APPLY ABURI ACCORD, DIVIDE NIGERIA NOW – AGBAKOBA TELLS BUHARI
Former
President of the Nigerian Bar Association, NBA, and human rights activist,
Olisa Agbakoba (SAN), has told President Muhammadu Buhari to divide the country
into eight regional structures.
Agbakoba,
one of the greatest heroes of democracy in Nigeria, noted that there are so
many unclear issues in Nigeria about how people of the country want to organize
themselves and how they want to live together.
The senior
lawyer told reporters at the weekend that insecurity and other serious issues
facing the country “can’t [be] fully arrested,” if the central government
remains so strong as it is now.
He added
that, “This is because community policing or state policing is a tactical tool
to deal with the problem, but the strategic tool is the bigger question of the
national question.
“There are
so many unclear issues in Nigeria about how we want to organize ourselves, how
we want to live together, this is what some people have called the
restructuring question, some call it the national question, but I call it devolution
of powers question.
“Whatever
it’s called that is the central issue that needs resolution so that even if you
use tactical tools like community policing, but the bigger issue remains then I
don’t know if we can resolve it.
“What
Nigeria needs is space, there are diverse ethnicities and they are living in
such close proximity that one ethnic community is in the face of the other with
counter-cultures, counter-religious beliefs and that is not healthy. Even in
America in spite of all their advanced democracy, they take care of
diversities.
“So, I think
if I were to advise the president, for instance, the first thing to do is
create space…,identify the ethnic regionalities, create eight big blocs, even
though we have 6 to make it 8.
“And then I
will give them the power to do things at their own local level, it’s called the
principle of subsidiarity; let them work at their own local level. Subsidiarity
is where people engage themselves at the local level such that you find in Wales,
Scotland, Ireland and England.
“Part of the
challenge they had when they were living closely was to create an act of
settlement of 1705, that was when peace began to come and each of the regions
recognized themselves.
“They all
had their own prime ministers and they call them first ministers, so the prime
minister of the UK is the one we see internationally, but on local matters like
school, refuse collection, education, agriculture, employment, health issues,
it’s local.
“So, imagine
where eight of the regional structures in Nigeria were fending for themselves
at their local level and not depending on federal allocation from Abuja, things
will be different.
“Immediately
they will take control of what is around them, they will create state police,
they will create the relevant security apparatus to deal with any threat,
therefore, you don’t need one Chief of Army Staff, and they don’t need one
Inspector General of Police to be running around entire Nigeria.
“For
instance…say in the South-south region, they will have all the relevant
apparatuses to deal with whatever situation that they need to survive as a
region.
“They could
have courts; they might like to have a Supreme Court of the South-south where
cases end in the Supreme Court of the South-south, so they do not have to go to
the Supreme Court of Nigeria because the Supreme Court of Nigeria has no
business dealing with issues arising from there.
“That is the
kind of space I think that should be paramount in the issue concerning where
Nigeria is heading to.
“Because
that discussion is not on the table, all these ethnic issues flare up as major
national insecurity challenge. So, that is what I will do or suggest if I had
the opportunity to advise on it. The Federal Government is too strong.
“The Federal
Government is actually not a Federal Government, ours is a unitary government
because the states have no power on the legislative list so there are 68 items
on the Exclusive List and as the name implies in Exclusive List only the
Federal Government handles it.
“There is 30
on the Concurrent List, concurrent is between the federal and the state to
legislate, but if the Federal Government legislates then pursuant to what is
called the doctrine of covering the field the state is not allowed to do
anything. In other words, the states have no legislative authority, that
creates a problem.
“Why should
the Federal Government be dealing with Universal Basic Education for primary
schools? What is the Federal Government responsibility with that? I don’t
understand.
“What is the
Federal Government responsibility with setting up a JAMB process so that you
equalize educational activities, but if my grandchild from Anambra scores 282,
but my friend’s grandson from Zamfara scores 100, my friend’s grandson gets
into the university, but my own does not get in. Why don’t you simply say
….look each region can just organize itself and take your examination?
“So, it is
this centrifugal federalism, that means federalism that has a pyramid that has
only one leader that is our problem.
“We just
have to blast the structures and allow regional leaders as we had under the
1960 Constitution. So, when you have regional leaders you will have people who
will like to play regional politics or regional law.
“There is no
reason, for instance, in my own profession the eight regions I propose should
not be awarding SAN to their best lawyers. Why must it only be Abuja? In the
UK, the SAN in England is different from the SAN in Scotland.
“So, the
formula that worked for Nigeria was to recognize the differences and I think
the best example of the agreements that we can apply is the Aburi Accord.
“The Aburi
Accord recognized that Nigeria’s problems were as a result of our diversity not
being well managed. We need to manage our diversity that is the way we can move
forward.”
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