APC’s false hope on restructuring
“In respect of political developments, I have
kept a close watch on the on-going debate about “Restructuring”. No human law
or edifice is perfect. Whatever structure we develop must periodically be
perfected according to changing circumstances and the country’s socio-economic
developments. We Nigerians can be very impatient and want to improve our
conditions faster than may be possible considering our resources and
capabilities. When all the aggregates of nationwide opinions are considered, my
firm view is that our problems are more to do with process than structure.”
-
President Muhammadu Buhari in his 2018 New
Year day address to Nigerians.
Last
Thursday, January 25, 2018, the Mallam Nasir el-Rufai led 23 member committee
on All Progressives Congress idea of restructuring submitted its report to the
APC chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun. APC had on August 10, 2017 set up the
committee with the aim of determining the meaning and scope of restructuring
for the party. It will be recalled that for a fairly long time now, there have been
strident call for reform of the country’s political economy structure. It was
indeed a campaign issue ahead of the 2015 general elections so much so that the
APC promised “true federalism” and “devolution of powers” in its constitution
and manifesto. Unfortunately, despite the repeated demand for the party to walk
the talk, there has been a loud silence from the party leadership.
Ahead
of the voting by National Assembly on the constitutional amendment, there was
high hope that the federal lawmakers will vote in support of the reform of the
country. However, both chambers of NASS
voted against devolution of power on July 26 and 27, 2017. This was at a point that the agitation for
referendum for self-determination by the Indigenous People of Biafra was at its
peak. Shortly after the defeat of this bill came the three months quit notice
issued by Arewa Youths against Igbos living in the 19 Northern States. It was
the tension generated by this face-off that made the APC, in a volte-face
action, to set up the el-Rufai committee.
At
inauguration, the APC chairman said to the committee: “Let me emphasise that your task is both
critical and very sensitive, especially in the light of the clamour for
restructuring, devolution of powers, fiscal federalism, resource control, and
all other issues that describe the various forms of reforms that are being
suggested for the restructuring of the current political architecture of our
beloved nation. The APC constitution and manifesto vigorously canvass these
issues and they are very elaborately provided for………It is your duty, especially
having regard to the emotive nature of the national discourse on restructuring,
to distil from our party’s constitution and manifesto the various ideas being
canvassed in the different constitutional conferences that have been held in
this country.”
It
took almost six months for the party to define its position on the
restructuring debate. According to el-Rufai, the committee engaged about 8,040
persons during 14 sittings throughout the federation; had 12 public
consultations in all the six geopolitical zones in the country, while 409
memoranda were received from respondents. He stated further that in the process
of their research, Nigerians indicated interest in 24 issues out of which the
committee made recommendation on 13 in its four volumes report.
24
items identified by the committee and for which it carried out opinion surveys
were creation of states, merger of states, state police, the derivation
principle, fiscal federalism, local government autonomy, devolution of powers,
type of government, independent candidacy, public holidays, the land tenure
system, power sharing and rotation, type of legislature, affirmation for
vulnerable groups like the physically challenged, women and youths, the minimum
wage, border adjustment, secular statutes of the country, and the conduct of
referendums.
Out
of this lot the committee recommended resource control, merger of states, State
police and prison, State Judicial Council and State Court of Appeal,
independent candidacy, public holidays, minimum wage, referendum, fiscal
federalism and revenue allocation, and local government autonomy. Of course,
these recommendations are not devoid of their own controversies.
I
applaud the effort of the APC but is it not too little, too late? Why did the
party wait for over two years, and for NASS to vote against the party position,
before embarking on this exercise? Are these recommendations not contained in
the 2014 National Conference report? Given the seeming opposition of the president
and the National Assembly against devolution of powers, is the exercise not in
futility? What are the next steps for the party on this report? Will the party
be able to deliver on this campaign promise before the 2019 elections as being
demanded by the Niger Delta Avengers?
To
my own mind, this issue has become a bone in the throat of APC. It can’t
swallow or vomit it. The party pledged
it and didn’t know or is unwilling to deliver on it. In bureaucracy or management
there is a phenomenon known as KIV. It means one of two things. It is either
Keep in View or Kill in View. The way APC has mishandled this restructuring
request the party either want to keep the issue in view and re-enlist it as a
campaign issue for 2019 general elections or kill in view by hoping that by
‘filibustering’ (using delay tactics) the issue will die a natural death. There
is no gainsaying that there is no sincerity of purpose and political will by
either the APC as a party or government to do the needful before the next
general elections.
The
deliberate late decision of the party on this issue led to a situation where it
is proposing independent candidacy and rejecting local government autonomy
which had already been voted on by the National Assembly. I am of the opinion
that APC’s timing of the release of this report is to serve as a red herring.
It is to distract us from its underperformance. The party had subtly found a
way to generate a new round of controversies. What APC has done on its
purported true federalism and restructuring stance is similar to what President
Buhari did when in October 2016 he set up Senator Ken Nanmani presidential
committee on electoral reform. Like the el-Rufai’s committee, that committee
too sat for six months submitted its report on May 2, 2017 to the Attorney
General and Minister of Justice who promised to present the report to the
president. Till date, no one knows of any action or decision that has been
taken on that report. There is an adage that says “If a man deceives me once,
shame on him; if he deceives me twice, shame on me.”
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