Igbo people of Nigeria have made
a mark in the history of this nation. They led the first successful
military
coup which eliminated the Military and Political leaders of other
regions while
letting off Igbo leaders. Nwafor Orizu, then Senate President, in
consultation
with President Azikiwe, subverted the constitution and handed over
power to
Aguiyi-Ironsi. Subsequent developments, including attempts at
humiliating
other peoples, led to the counter-coup and later the civil war. The
Igbos
themselves must acknowledge that they have a large part of the blame
for
shattering the unity of this country.
Having
said that, this nation must
realise that Igbos have more than paid for their foolishness. They have
been
defeated in war, rendered paupers by monetary policy fiat, their
properties
declared abandoned and confiscated, kept out of strategic public sector
appointments and deprived of public services. The rest of the country
forced
them to remain in Nigeria and has
continued to deny them equity.
The
Northern Bourgeoisie and the
Yoruba Bourgeoisie have conspired to keep the Igbo out of the scheme of
things.
In the recent transition when the Igbo solidly supported the PDP in the
hope of
an Ekwueme presidency, the North and South-West treated this as a
Biafra
agenda. Every rule set for the primaries, every gentleman’s agreement
was set
aside to ensure that Obasanjo, not Ekwueme emerged as the candidate.
Things
went as far as getting the Federal Government to hurriedly gazette a
pardon.
Now, with this government, the marginalistion of the Igbo is more
complete than
ever before. The Igbos have taken all these quietly because, they
reason, they
brought it upon themselves. But the nation is sitting on a time-bomb.
After
the First World War, the
victors treated Germany with the same contempt Nigeria is treating
Igbos. Two
decades later, there was a Second World War, far costlier than the
first.
Germany was again defeated, but this time, they won a more honourable
peace.
Our present political leaders have no sense of History. There is a new
Igbo
man, who was not born in 1966 and neither knows nor cares about Nzeogwu
and
Ojukwu. There are Igbo men on the street who were never Biafrans. They
were
born Nigerians, are Nigerians, but suffer because of actions of earlier
generations. They will soon decide that
it is better to fight their own war, and may be find an honourable
peace, than
to remain in this contemptible state in perpetuity.
The
Northern Bourgeoisie and the
Yoruba Bourgeoisie have exacted their pound of flesh from the Igbos.
For one
Sardauna, one Tafawa Balewa, one Akintola and one Okotie-Eboh, hundreds
of
thousands have died and suffered.
If
this issue is not addressed
immediately, no conference will solve Nigeria’s problems.
iv.
The Niger-Delta and The Need For
Justice.
This
is the final subjective
variable I wish to mention. I will not say anything on this because it
seems,
finally, it has caught the attention of the nation and something is
being done
about it.
Conclusion
I
started this paper by saying that
restructuring the Federation was not a simple task, and should be
considered
only as part of the process of nation-building. The message I have
carried all
my life is that all Nigerians have a right to maintain their diversity
but this
should only be on the basis of respect of the same rights for other
Nigerians.
No nation can be built on the platform of inequity, intolerance and
selfishness.
I am
Fulani. I am Muslim. But I am
able to relate to every Nigerian as a fellow Nigerian and respect his
ethnicity
and his faith. I am also convinced that we tend to exaggerate our
differences for selfish ends and this applies even to matters of faith.
I
have no doubt in my mind that the
leadership of Nigerian politics in all parts of the country today, is
in the
main, reactionary, greedy, corrupt and bankrupt. Brought up in the era
of
tribal warlords, most political leaders are unable to think first and
foremost
like Nigerians. To this extent, any conference held today may be a
waste of
time.
But
the audience may ask “Is there
any hope for this Country”? My answer is yes! I rest my
hope partly
on personal experience. In every part of the country, I come across
young
Nigerians who do not agree with their elders. In the North, there is a
new
northerner, throwing off the yoke of irredentism, the toga of nepotism
and the
image of being a beneficiary of quota system. In the South-West, I find
many
young Yoruba citizens who frown at the rabid tribalism and
provincialism of
their leaders. In Igboland, we see young Igbos who regret the past and
look
forward to a brighter future. I have indeed received several letters
from
Nigerians, northerners and southerners, christians and muslims,
encouraging me
in the fight against the twin vices of religious intolerance and ethnic
chauvinism.
But I
rest my hope on a much deeper
and profound base than these fleeting impressions. The hope for this
Country is
founded on the existence of the very problems we have just examined.
The people
of this Country have a long history of being together. Yet each group
jealously
guards its own identity, be it ethnic or religious. This is so only
because our
cultures, our religions, teach us core values within which we find full
expression of our humanity. If only we would look, we would find that
the
values that make a good Fulani, Yoruba, Kanuri or Bini man; the values
that
make a good Christian and a good Muslim; are the same. If only we had
in each
part of this country, a leadership with the vision to recognize this,
to
harness this, to bring together good Yoruba, Hausa, Igbo, Ogoni and
Angas men
and women; good Christians and Muslims; to run the affairs of this
country, we
would find peace.
I
rest my hope, finally on my
generation. A generation of young, educated Nigerians, brought up in
luxury,
weaned by the traumatic experiences of the last two decades, and ready
to take
up the gauntlet, and ignite the hopes, for a renewed Nigeria. This is
the
generation much maligned by the present administration of
septuagenarians. The
generation discarded and treated like a pack of potential thieves. The
only
truly marginalized generation. This is the generation that will pick up
the
pieces and by the grace of Allah, leave those coming behind with a
legacy far
more progressive than the one we
inherited.
Thank
you.