Austin Lewter, a graduate student in Pan African studies in the College of Arts and Sciences, presents at the inaugural Social Differences, Social Justice Research Symposium March 31.
On March 31, the Social Differences, Social Justice research cluster hosted its inaugural symposium, crossing interdisciplinary boundaries to showcase student and faculty research related to equity, social justice and global transformation.
Co-sponsored by the College of Arts and Sciences, Humanities Center, Lender Center for Social Justice, Renée Crown University Honors Program and Whitman School of Management, the symposium featured a keynote address from Gisele Marcus ’89, a Syracuse University Trustee and professor of practice in diversity, equity and inclusion at the Olin Business School at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri.
“Today is a day of celebration, valuing and honoring,” said Kira Reed, associate professor of management in the Whitman School and member of the Social Differences, Social Justice cluster, addressing scholars during her introductory remarks. “We are excited that we now have a cohort of cluster hires and that the University recognizes the value in convening scholars of different disciplines to bring forth issues of justice and equity and ideas about how we can make improvements. We are here to value you and your contributions. Your work is meaningful and impactful.”
Ravi Dharwadkar, professor and chair of management in the Whitman School, and James Haywood Rolling Jr., co-director of the Lender Center for Social Justice and professor of arts education in the College of Visual and Performing Arts, welcomed symposium attendees before the panel discussions commenced.
The first panel on African Diasporic Studies showcased student research, featuring graduate students from the master’s program in Pan African studies in the College of Arts and Sciences.
Moderator Danielle Taana Smith, professor of African American Studies and director of the Renée Crown University Honors Program, acknowledged that “the Department of African American studies has a long and rich history at Syracuse University. It continues to be a space where intellectuals across many disciplines center Africa as a site of intellectual knowledge, where faculty and researchers contest pre-existing ideas of what Africa and its diaspora mean, and present alternative knowledges.”
Taana Smith then introduced first-year graduate students Joy Nyokabi, Kailey Smith and Austin Lewter.
Nyokabi presented her preliminary research on attempts by the British government to conceal documents and evidence of war crimes against Kenyans during the Mau Mau War in the 1950s.
As a critical component of the discussion about reparations, Kailey Smith’s presentation argued for the return of stolen cultural artifacts from Western museums to the African nations from which they originated.
Lewter presented his research on the legacy of lynching in the United States, arguing that lynchings have moved from public spectacle—such as the courthouse lawn—and become quieter and more institutionalized, invoking the deaths of Ahmaud Arbery, Sandra Bland and Eric Garner as examples of modern lynchings.
The second panel, Democratizing Internet Access, was moderated by Abdullah Naimzadeh, a graduate student in the School of Information Studies (iSchool), studying applied data science. Exploring the principle of global internet access as a human right, panelists Catherine Forrest ’22, doctoral candidate Jane Asantewaa Appiah-Okyere and Professor Lee McKnight, from the iSchool, shared ongoing research on deployment of the internet backpack technology, which was co-invented by McKnight.
Use of the internet backpack to expand global internet access was presented through the lens of several contexts and projects, including for health care workers in rural and remote Central America; teachers in rural Ghana; and elementary school students in underserved areas of Brooklyn and the Bronx in New York City. The panel also addressed the moral imperative for universal internet access—especially amidst the COVID-19 pandemic—and the importance of championing a framework for ethical data collection.
The morning then segued into a full schedule of faculty research briefs and presentations, including:
Jamie Perry, assistant professor of management in the Whitman School, presented on the characteristics and outcomes of diverse teams;
Hector Rendon*, assistant professor of communications in the Newhouse School, presented on contemporary representations of Mexico, Mexicans and Mexican-Americans in Hollywood films;
Rachael Goodwin*, assistant professor of management in the Whitman School, presented on dehumanization and maladaptive perfectionism at work;
Charisse L’Pree Corsbie-Massay, associate professor of communications in the Newhouse School, presented on her forthcoming book, “Diversity and Satire: Laughing at Processes of Marginalization;”
Srivi Ramasubramanian, Newhouse Professor in the Newhouse School, presented on the personal, professional and political challenges of critical race scholar-activism;
Rashmi Gangamma, associate professor and director of graduate studies in marriage and family therapy in the Falk College; Melissa Luke, Dean’s Professor and Provost Faculty Fellow in counseling and human services in the School of Education; and Bhavneet Walia, assistant professor of public health in the Falk College, presented research on the continuation of teletherapy post-COVID-19;
Ethan Madarieta, assistant professor of English in the College of Arts and Sciences, presented on his forthcoming book, “The Body is Not the Land: Memory, Translation, and Territorial Aporias;”
Delali Kumavie*, assistant professor of English in the College of Arts and Sciences, presented on her current book project, “Aerial Geographies: Rooting Aviation in Global Black Literature;”
Warrick Moses*, assistant professor of music history and cultures in the College of Arts and Sciences, presented on racial and language identity within the mixed race or coloured community of Cape Town, South Africa;
Ruth Opara, assistant professor of music history and cultures in the College of Arts and Sciences, presented “Mirroring Motherhood/Land in Diaspora: Igbo Women in Music;”
Melissa Yuen, the curator at the Syracuse University Art Museum, presented “Teaching and Learning Social Justice at the Syracuse University Art Museum;”
Erin Rand, associate professor of communication and rhetorical studies in the College of Visual and Performing Arts, presented “Too Much to Tolerate: School Bathrooms, Trans Temporality, and Black Excess;” and
Carol Faulkner, associate dean and Andrew W. Cohen, Walter Montgomery and Marian Gruber professor of history in the Maxwell School, presented “Gender at the Polls: Illicit Voting and Suffrage Before the Civil War.”
*Indicates a cluster hire in the Social Differences, Social Justice research cluster.
Marcelle Haddix, associate provost for strategic initiatives and Distinguished Dean’s Professor of Literacy, Race and Justice in the School of Education, shared her thoughts on the significance of the day prior to Marcus’s keynote address.
“This inaugural symposium is exactly the type of output, the kind of research work we want to see coming from the research clusters,” Haddix said. “Today spoke to the power of interdisciplinarity, the power of connecting us, bringing us together. And what we often don’t talk about are the kinds of resources it takes to engage in this work; how we acknowledge and reward interdisciplinary collaboration; how we create spaces and opportunities for people to come together across differences. That’s what today’s event really highlighted for me.”
Haddix then welcomed Marcus to deliver her keynote address, “Belonging: Essential to Enhancing the Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) Equation.”
Marcus began with a definition of belonging from diversity and inclusion expert Verna Myers: Diversity is being invited to the party; inclusion means being asked to dance; belonging is “they’re actually playing some of my music.”
She spoke of belonging as a human requirement, shared how companies can expand their DEI initiatives to include belonging to address the Great Resignation, and how increased feelings of belonging for students lead to better outcomes in higher education.
“Belonging is all about feeling welcomed in a space, feeling that you’re included, feeling that your contributions are valued,” Marcus said. “It matters because when people belong, they are going to help their organization be more productive, there’s going to be better teamwork and an increase in their pride as an employee. And all of those things can be contagious in your environment.”
Marcus earned a bachelor’s degree in management information systems and transportation management from Whitman and an MBA from Harvard University. She is a member of the Syracuse University Multicultural Advancement Advisory Council; former vice president of the Syracuse University Alumni Association; an inaugural lecturer for the University’s Sankofa Lecture Series; and a 2014 recipient of the Chancellor’s Citation for Excellence in Global Business Management. Marcus also endowed an Our Time has Come scholarship in her name in the Whitman School and joined the University’s Board of Trustees in 2021.
Patrick W. Berry, associate professor in writing studies, rhetoric and composition in the College of Arts and Sciences and member of the Social Differences, Social Justice cluster, closed the symposium, remarking on the scholarly community being strengthened through the cluster. Berry stated that this group of scholars will be prepared to inform the academy, the arts, business and society, and that including students in the endeavor prepares them to make a global impact.
The Social Differences, Social Justice research cluster includes more than 30 affiliated faculty from the College of Arts and Sciences, College of Engineering and Computer Science, College of Law, College of Visual and Performing Arts, iSchool, the Maxwell School, the Newhouse School and the Whitman School. The group has a listserv to which interested scholars can subscribe to stay connected and learn of future events. To join, send an email request to SDSJ@listserv.syr.edu. To learn more about its work, visit the cluster’s webpage.
Showing posts with label Symposium. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Symposium. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 13, 2022
Tuesday, February 18, 2020
NIGERIA: Another Search For A People’s Constitution
Senate President Ahmad Ibrahim Lawan
Past efforts at constitutional review largely failed. Against this backdrop, the Senate has inaugurated a committee to have another go. What are its chances and what areas should it focus on? Legal Editor JOHN AUSTIN UNACHUKWU asks lawyers.
The search for a people’s constitution inched forward on January 30, when Senate President Ahmad Lawan
announced the composition of a 56-man Steering and Constitution Review Committee.
The committee, with all principal officers as members, also has a senator from each state, and two senators selected to represent each geo-political zone.
The committee
Principal officers on the membership of the Constitution Review Committee include: Deputy Senate President, Ovie Omo-Agege who will serve as its Chairman; Senate Leader, Yahaya Abdullahi; Deputy Leader, Ajayi Boroffice; Minority Leader, Enyinnaya Abaribe; Deputy Whip, Aliyu Sabi Abdullahi; Deputy Minority Leader, Emmanuel Bwacha; Minority Whip, Philip Aduda; and Deputy Minority Whip, Sahabi Alhaji Ya’u.
Lawmakers selected to represent each state include: Theordore Orji, Abia; Aishat Ahmed, Adamawa; Bassey Akpan, Akwa-Ibom; Stella Oduah, Anambra; Haliru Jika Dauda, Bauchi; Biobarukuma Deji-Eremenyo, Bayelsa; Gabriel Suswam, Benue; Abubakar Kyari, Borno; Gershom Bassey, Cross River; James Manager, Delta; Samuel Egwu, Ebonyi; Matthew Urhoghide, Edo; Opeyemi Bamidele, Ekiti; Ike Ekweremadu, Enugu; and Mohammed Danjuma Goje, Gombe.
Others are Rochas Okorocha, Imo; Sabo Mohammed, Jigawa; Uba Sani, Kaduna; Kabiru Gaya, Kano; Baba Ahmed Kaita, Katsina; Mohammed Adamu Aliero, Kebbi; Smart Adeyemi, Kogi; Suleiman Sadiq Umar, Kwara; Oluremi Tinubu, Lagos; Abdullahi Adamu, Nasarawa; Mohammed Sani Musa, Niger; Ibikunle Amosun, Ogun; Nicholas Olubukola, Ondo; Surajudeen Ajibola, Osun; Teslim Folarin, Oyo; Hezekiah Ayuba, Plateau; George Thompson Sekibo, Rivers; Aliyu Wamakko, Sokoto; Yusuf A. Yusuf, Taraba; Ibrahim Geidam, Yobe; and Mohammed Hassan, Zamfara.
Representatives of geo-political zones are Bala Ibn Na’Allah and Ibrahim Shekarau, North-West; Kashim Shettima and Lawal Yahaya, North-East; Tanko Al-Makura and Yakubu Oseni, North-Central; Abdulfatai Buhari and Biodun Olujimi, South-West; Lilian Uche Ekwunife and Chukwuka Utazi, South-East; Rose Oko and Akon Eyakenyi, South-South.
Inaugurating the committee, Lawan said: “There are several issues that Nigerians feel strongly about. “The Constitution Review Committee is supposed to be a platform where such issues will be brought, and where those who are interested should ensure that they make every possible effort, including presentations for their views to be considered.
“As a National Assembly, particularly the Senate, we want to have a very stable country. We want a country that gives every citizen the opportunity to actualise his or her dream. We want to have a security that is enhanced and an economy that works for everyone.
“Stability of the polity is important, we need to have a country before we run for elections, or indeed undertake any activity. So, we advise that any organisation or individual who has anything that should be taken on by the committee should make submissions to the Constitution Review Committee.”
Lawan’s statement suggests that the Senate wants the committee to produce a people’s constitution that will create a balance between the legislative, executive, and judicial arms of the government, meet the needs and welfare of Nigerians and provide a platform for them to actualise their dreams.
Past efforts
Efforts to amend the 1999 Constitution which was handed over to Nigerians by the Abdulsalami Abubakar military regime began in 2000 during the Senate presidency of Dr. Chuba Okadigbo.
In that exercise, then Deputy Senate President Haruna Abubakar and the Deputy Speaker of the House Chibudom Nwuche were named co-chairs of the National Assembly Joint Committee on Constitution Review (JCCR).
Terms of reference
The committee is expected to consider national issues including restructuring, true federalism, state police, revenue sharing formula and resource control, among others that have dominated public discourses in recent years.
It is not the first time a review has been attempted.
Speaking on the committee’s agenda, Deputy Senate President Senator Ovie Omo-Agege said it would consider the recommendations of the 2014 national conference.
That conference was convened under ex-President Goodluck Jonathan and chaired by former Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), the late Idris Legbo Kutigi. The conference proposed solutions to a number of the country’s challenges.
Omo-Agege also said that recommendations of the All Progressives Congress (APC) panel on restructuring would be considered. Thepanel was chaired by Nasir el-Rufai, Governor of Kaduna State.
Omo-Agege also said the committee would also consider altering the sixth schedule of the Constitution to provide for the establishment of pre-election matters tribunal, governorship pre-election matters tribunals and presidential pre-election matters tribunal.
He said: “This committee will consider the recommendations of the 2014 constitutional conference and the Governor Nasir el-Rufai-led committee on restructuring.
“It will suffice to say that an assignment of this magnitude demands diligence and commitment. So, as we embark on this very important legislative assignment, let us use this opportunity to build consensus on constitutional issues that will impact the lives of the people of our great country Nigeria.
“We must get it right for the good of our people and the unity of our great country. The Nigerian people deserve no less.”
SANs: Key areas the committee must consider
Senior lawyers including former Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) presidents Dr. Olisa Agbakoba (SAN) and Mr. Augustine Alegeh (SAN), as well as constitutional lawyer Dr. Kayode Ajulo commended the Senate’s move. They recommended several areas the committee must seek a review.
Agbakoba advised that the committee needed to develop a “Constitution review strategy.”
He expressed happiness that the committee will review the recommendations of the 2014 National Conference and the El- Rufai report on restructuring, set up by the All Progressive Congress (APC) in 2017.
According to him, restructuring or devolution of powers is crucial to deepening Nigeria’s democracy.
Agbakoba said: “The (Constitution review) strategy should consider some of the past reports of previous committees and the key points in various national conference reports, and develop a constitutional review formula that has national acceptance. The key thematic issues the committee may consider are as follows.”
Constitutional supremacy
He said: “Supremacy of the Constitution: This is contained in Section 1 of the Constitution which has three subsections.
We propose that in addition to the provision of Section 1(1) which provides that the provisions of the Constitution shall have binding force on all authorities and persons; every Nigerian should be expressly conferred with a constitutional right to approach the Courts to challenge constitutional infractions.
In addition to the provision of Section 1(2) which prohibits unconstitutional take-over of government, there may be a provision for sanctions for unconstitutional take-over of government. It shall be the unalterable and inalienable right of Nigerians to sanction violators of the constitutional order.”
Institutions consolidating democracy
Another area Agbakoba advised the committee to focus on is what he called “Institutions Consolidating Democracy”.
He said: “Some state institutions serve as gatekeepers and protectors of constitutional democracy. These institutions play a key role in administering and consolidating democracy and so they must be independent and constitutionally insulated from external interference and control by any person or organ of the state.
“Some of these institutions are contained in Section 153 of the 1999 Constitution and include the Code of Conduct Bureau, the National Judicial Council, the Federal Civil Service Commission, the Federal Judicial Service Commission, the Revenue Mobilisation and Fiscal Commission etc.
In order to ensure that these institutions consolidate democracy, it is important that their independence is constitutionally secured and guaranteed.
‘Section 153 of the Constitution falls far short of the requirement. It will be important to alter Section 153 and a good example will be Chapter 9 of the South African Constitution which provides for “State Institutions Supporting Constitutional Democracy”.
These include the Public Protector (who investigates certain conducts in state affairs), the Auditor-General, the Electoral Commission etc. in our case the EFCC, Police, Accountant General, Judiciary INEC etc. will run completely independent of other Government institutions. This process alone will dramatically alter the Nigeria democratic space.”
Judicial powers, ‘indigeneship’, devolution of powers
Other areas the lawyer advocated a review are judicial powers, ‘indigeneship’ and devolution of powers.
For indigene-ship, he said: “The Constitution provides for citizenship but what is recognised in practice is indigeneship. This may be an opportunity for the committee to reexamine and redefine the status of citizenship and indigeneship.”
He said as for power devolution, the scheme of devolution should examine which aspects of the 98 items of Legislative powers are best exercised by the Federal and State government.
“The issue of autonomy of the Local government system is vital, on the basis of the principle of subsidiarity.
“A new list of Legislative powers should be considered so as to distribute powers in a way that upholds the principles of “true” federalism.
“The Federal Government has no role in issuance of driver’s licence, marriage certificates and business permits.
“The Federal Government should devolve Legislative powers over prisons, education and health to the States. A contentious issue will be fiscal federalism but I expect the committee to take strong decisions for the common good.
“Hopefully, this will be the final process of Constitution review in a long while. It is time to turn attention to good governance.”
Revenue allocation, cost of running democracy, federal character
For Alegeh, revenue allocation, cost of running democracy, federal character concerns are among the issues that need reform.
He said: “From our electoral jurisprudence, if you look at these 14 days within which you have to file you complaints, it has knocked out so many viable petitions and so many viable claims. We need to review them in our electoral laws.
“Another area is the issue of revenue allocation. Why is the Federal Government still getting so much humongous sum while almost all the States cannot pay salaries? We have new areas of law that are emerging, we have the new media or digital media as you call it, the internet and so on that have not hitherto been there, they have not been mentioned in our Constitution.”
Alegeh suggested that when the constitution talks of the media for example, it had only the Nigerian Television Authority (NTA) and possibly Daily Times in mind.
He said: “I don’t think they had the private media organisations in mind. So the constitution now needs a holistic review to regulate them.
“The next is the cost of running our democracy, why do we have full time Senators, full time members of the House of Representatives, why can’t they be part time, how can we reduce their overall cost?
“Managing the issue of federal character, is it real or is it imagined, is there no need for further specifications in terms of Federal Character, the clamour in different parts of the country about how it appears that the federal character is being respected more in breach than in compliance.”
Rejig land ownership system
Alegeh said: “For example, in Lagos State, one cannot build on a federal piece of land with the Federal Government’s Certificate of Occupancy (C of O) without obtaining the state’s C of O.
“Lagos was a Federal Capital Territory, and by assimilating and having the Land Use Decree in the constitution, you now have a situation where there are challenges.
“You have a Federal Government C of O and Lagos says that you must get your town planning approval from the state, and Lagos State can refuse to give you town planning approval unless you have their own C of O, so you have so many people especially in Ikeja GRA, Apapa GRA and in Ikoyi, who are holding two C of Os.
“We need to have a total rejig of our system if Federal Government cannot give C of O, let them cede that power totally to Lagos State Government and if Lagos cannot do that let it cede the power to Federal Government.”
Judiciary
He added: “In the judiciary, there is a lot of room for specification for instance there is clamour for Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SANs) to be admitted into the Supreme Court Bench, because the constitution allows them to go, but the rules say that you must produce the judgments you have written before you are admitted into the Supreme Court bench.
“As a lawyer in practice, you only have briefs, you don’t have judgments, so how do you qualify, when the Rules say that you must bring at least 10 of your last judgments.
“How does a SAN in practice do this, how does he qualify, so that requirement in the constitution that once you are 15 years at the Bar, you entitled to be made a Supreme Court Justice is invalid given the current state of affairs, there are several issues to be addressed.
“When you hear of a 56-member committee, it means that they know that there is a lot of work to be done. And life is so dynamic that even if you amend the constitution today, by the 56-man committee, by the day the new constitution comes into effect, there will be parts of it that will need amendments.”.
Fundamental objectives and directive principles of state policy
Ajulo canvassed several areas that require a second look, including the Fundamental Objectives and Directive Principles of state policy.
He said: “It is my hope that the next amendment should correct the wrong on the justiciability or otherwise of the Chapter 2 of the Constitution mentioned above, better still, I foresee a situation where the Supreme Court under the dynamism of our jurisprudence do the needful by ensuring the justiciability of Chapter 2 which guards the fundamental objectives of state principles.
“Also, there is at present widespread discontent with the country’s federal structure and arrangements.
“All the constitutional, political and judicial aspects of the federal system need to be openly discussed.
“Issues such as revenue allocations from the Federation Account to the three levels of government; the position of local government in the federal system; sharia and customary laws under the Constitution; the power and functions of the National Judicial Council; the principle underlying the growing number of federal courts of first instance within a federal system; the formation and registration of political parties and their constitutional role; the electoral processes; etc. All of these need to be resolved on the basis of a general consensus.
Removal of immunity clause
Ajulo also suggested that the immunity clause should be removed if the offences attract criminal charges to encourage accountability by those managing the economy.
“It is, however, important to point attention to the fact that immunity is a fundamental and innate power of a sovereign which right is inalienable whether it is in the papers or not.
He added: “Personally, I must say that removing immunity is quite laughable and palpable: what is sovereignty without immunity!.”
Independent candidacy
Every Nigerian who meets the specified condition in the Electoral Act should be free to contest elections as an independent candidate,” Ajulo said.
Anti-corruption
He further advocated the establishment of Special Courts to handle corruption cases in the light of undue prolongation in the trials and prosecution of corruption cases in the regular courts.
Ajulo noted that whether it is a Sovereign National Conference, or an elected Constituent Assembly, or any other gathering that is put in place to prepare a new constitution, ‘it is highly desirable that the contents of that constitution should be widely discussed, generally understood and genuinely acceptable to all the communities and ethnic groups as well as all shades of opinion in the country.
“It is very important that several million copies of any Draft of the Constitution produced by a Constituent Assembly or a General Conference should be made available to the public throughout Nigeria before it is debated in the State Houses of Assembly.”
According to him, this will enable the people to make their views known to their representatives on specific provisions in the Draft before it is debated in the State Houses of Assembly and the National Assembly.
He added: ‘This will enable the people to make their views known to their representatives on specific provisions in the draft before it is debated in the State Houses of Assembly and the National Assembly.
“It will also enable knowledgeable contributions to be made to the debate from individuals who feel concerned about any aspects of the Constitution as well as on the document as a whole
“The making of a constitution for the country is so crucial for the social harmony, political stability and general well-being of the nation to deserve the widest possible circulation of the Draft of any constitution. Specifically, I suggest the putting into circulation of several million copies of any such Draft.
“In conclusion, I more fortified by the calibre and debonair of the members of the committee. Senator Ovie Omo-Agege is someone I know personally and I can vouch for his passion for people and constitutional development.
“Recall that he first secured his seat at the Senate on the platform of Labour Party when I was the National Secretary of the party. I am quite certain and positive on the outcome of the Committee”.
SOURCE: THYE NATION
Monday, January 13, 2020
SYMPOSIUM: BIAFRA: 50 Years After: Let’s Revisit Issues That Caused The Civil War
Protesters march from the former Soviet Union's Embassy in London to the office of the Prime Minister on Downing Street. They argued that the Soviet Union and Britain supported Nigeria's war on Biafra and arms trafficking to the Nigerian federal troops. Labor Party politician Michael Barnes also spoke at a meeting organized by the Biafran Committee in London. Image: R. Dumont/Daily Express/Getty
LAGOS, NIGERIA (VANGUARD) — 50 years after the Nigerian Civil War, former Head of State, Gen. Yakubu Gowon (retd); Nobel Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka; Professor Anya O. Anya, Professor Pat Utomi and Professor Banji Akintoye, yesterday, warned that another war was imminent if the current political, social, and economic challenges plaguing the country were not addressed.
They were, however, unanimous that Nigeria must avert another Civil War.
Also, notable Igbo elders, leaders and traditional rulers gathered at the MUSON Centre in Lagos to discuss the way forward, 50 years after the Nigerian civil war.
The 50th anniversary of the Nigerian Civil War, tagged Never Again, was organized by the Nzuko Umunna and Ndigbo Lagos in collaboration with civil society organisations.
We must revisit the issues — Gowon
Gowon, though absent at the event, spoke via a recorded video.
The former military Head of State said the Civil War remains a reference point in the country’s political odyssey, adding that as a way of moving forward, there exists the need to revisit the challenges bedeviling the country.
His words: “Let me say again, that although the Nigerian Civil War ended in January 1970, yet it has continued to be a veritable reference point in our nation’s political discourse for the past 50 years. It was indeed a welcome way. It ended at the time for it had posed the greatest threat to the territorial integrity and unity of Nigeria, our promising multi-ethnic federation.
“The Civil War left an indelible impression and desire in me to hold dearest, the unity and indivisibility of a democratic Nigeria in line with my response to a question by many passengers on an MV Aureol West African Sea Passage, Liverpool to Lagos in December/January 1965/66, who asked “Can there be a coup in Nigeria? My response during the trip was that it was impossible because we are ‘a political Army’ trained to be loyal to the government of the day, to defend the unity and territorial integrity of Nigeria, from both internal and external attacks until we got to Ghana on January 12, 1966, when as a result of a reported threat near Nigeria, I had to change my stance and said philosophically “nothing is impossible in this world, but if such a thing happens in Nigeria, I hope the few loyal of us will check, deal with it and return the status quo.” And that was what happened, 36 hours after my arrival in Lagos on January 15, 1966.
“The Civil War left an indelible impression and desire in me to hold dearest, the unity and indivisibility of a democratic Nigeria in line with my response to a question by many passengers on an MV Aureol West African Sea Passage, Liverpool to Lagos in December/January 1965/66, who asked “Can there be a coup in Nigeria? My response during the trip was that it was impossible because we are ‘a political Army’ trained to be loyal to the government of the day, to defend the unity and territorial integrity of Nigeria, from both internal and external attacks until we got to Ghana on January 12, 1966, when as a result of a reported threat near Nigeria, I had to change my stance and said philosophically “nothing is impossible in this world, but if such a thing happens in Nigeria, I hope the few loyal of us will check, deal with it and return the status quo.” And that was what happened, 36 hours after my arrival in Lagos on January 15, 1966.
We must avert another war
“In conclusion, I sincerely, believe that this speech at the end of the civil war is still relevant today and on this occasion. I, therefore, urge us to always refer to this speech as a reference point for entrenching national reconciliation, peace and unity of the country.
“We must do all in our power as responsible leaders and citizens of this great country and nation to create enabling platforms to dialogue and proffer ideas on how we can live together in peace and harmony for the good of all Nigerians and the black race as a whole, thus ensuring political and economic security and development of the country. I urge all Nigerians to ensure that we avert another civil war in Nigeria.
“Our commitment to Nigeria must be total and patriotic. To me, our Nigeria of today of over 500 ethnic groups of diverse socio-cultural and religious colorations and spread across 774 local government areas and the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, is worthy of your support and defence.”
We can’t survive another war — Soyinka In his speech,
Professor Soyinka said: “We have been made to understand that no nation has ever survived any two Civil Wars.”
Recalling how Tanzania recognized Biafra as a nation, he frowned at the casualties recorded during the Civil War.
He said: “Let me remind you that Tanzania was one of the nations that recognized the breakaway republic of Biafra during the Nigerian Civil War.
“And so, finding myself in that setting among products of this special historic formation, pre and immediate colonial African order, it was an opportunity to interrogate what could be considered a physiological or ideological extract from that human event that consumed, in its estimation, two million lives within two years.”
He also restated that the unity of Nigeria was non-negotiable.
He said: “My extract from the Civil War remains what it always was and that is a simple, self interrogatory: Are we being heard with the clarity and the excuseless that does not task the brain? The sovereignty of this nation is non-negotiable.”
Nigerians must eschew violence — Anya
Professor Anya, who was chairman of the occasion, noted that violence cannot provide the solution to the problems facing the nation.
He called on Nigerians to learn from the mistakes of the past, adding that losing a war was not necessarily a badge of failure.
Anya said: “Nigeria’s situation is not unique. Other countries have gone through the same. We, as a country, must learn from other countries that have survived the horror of war.
“Germany fought a war and lost, the same as Japan. But 30 years after, Germany became one of the best economies in the world, the same and Japan, until the advent of China. Losing a war does not make you a failure.
“We as a country must eschew violence, as it will not provide the answer to our current situation. There is a saying which goes like this: “Those who live by the sword, die by the sword.” This is a new year and a new opportunity for Nigeria to make things right once again.”
War is horrible — Utomi
While highlighting the collapse of culture as one of the major problems of the country, Professor Utomi called for urgent attention and a joint effort to fix the problem.
Utomi noted that if the Biafran war was fought today, Nigeria may not exist due to the self-determination recognition by the international community.
He said: “War is a horrible experience. I have read about it, I have experienced it and I have watched it in the movies. We must address the issues that led to the Civil War. I can tell you that if the Biafran war is fought today, there will be no Nigeria because the international community now recognizes self-determination.”
He urged the government to create an enabling environment to help businesses.
He said: “Why does it matter to reflect on that experience and 50 years since?
I think this initiative has value because war is horrible and anything that enables people to learn enough from its experience to make them seek not to repeat it, does humanity great favour. Allied to this is that managing the cessation of hostility will determine how people heal and whether it is easy to capitalize on old wounds. Some doubt that the nature of the peace treaty that ended World War I paved the way for Hitler to emerge and made a more terrible World War II happen.
“War creates its psychosis and that can affect culture in a way that people may not become immediately aware of but this may affect fundamentally a peoples’ way. Why, for example, were Ndigbo typically considered modest, even stereotyped as stingy, before the war, and in the post-war era have become more voluble, extravagant and showy, with significant consequences for Emotional Intelligence?
“Nigeria’s inability to have learned and institutionalized lessons from the civil war is perhaps one of the greatest cases of leadership failure in modern human history. Even that is a paradox. The end of the civil war was marked by some great leadership initiatives”.
We must address the fundamentals — Akintoye
Also speaking, eminent historian, Professor Banji Akintoye said there is a need for Nigerians to find a rational solution to problems affecting the country.
He warned that the country is in a mood similar to the pre-Civil War mood, noting: “We, who are here assembled and the rest of our whole country owe a great debt of gratitude to our men and women who thought that Nigeria must celebrate this important day in our country’s history and who put the arrangements together to enable us to assemble here now.
“This day, 50 years ago, we Nigerians saw the end of a bitter and sanguinary Civil War in which two sides of our country had been pitched against each other for fully 30 months. A war which had directly and indirectly taken the lives of millions of our citizens and had left the lives of more millions shattered.
“I assess that we are assembled to mark this day for two important reasons. First, we have assembled in gratitude to God that our Civil War came to an end when it did and that it did not continue beyond that day to inflict more deaths and more wounds upon us citizens and peoples of Nigeria and upon our country as a corporate entity.
“We elders, leaders, rulers and citizens of Nigeria are assembled here today before the world, and before the ruler of all peoples and nations, to assert that We the people of this country of Nigeria will Never Again manage the affairs of our country in such a way as to lead to war among us.
“It is hugely providential that we are registering this resolve today before the world and before the Creator and Ruler of the World. I say providential because, as an elderly citizen of this country and as a citizen who was already a young university teacher in the time of our Civil War, I have good reasons to fear today that the character of the affairs of our country these days and the prevailing mood among us Nigerians, are chillingly similar to the character of the affairs of our country in the months leading to our Civil War.
“The government of our country is being managed in ways that make it look like an exclusive preserve of a particular minority. There seems to be an agenda being pursued to establish this minority in all positions of command in the executive, administrative, judicial and security services of our country. The voices of the majority register protests continually and are continually disrespected and ignored. “The state of the law is patently being subsumed to the needs of that agenda with seriously damaging effects on human rights. These situations are inevitably fostering among the peoples of the Middle Belt and South of our country, the feeling that they are being reduced to the status of conquered peoples in Nigeria.
“But in the spirit of today, in the spirit of Never Again plunging our country into Civil War, we can, and we must terminate all this descent towards horrific war. We can and we must speedily move our country into the state of law, the state of mutual respect among our hundreds of nations and the state of order and peace in our country.”
Throwing his weight behind the restructuring of the country, Akintoye said: “To make restructuring produce a full and abiding good for our country, we must now for the first time, correct a serious mistake which we have been making from the beginning especially from the beginning of independent Nigeria. That mistake is that we have been ignoring the fundamental fact that underlies our country. The fundamental fact is that Nigeria is a country of many different nations, of nations that are in some respects radically different in their cultures, their political traditions, their perceptions of acceptable reality, their expectations, and their desires and goals. Ignoring these fundamentals, we have almost continuously let our country wobble and teeter on the brink of violent implosion and we have continually inflicted serious pains upon ourselves. We fought and ended a Civil War but we have never really moved measurably away from the brinks of the Civil War.”
Roll call
Notable personalities present include Prof Wole Soyinka, Prof Anya O. Anya, Prof Pat Utomi, Prof. Adebanji Akintoye, Professor George Obiozor, Admiral Alison Madueke (retd), former Group Managing Director of Diamond Bank Plc, Mr. Alex Oti; Onyeka Onwenu, former Information Minister, Mr. Frank Nweke, Jnr; Eze Chukwuemeka-Eri, Senate Minority Whip, Senator Eyinnaya Abaribe; Political Adviser to former President Olusegun Obasanjo, Akin Osuntokun; Maj. Gen. Obi Umahi (retd) and Guy Ikokwu.
Friday, November 08, 2013
Sovereign National Conference: A Symposium
THE AMBROSE EHIRIM FILES
A call for Sovereign National Conference had been echoed in all nooks and cranny of the nation's socio-cultural and political landscape to find out by way of dialogue how better the most populous nation in the continent with more than 250 ethnic groups could finally reach an agreement for proper governance. Many such cases of a national dialogue had been held in the past; and while some have been in favor of sitting down and talk about it, some had argued it would make no difference to the ones previously held. On October 1, 2013, President Goodluck Jonathan, in his announcement to the nation, inaugurated the National Advisory Committee and gave them six weeks to submit a report of their findings and how possible a mandate could be obtained for related national discourses. As it had happened, I sought the opinion of Nigerians from all walks of life regarding their take on a sovereign national conference. In this first part of a symposium, eight contributors -- Dr. Femi Adebajo, Dr. E. John Agbomi, Pastor Harold Ikewueze, George C. E. Enyoazu, Ikhide R. Ikheloa, Nonso Franklin Anyanwu, Odimegwu Onwumere and Taohid Animaseun -- gave us a piece of their mind and what they thought should be done.
Excerpt:
A meeting of colonial administrators with tribal messengers in the early 20th century from the interior in Lagos, Nigeria. Image: Hulton-Deutsch Archives
A call for Sovereign National Conference had been echoed in all nooks and cranny of the nation's socio-cultural and political landscape to find out by way of dialogue how better the most populous nation in the continent with more than 250 ethnic groups could finally reach an agreement for proper governance. Many such cases of a national dialogue had been held in the past; and while some have been in favor of sitting down and talk about it, some had argued it would make no difference to the ones previously held. On October 1, 2013, President Goodluck Jonathan, in his announcement to the nation, inaugurated the National Advisory Committee and gave them six weeks to submit a report of their findings and how possible a mandate could be obtained for related national discourses. As it had happened, I sought the opinion of Nigerians from all walks of life regarding their take on a sovereign national conference. In this first part of a symposium, eight contributors -- Dr. Femi Adebajo, Dr. E. John Agbomi, Pastor Harold Ikewueze, George C. E. Enyoazu, Ikhide R. Ikheloa, Nonso Franklin Anyanwu, Odimegwu Onwumere and Taohid Animaseun -- gave us a piece of their mind and what they thought should be done.
Excerpt:
A meeting of colonial administrators with tribal messengers in the early 20th century from the interior in Lagos, Nigeria. Image: Hulton-Deutsch Archives
The
Nigerian Federal government has recently announced the inauguration of a
committee to oversee arrangements for a national conference and despite the
misgivings about the timing and the previous pronouncements of the principal
functionaries of the government, this appears to be a positive response to the
increasingly vociferous clamour for a renegotiation of our nationhood.
A brief
historical excursion is necessary here. The existence of Nigeria as a nation
can be dated to 1st January 1914 when the Governor, Frederick
Lugard by means of a colonial legislative instrument, declared the amalgamation
of the Northern and Southern protectorates. This administrative realignment,
primarily to serve the economic interests of the colonial authorities, was
accompanied by the first proper delineation of regional physical boundaries and
subsequent constitutional arrangements merely reinforced the fait accompli of
an involuntary union of over two hundred ethno-linguistic groups into one
country. Many Nigerians argue that a union thus artificially conceived, sans a
voluntary commitment of its constituent peoples, is an aberration and that the
subsequent dysfunction and strife is an inevitable consequence of this abnormal
conception. More recently, the obvious failures of the Nigerian state to
protect and nurture its citizens and the aberrations of a lopsided federal
arrangement have fuelled a widespread dissatisfaction with the status quo and
strident calls for restructuring and separation.
The
distinction between the abnormalities of structure and function of the modern
Nigerian state must be noted in order to stress the realistic expectations from
a Sovereign National Conference, as the beginning of the nation-building
process rather than a nirvana of nationhood. Corrupt public officials,
avaricious businessmen, inefficient public infrastructure, violent crime, moral
anarchy etc can exist in whatever structural forms emerge from this process.
The fundamental principle must be one of freedom of association and
self-determination as inalienable human rights of individuals and groups. The
SNC should thus be conceived as a two-stage process: firstly to answer the
simple question of whether we wish to live together as one country and,
secondly, under what formal arrangements do we wish to do so.
In my view, for far too long, the believers in a Nigerian nation have been variously timid and arrogant in discouraging these frank discussions about nationhood and in their misguided patriotic zeal, have deemed these legitimate questions either unpatriotic or seditious, even treasonous. This has ensured that the proponents of separation have dominated the landscape of intellectual discourse and the illogicalities of their position have not been robustly tackled. I hope that the recent change of heart by the FG marks the beginning of a true intellectual engagement with 'no-go areas' jettisoned and the power of persuasion, by logical argument, deployed rather than the coercive powers of state action. Just as important, those who see an SNC as a short cut to secession will find that their sincerity will be laid bare when they are invited to present their arguments.
On the issue of sovereignty and possible conflicts with the democratic mandate of the current legislative assemblies, various eminent legal authorities have pointed out that sovereign authority lies with the people and there is no contradiction in the expressed will of the Nigerian people, in the SNC context, being affirmed by the formal instruments of the current legislative assemblies. The democratic deficits of the various post-independence constitutions, mainly caused by the tinkering of the illegitimate military juntas that midwifed them, can thus be overcome.
In my view, for far too long, the believers in a Nigerian nation have been variously timid and arrogant in discouraging these frank discussions about nationhood and in their misguided patriotic zeal, have deemed these legitimate questions either unpatriotic or seditious, even treasonous. This has ensured that the proponents of separation have dominated the landscape of intellectual discourse and the illogicalities of their position have not been robustly tackled. I hope that the recent change of heart by the FG marks the beginning of a true intellectual engagement with 'no-go areas' jettisoned and the power of persuasion, by logical argument, deployed rather than the coercive powers of state action. Just as important, those who see an SNC as a short cut to secession will find that their sincerity will be laid bare when they are invited to present their arguments.
On the issue of sovereignty and possible conflicts with the democratic mandate of the current legislative assemblies, various eminent legal authorities have pointed out that sovereign authority lies with the people and there is no contradiction in the expressed will of the Nigerian people, in the SNC context, being affirmed by the formal instruments of the current legislative assemblies. The democratic deficits of the various post-independence constitutions, mainly caused by the tinkering of the illegitimate military juntas that midwifed them, can thus be overcome.
The mode of
representation in the SNC is also worthy of contemplation for it would be
invidious to merely replicate a duplicate National Assembly by electing
representatives from the current constituencies. It would be necessary to have
true representatives of the people, selected by democratic means, but also
representative elements of the various segments of our society- traditional
rulers, labour unions, religious institutions, youth and student groups,
professional associations, Diasporans etc. Such an assembly should be able to
set its own agenda, invite and receive memoranda from all interested parties
and devise the rules by which the aggregate of opinions will be derived, noting
that a true democratic process ensures that the will of the majority prevails
and the interests of minorities (all kinds) are protected. A wholesome
examination of issues such as the structure of the federating units, concurrent
legislative lists, constituency delineation, land use laws, property rights,
resource control and federal allocation formulas, indigeneship and residency
rights, the interaction between state and religion, population census, policing
arrangements, structure and function of the armed services and paramilitary
organisations etc will inevitably result in a reworked constitution.
My own view is that separatist impulses are not uncommon in most modern societies, even in nations considered to be homogenous and settled, and arise from a combination of fears (of domination and subjugation) and realities of marginalisation, historical animosities, disparities in expectation and cultural norms, as well as an all too human competition for resources. History teaches us that inequitable arrangements held together by force rather than free do not last and free humans usually choose to associate in large and economically advantageous groups if their interests can be thus promoted. Nigeria has both structural and functional deficiencies and an unfettered Sovereign National Conference can remedy the structural faults, start us on the road to repairing the functional defects and kick-start the process of welding 250+ ethnic nationalities into a single nation.
My own view is that separatist impulses are not uncommon in most modern societies, even in nations considered to be homogenous and settled, and arise from a combination of fears (of domination and subjugation) and realities of marginalisation, historical animosities, disparities in expectation and cultural norms, as well as an all too human competition for resources. History teaches us that inequitable arrangements held together by force rather than free do not last and free humans usually choose to associate in large and economically advantageous groups if their interests can be thus promoted. Nigeria has both structural and functional deficiencies and an unfettered Sovereign National Conference can remedy the structural faults, start us on the road to repairing the functional defects and kick-start the process of welding 250+ ethnic nationalities into a single nation.
Dr 'Femi
Adebajo
Practicing
Physician
Milton
Keynes, England
Humans as gregarious animals are imbued with the natural
tendency to come together and function as a society, a community, a nation,
sharing in the attributes of such conglomeration, freely without let, hindrance
or coercion. They laugh together in times of joy, cry together in times of
distress. These are the emotions that make us truly humans. A sovereign nation
is born when, out of civilization, any such populations of human assemblage
pledge loyalty and confide their trust to a governing body which they elect to
oversee to their security, welfare and yes, to their happiness. The ensuing
system of governance thrives and becomes sustainable by the wishes of the
people whose interests it caters for. The referendum to govern therefore is
attributable to the peoples’ wishes and not vice versa. As in the formation of
a family – the core unit of any society - the mating spouses have to choose
with whom to associate in order to become a loving couple; therefrom a
harmonious, cohesive family union sprouts, festooned in love, respect and
admiration. When myriads of such families, characterized by various subunits of
society (designated as variant races, or diverse ethnicities), harmoniously
interact, the resultant population enjoys peace, progress and unity, because
they share in core cultural values innate and native to them; they are much
more tolerant of imported ideologies which augur divisiveness. When attention
is not paid to these factors, dissatisfaction, dissention and man-made
calamities befall such shortsightedness and self-interest; the outcome is
history … uncanny and disastrous, as innumerable, premature tombstones continue
to cry: “Where is the love” unto the deaf ears of indifferent
leadership.
Action they say, speaks louder than words; and no
intellectual is a stranger to, nor could connive at, the ramifications of this
assertion in the context of Nigeria and its often rancorous politics over the
burgeoning years. Is Nigeria sick - too sick to undertake a candid
self-diagnosis to establish its malaise infestation, and follow-up therapy, in
order to proffer a prognosis of progress for future generations? Well, it would
behoove its leadership to start taking a candid stock in itself by carrying out
self-analysis in the light of what perceptions other developed world
communities and well-meaning people think of it. How many Nigerians are truly
and honestly happy at the status quo of Nigeria today? Not unless perhaps your
“elbows are greased” by the ruling elites! Irrespective of any dogmas and
arbitrary territorial limitations, all are born to be FREE – in pursuit of
freedom of thought and of association, and to be HAPPY on Planet Earth, let
alone the hereafter!
The geographic entity christened “Nigeria” a century ago
next year 2014, by colonial masters, over half of which period it unremarkably
self-governed itself, has unfortunately failed to address the core values and
true wishes of its people, and rules by imposing government on its people with
a by-product of disenfranchised, disgruntled elements that steam-off, venting
their frustration at the expense of innocent citizens’ lives. Their system of
electing custodians of their governing bodies is, for all practical purposes,
artificial, relegating them to that often gut-retching, despicable designation
of “third world” time and again, despite their salubrious natural resources and
wealth - which nonetheless end up in the hands of a few! They cannot explain to
the Nigerian public why, say for instance, 1 US dollar which was equivalent to
66 kobo in the seventies is now equivalent to N168 (naira) as of this write-up,
yet Nigeria can still boast of foreign reserve in the billions? Mismanagement
or what? The endless yet avoidable blood-baths that have plagued that entity
since the wake of its self-governance have been a direct reflection of its
astute leadership’s failure to pay attention to the actual wishes of the people
who are supposed to be governed by them. Plausibly, their pattern of
“democracy” could well be defined as “the government of the leaders, and by the
leaders for the leaders and then for the people”!
If Nigeria must emerge to enjoy its enviable position in the
continent of Africa, not just by numbers but by substantive value leadership
and mental reawakening, it must device a new measure for assessing the true
wishes of its people in terms of the type of association that each and every of
its multimillion members wishes to get into, and seek to evoke the latent
values imbued in each of those individuals; sparking a renaissance of some sort
– a different kind of sovereignty.
A rudimentary plebiscite, a pooling of opinions and the
generation of a referendum specifying the type of union or disunion that
majority of its population seek, is a germane approach. Based on the outcome of
such pooling, a governing committee representative of all the pooled
ethnicities (devoid of incumbent legislators) could deliberate to decide on the
fate of Nigeria in a direction that best suits PEACE, PROGRESS, UNITY and
HAPPINESS as it enters its second century.
E. John Agbomi
Physician, songwriter and music producer
Moorpark, CA
One of my great uncles, a man who after my own biological
father influenced my earliest worldview politically, Mr.Gabriel Ginikanwa
Nwachukwu, a history graduate of the University of Ilorin once told me not too
long ago that “they fearfully accepted to be called Nigerians”. His
younger brother, Mr. Eustace Emeka Nwachukwu was an officer in the ‘People’s
Army’ – the Biafran army. Dede Eguzoroibe as we love to call the younger
Nwachukwu like my own dad who served as a recruit in the same army is a die-hard
Biafran. My dad almost removed “Harold” from my names after what he saw as a ‘taking
of sides’ by the Harold Wilson’s led government of Great Britain during the
Nigerian civil war. So one can easily discern what must have shaped my thinking
about Nigeria while growing up. My father spoke a particular Ghanaian language
fluently during his life time because he once lived in Ghana. He learns
languages easily, but while living in Lagos for years, he deliberately refused
to learn to speak Yoruba language because of his misgivings concerning the role
that the Yorubas played before, during and after the civil war. In my brief
stay with him in Lagos (1971-73) as a child, he made sure I had nothing to do
with that language. Bottled up misgivings of a people who feel they are either
not wanted in the enclave called Nigeria or that they are feared and loathed at
the same time for no just cause.
With the scenario above, one will think I will
wholeheartedly support the convocation of a sovereign national conference,
hoping that it will be a clear cut roadmap to recovering what by 1970 looked
like a shattered dream to those of us Nigerians of the Igbo race when war came
to an end with the defeat of Biafra even though we pretended that there was “no
victor, no vanquished”. My very good friend and brother, Barrister Leonard
Ugboaja has been a great advocate of this conference, but we have cautiously
disagreed on this, even though I congratulated him when recently President
Goodluck Jonathan okayed a national confab. Yes, “jaw-jaw” according to
inimitable late former British PM, Mr. Winston Churchill is better than
“war-war”. But that is only when people talk sincerely and conscientiously.
That is only when people talk open mindedly without secret tribal, ethnic and
religious agendas as is often the case in Nigeria. I have often had reasons to
seriously disagree with few famous newspaper columnists in Nigeria (I won’t
mention names) on the kind of tribal sentiments that run through the entire
gamut of their writings. And that is too sad for a country like Nigeria where
even the intelligentsia is not free from the virus of tribalism. Nigeria is yet
to grow up from her tribal childishness. This tribal childishness is the
abortion pill that will kill any good thing that will likely come out of a
national conference. I wish we have come of nationalistic age to talk and talk
like the aged and well informed. I wish, if at all we shall talk, we find a
workable way to stop all those that have been talking before, whose vain talks have
led us to nowhere.
But Aburi 1967 was a talk. It even went into an accord. But
what happened later? One may argue it was a kind of an ad hoc peace-seeking
talk like all the talks on troubled Syria of today. But an agreement was
reached at Aburi between the then Supreme military council of Nigeria led by
the then youthful and naïve Gen.Gowon and the then Eastern region government of
Nigeria led by the equally youthful but better learned in the guile and
brinkmanship of politics, Col. Chukwuemeka Odimegwu Ojukwu. On return to Lagos
after Aburi, the tribal lords and bespectacled bureaucrats in the Gen.Gowon’s
government tore the accord to pieces with their counsel thereby inadvertently
tearing Nigeria to pieces. They may have gloated over the Ahithophelian nature
of their counsel but honestly there was nothing Ahitophelian in a breach of an
agreement. Before we came to grips with the implications of that indiscretion
we lost millions of our beloved fellow country men and women in a war which a
more matured handling of the Aburi agreement could have stopped. We are a
nation full of discordant tunes coming from all quarters. We are a nation known
for our babble of voices whenever it is time to talk. And such babbles lead to
nothing but more confusion. I personally do not want Nigeria to disintegrate. I
do not accept the prophecy of false prophets especially from the Western world
that Nigeria is bound to disintegrate by 2015. I smell rat in even Mr.
President’s concession to a national conference at this time of all times.
He never believed in a national conference. How come he got ‘born again’
about the convocation of a national conference at a time that his purported
2015 presidential ambition is becoming an item too difficult to sell to
majority of Nigerians outside his South-South and South-East regions? It may
also be he has fallen to the bobby trap of these prophets of doom who
expectedly will like to see to the fulfillment of their prophecy so as to give
some grain of validity to their prophetic credentials.
One is not too comfortable with the
timing of the President GEJ National Confab. Less than two years to the 2015
general election. Is this not a cunningly devised instrument of talk-talk
distraction, so that our wily and foxy politicians will go ahead to perfect
their hideous plans for the 2015 election? Is this not the kind of IBB 1986
political bureau debate, one of the broadest political debates ever conducted
in Nigeria? That 17 man bureau led by saintly Silvanus Cookey did their best,
but did it not turn out to be the earliest manifestations of ‘Maradonic
Politics’ in Nigeria? IBB politics in Nigeria taught Nigerian politicians more
than elementary Marchivialism. ‘Maradonism’ in politics is more than
ancient Marchivialism. Like the famous ‘hand-of-God’ - the very origin of
Maradonism associated with the highly controversial goal scored by the
legendary Argentine footballer, Diego Armanda Maradona against the English team
in a 1986 FIFA world cup football match played on June 22, 1986 at the
Estadio Azteca, Mexico city; before you see the scorer, it is goal already. I
do pray that the current national conference is not another delay tactics now
that clauses are being added day by day, like that the submissions of the
conference will be vetted by the national assembly. If we must talk, let the
choice of the representatives be purely based on merit and not on political
patronage as usual. Had it been that we have been sincere with our ongoing
political experiment, with the political
Harold Ikewueze, Pastor
General Secretary, Students Christian Movement
Abuja, Nigeria
For over a
decade, calls for a Sovereign National Conference (SNC) had reached a deafening
crescendo in Nigeria. Proponents of the conference saw it as an avenue to find
and address the key problems afflicting Nigeria since 1914 to present.
The ace constitutional-lawyer, Gani Fawehinmi of blessed memory put it
succinctly in the year 2000:
“...The
concern is to remove all obstacles which have prevented the country from
establishing political justice, economic justice, social justice, cultural
justice, religious justice and to construct a new constitutional frame-work in
terms of the system of government-structurally, politically, economically,
socially, culturally and religiously.”
The above
description vividly captures the salient aspects of injustices that have
manifested in various ramifications, and seem to have been moulded into the
prevalent culture of hate, intolerance, acrimony, ethnocentrism, blood-letting,
restiveness, pogroms, south-north dichotomy, west-east divide, deprivation,
underdevelopment, infrastructural decay, lack of basic amenities, unemployment,
poverty, corruption, criminality, insecurity and state failure. One of the
major issues is the lack of will by the ruling class to get things done, and
rightly. Whenever a national crisis arises, those at the helm of affairs treat
it with infidelity. That seems to be an established pattern.
Here we
are, talking about SNC. The Aburi Conference of 1967 provided an opportunity
for representatives of shades of Nigerian governments to discuss and avert
imminent greater crises which were to follow. But the squandering of the Aburi
Accord by the Yakubu Gowon-led Military junta spelt disaster for the fledgling
independent former British colony peaked by the Biafran War of attrition which
claimed the lives of 3.5 million Biafrans. Aburi was a promise not kept.
The aftermath of the failure to take advantage of it is why Nigeria is still
wandering in the dark, nearly five decades on.
Let the
truth be told. Nigerians are yet to be fervent in self-appraisal. Some of the
scars and repulsive misdeeds of the Nigerian forces are staring us in the face,
but they are vainly wished away. Sadistic orgies, such as the Massacres which
they had perpetrated on hapless civilians in: 1967 Asaba Massacres and Onitsha
Massacre in 1968 won’t go away, until people acknowledge the wrongfulness of
such acts with unreserved apologies. No student who fails their exams can scale
through repeating the same mistakes. Military forces follow orders...whose
orders? – The man behind the mask?
The
eventual triumph of the Nigerian federal forces gave the impression of an end
to all forms of self-determination agitations in the new Nigeria, which has
been unified by the conquest of Biafra. Perhaps, the non-implementation of the
country’s three Rs programme – Rehabilitation, Reconciliation, and
Reconstruction by the very same architects of the programme was the beginning
of the loss of the peace. The three Rs meant to reintegrate the former Biafran
territories into the socio-political life of Nigeria were substituted with
covert and overt marginalization policies of the war-battered region. This
singular act of reneging by the Nigerian government indeed relived the reneging
of the regime from the Aburi Accord, an accord which, if implemented would have
staved off the war and its consequences. And it is perceived that the Nigerian
Military government was unrepentant for its inglorious role in Biafra, and
unwilling to extend a lifeline to the survivors in the beleaguered territory.
Thus, the proclamation of the three Rs merely served as an image-making stunt,
an attempt by the regime to paint a picture of benevolence towards the one-time
enemy territory which bore the brunt of war. The world was once again duped into
believing that all was well. The three Rs programme was another promise not
kept.
Religion
has always been used as a political and ethnic tool in Nigeria to unleash
mayhem on people of different ideologies, different ethnic groups, and
different religious beliefs. It’s been used to pursue an extremist agenda, seek
to domineer and exert political control, continue an expansionist policy, and
hinder the forward movement of the country in civility. A lot of the attacks
principally target a certain ethnic group. Historically, the Igbo are the most
targeted and worst hit. It all started with Jos riots of 1945, in which Igbo
people were attacked. Again in 1953, “anti-Ibo riots broke out in the north in
protest of Ibo domination of social, political, business and military
institutions. Ibos were hunted down and attacked in Kano, 245 were injured and
more than 52 were killed. The southern Yoruba did not participate in the
fighting.” [Ref World].
The
Maitatsine religious onslaught took Northern Nigeria by storm in the best part
of the 1980s. The so-called riots are never dealt with to forestall recurrence,
hence the incessancy. Perpetrators of these bloody riots are never punished. In
its January 21, 2010 editorial “Not Just Jos”, Vanguard writes:
“Any attempt
to bring the perpetrators of the riots to book starts another riot. The
November 2008 riot is the subject of two probes, the Justice Bola Ajibola panel
by the Plateau State Government, which has finished its work and the on going
General Emmanuel Abisoye panel of the Federal Government.
Riots date
a little bit further and in the North appear to be used in furthering religious
hegemony. They have been extended to political disputes and in some instances
poorly managed ethnic relations. Some major riots – riots Jos in 1945, Kano in
1957, most parts of northern Nigeria in 1966, Kano in 1980, Maiduguri in 1982,
Jimeta in 1984, Gombe in 1985, Kaduna and Kafanchan in 1991, Bauchi, Katsina,
and Kano in 1991, Zango-Kataf in 1992, Funtua in 1993, Kano in 1994 and 2000,
Kaduna Sharia riot 2001, Jos 2004, Kano 2004 and Kano 2007, Maiduguri, Bauchi,
Yobe and Kano in 2009. The losses have been estimated at over 100,000 and
property worth billions of Naira.
More than
6,000 people perished in the December 1980 Maitatsine in Kano, which spread to
Yola, Maiduguri, Bauchi and Gombe. Maitatsine sects have been regrouping under
different names since then, wrecking havoc wherever they go.
Rioters
target churches under the cloak of religious differences. When Muslim sects
disagree, they burn churches, and attack non-Muslims. Riots are more political
than religious.
Estimates
of deaths from riots in Jos and other towns in Plateau State since 2001 are in
the 4,000 mark.” [Vanguard]
Needless to
assert that since 2002, another Islamic militant group known as Boko Haram has
stepped into the fray, having a similar ideology as Maitatsine, continuing the
onslaught – bombing, killing, destroying, maiming and uprooting people from
their chosen places of residency. Apart from recruiting locals, Boko Haram is
said to have enlisted the help of Muslim fighters from neighbouring Chad. The
inability of the federal government to protect its people and guarantee them
the modest benefits accruable to citizenship is a promise not kept. Of course,
if citizens feel threatened, unprotected and failed by their State, they
reserve the right to self-determination. There’s no point being a denizen in
your own country!
Bizarrely,
some ethnic groups in Nigeria had supported the wrong cause, thinking that the
weakness of one would be their own gain. So far, they have been proven wrong.
By this miscalculation, they played into an agenda which created hegemony and
reduced the polity to naught. In spite of disloyalty to their Igbo kith and kin
and sabotaging of the Biafran revolution, the Eastern minorities were treated
as a conquered territory alongside their Igbo neighbours. They were made to
suffer the same deprivation as the Igbo. To their chagrin, it was a Nigerian
promise not to be fulfilled. In place of promise, they were rewarded with
abject poverty, environmental degradation occasioned by oil spillage,
underdevelopment, loss of means of livelihood, and so forth. This ugly
situation gave rise to indigenous people’s agitations for resource control and
environmental protection. In response, the government met their demands with
high-handedness and military suppression yielding the likes of Umuechem
Massacre in 1990, 1995 Execution of the Ogoni 9, and Odi Massacre in 1999. All
these culminated into youth restiveness, the militancy and militarisation of
the Niger Delta, sabotage of oil pipelines, advent of kidnapping for ransom and
other criminalities. All these have resulted in a sense of disillusionment in
the region which lent urgency to some forms of discussion and restructuring.
Zaki Ibiam
massacre of 2001 in the Middle Belt deserves a mention as one of those
incidents which occurred when people trusted the word of their government
without realizing it was an ambush.
After the
fall of the apartheid regime, South Africa’s legitimate government set up the
Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) lasting from 1995 to 2002. The TRC
was to underscore the wrongs and victims of the obnoxious apartheid era on both
divides and to effect a healing. South Africa’s TRC was the 19th of
such held across the world; with the slight difference that the Cape Town based
South Africa’s TRC was the first one to conduct public hearings. Despite some
flaws, the exercise was held as a success.
Borrowing
from South Africa, Nigeria, under Olusegun Obasanjo set up the Human
Rights Violations Investigation Commission, 1999.
“The
Commission was mandated to identify the perpetrators of human rights violations
and to recommend accountability measures and means of preventing future abuses.
The original mandate asked the Commission to gather information about four
military regimes that ruled Nigeria from 1984 to 1999. However, the temporal
scope of the Commission was later extended back to 1966; the year of Nigeria's
first military coup after the country had gained independence from the United
Kingdom.” -Harvard University.
According
to the United States Institute for Peace, the commission submitted its report
to Obasanjo in June 2002, but the report was never released officially to the
public. However, a Washington-based NGO known as Nigerian Democratic Movement
and Nigeria-based Civil Society Forum acted on their own accord to publish the
full report to the public. The report found amongst other things, the military
responsible for gross human rights violations, in collaboration with some rich
civilians. One of the recommendations was a compensation for victims of human
rights abuses. As usual, the Nigerian government never blinked. Neither the
military nor the culpable rich civilians were censured by the government. No
apologies were rendered to victims and descendants of human rights abuses, and
no compensations paid. Instead, Obasanjo sent the army again on murderous
rampage in Odi and Zaki Ibiam. Very typical!
Now, with
the acceptance by the President, Goodluck Ebele Jonathan that a Sovereign
National Conference is a road map to a fresh start, one wonders if his
government would be prepared to break the jinx of dishonesty and lack of faith
which those who had mimed leadership roles in Nigeria were known for. Nigeria
is still plagued by a post-war winner dementia propounded by those who tricked
their way into power by pretending to love Nigeria and fighting for her unity,
and have sustained misrule to date, by rewarding their conspiracy since 1966.
It beats logic that a bunch of self-acclaimed patriots would fight for the love
of a country and end up feasting on its misery. As we can see, Nigeria is
remotely and directly ruled by the War victors whose vested interest has
created so much mess that needs thorough cleaning up.
Interestingly,
the colonial Governor-General of Nigeria between 1920–31, Sir Hugh Clifford,
described Nigeria as “a collection of independent Native States, separated
from one another by great distances, by differences of history and traditions
and by ethnological, racial, tribal, political, social and religious
barriers.” (Nigeria Council Debate, Lagos, 1920). [Open Mind
Foundation].
All over
the world, self-determination is the prerogative of every people, and their
will is respected. Nigeria’s Sovereign National Conference must not be
programmed, pre-empted, and delegates must not be selected by the government.
Every possibility must be on the table. Passionate groups should be allowed to
participate in the conference. There must not be a no-go area; else it’s no
longer sovereign. Sahara Reporters reported about an individual, Dr Femi
Okurounmu, a former senator who while speaking on behalf of the federal
government had ruled out discussing the break-up of Nigeria during the conference.
His reason hinged on:
“Those
people who believe in the dismembering of Nigeria are just fringe groups,” he
said, referring to some elements in the Movement for the Actualization of the
Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), the Odua People’s Congress (OPC), Arewa
People’s Congress (APC), Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People (MOSOP) and
other groups. “Nobody came to demand that Nigeria should be dismembered,” he
said. “The goal of the National Conference is greater justice and greater
equity.” – Sahara Reporters
If that
line of thought is the basis for the conference, it means that the outcome of
the conference has already been decided before the conference kicks off,
thereby sealing its fate as another futile exercise in the league of successive
Nigerian governments’ window dressing. It becomes like Obasanjo-era elections
where the outcomes were determined, and candidates assumed the positions they
were vying for before even the votes were cast. In a country where numerous
organized groups as Okurounmu highlighted are asking for self-determination in
form of separation, it raises curiosity as to why he thought that those groups
are fringe, especially being that the groups command large followings in their
respective regions in Nigeria. How do you determine what is fringe? Is it not
by testing its popularity, either via referendum or plebiscite? Why would they
be so afraid of the so-called fringe groups to the extent of denying them a say
in determining their own future? How fringe are the fringe groups? The smartest
approach would be to allow each group a say, and when their region and people
eventually reject their stand through a referendum, that would by implication
strengthen One-Nigeria. This is the only way to give either a legal backing or
rejection to Lord Frederick Lugard’s 1914 adventure in the Niger area.
Nigeria has
become synonymous with a promise not kept. President Jonathan should distance
himself from the hypocrisy of his authoritarian predecessors, and their foot
soldiers. He was given a strong mandate by the people to lead. At this crucial
point in history, he has to trust that the same people whose mandate he has are
itching for their voice to be heard, not the voice of the clique. Failure to
make a wise judgment would reduce the SNC to another jamboree, a waste of
resources and a waste of precious time. That’s sure to worsen the state of the
nation.
George
C.E. Enyoazu
Geochiez
& Gold International
Dundalk,
Ireland
On October 1, 2013, President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan
announced the approval of a national conference and subsequently set up a
committee to study the modalities for the conference and come up with
recommendations on how to go about the conference. The members of the advisory
committee are Dr. Femi Okurounmu (chairman), Dr. Akilu Indabawa (secretary),
Professor George Obiozo, Professor. Ben Nwabueze (now replaced by Professor
Anya O. Anya on health grounds) Senator Khairat Gwadabe, Senator Timothy Aduda,
retired Colonel. Tony Nyiam, Professor. Funke Adebayo, Mrs. Mairo Ahmed Amshi,
Dr. Abubakar Sadiq, Alhaji Dauda Birma, Mallam Buhari Bello and Mr. Tony
Uranta. There are brief bios of many of the members here. It is a typical
Nigerian “committee.” Long on gerontocracy and patriarchy, three women make up
the panel and I imagine the president is taking the title “Chairman”
literally; chairman must be a man. Where are the students? Where are the
young? Why do we need to convene a conference? What is the purpose of the
National Assembly? What do they do? Why can’t they have this conference?
Of course, Nigerians were caught by surprise, and the
ensuing racket from every corner of Nigeria gave voice to the sense that rather
than this being a substantive and proactive confrontation of Nigeria’s myriad
structural, social, cultural and economic issues, instead the populace seemed
largely convinced that this is yet another game as Nigeria’s leaders supervise
the lurching of the country from one crisis to the other.
Yes, there is a new game in town, if you obsess nonstop
about the fate of that mercurial, nebulous, frustrating entity called Nigeria.
It is called the National Conference, not to be confused with that other
seething-in-the-shadows game called Sovereign National Conference. The
Sovereign National Conference as you know is similar to the term reparations,
many people seem to want it, but there is no one alive that can explain it
coherently. And so people nod sagely, make a lot of polite noises, safe in the
knowledge that it will never go anywhere. Those who want reparations for Black
folks desire the asymptote from hell. It won’t happen. The Sovereign National
Conference, and now, the National Conference will not happen, because no one
knows what it means, except that it involves money, revenue allocation,
decentralization of power (and money) to more contiguous states of like tribes,
to be crass. It won’t happen, and President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan knows this.
He just wants to keep greedy Nigerian intellectuals and an ever hopeful ruling
elite busy.
And there has been a surplus of analysis, commentary and
opinion. You read and the head reels from the logorrhea of verbose and overly
scholarly theories about the ideal state(s). It is all so sad. Nigeria
cannot afford this latest distraction, on many levels. My mother has zero
interest in a national conference or conversation; she would like some basic
things, like pipe-borne water and electricity, safety and security. If I
was to tell her about this latest distraction, she would look at me askance,
flustered by what the problem we are now trying to solve is. She
would tell me in a conspiratorial whisper, “My son, I suspect that our thieves
in high places want their own country!” My mother has a good point: How is it
that these leaders who have basically looted everything that is not welded
down, “leaders” who now own everything good in Nigeria can with bold faces
assure us that the next Nirvana will come out of a National Conference or
something equally silly? Why is a national conference our priority right
now? The answer lies in what Wole Soyinka would say: "We asked for
statesmen and we were sent executioners.” Our rulers are now executioners,
gleefully feeding us distraction after distraction while they grin all the way
to the banks of Europe and America.
It is all about priorities. Here we are, the Academic Staff
Union of Universities (ASUU) has been on strike for months, leaving university
students to their own devices at home or wherever suits their fancy, other
unions threaten daily to join them and all we get from the government (and by
the way, the populace) are polite noises and long yawns. Nigeria is not a
serious country. We have a real crisis on our hands, it is called Nigeria and
our intellectuals and "rulers" are prattling on about a national
conference. Every day we are confronted with evidence of profligate spending
and blatant looting from the local to the national level, from the lowliest
clerk to the highest offices of the land, and our priority is a national
conference. It makes no sense. How can these criminals and conmen now start
telling us that once we each get our own country, the looting will stop? What
is wrong with us? As an aside, the constitution of the advisory group, with its
lack of inclusiveness loudly advertises the sense that Aso Rock is not really
interested in a substantive dialogue; they are mostly the deities of
gerontocracy with visions and strategies that belong in the 19th century.
Mr. Jonathan is attempting to lead us through the gift of drunken gab.
Otherwise how do you manage a country without data? Where did our rulers learn
that we want a national conference? Where? Did they do a survey? Did they
subject it to the ballot box? No, some drunks were drinking peppersoup and
someone blurted out, “National Conference!” Et voila, the people have
spoken!
The real tragedy of Nigeria’s circumstances is that there is
a compelling case that could be made for a national conference. As Nigeria has
lurched from regime to democracy, from one structure to the other, the mindset
of a top down heavily centralized and overly dysfunctional government has
remained the one frustrating constant. A structure that truly devolves power to
states or regions, one that grants true autonomy to these satellite entities
makes great sense. But then, the words of the sage, Chinua Achebe rage across
this vision:
“The trouble with Nigeria is simply and squarely a
failure of leadership. There is nothing basically wrong with the Nigerian
character. There is nothing wrong with the Nigerian land or climate of water or
air or anything else. The Nigerian problem is the unwillingness or inability of
its leaders to rise to the responsibility, to the challenge of personal example
which are the hallmarks of true leadership.”
Achebe is right, there is no structure robust enough to withstand the subversion of a failed leadership. Wait, I have another vision: Maybe we should have a National conference so that our thieves can have their own country and leave us alone.
Ikhide R. Ikheloa
Educator, Maryland, USA
Over the last three months, Nigeria has been a
big-mad-house, following the series of controversies that has lingered till
this time. The strike action by the Academic Staff Union of Universities,
followed by the breaking-up of the ruling party, and currently, the call for a
National Conference. Although many Nigerians has expressed their views
concerning this. They said this isn't the right time to talk about National
Conference. They said electricity and welfare are the most vital issue to
address, and not the National Conference. They said how will the president talk
about a National Conference when sixty-three Universities and over one hundred
polytechnics are under locks. They said how can the president talk about a
National Conference with the increasing insurgence in the North, the constant
negative news of bombing and shooting and lynching.
If truth be told, the president is inexperience to handle
national matters. He had fallen out of favour with his godfathers (the founding
members of the ruling parties, PDP). He had fallen out of favour the Nigerian
Youths, Students, Doctors. He's a lamb among wolves in a corrugated bars of
wealth. Confused. Following the controversies surrounding his 'promise' not to
recontest. His chances of coming back as president is very very slim. Amidst
this controversies, my friend had told me some weeks back, that the only option
left for the president is to divide the nation, knowing that he can't come back
as president. We only laughed ourselves into tears over this.
The call for National Conference. There are talks that the
president had been pushed to the wall by some overzealous Igbos who desperately
want the nation to split so they can resurate the death of The Republic of
Biafra. But the president had dispelled those rumors, saying that the National
Conference is a way of bringing the nation together. Now, I ask, how can he
bring the nation together when over five million students, doctors and lectures
are idling away at home. He should dialogue with this people into calling off
their over one hundred days of idleness.
If truth be told, Nigeria is a very big-mad-house where
human lives are been deleted in every thick of the clock. Nigerians are not
united. Let's not hide under the umbrella of religion, asking God to unite us.
We can NEVER be united. This hatred had started way back before the nation's
independence, proceeding to Civil War, and now to incessant killing of the
Igbos or the Christians in the North. I think the National Dialogue will create
a room for asking this very hard questions: is Nigeria a nation or a
Nation-state or just a mere geographical expression, or a Nation void of
sovereignty. I added Sovereign because I haven't seen any sovereign nation
where some citizens had come out in the press to threaten its existence.
Nonso Franklyn Anyanwu,
English Literature Major,
Ahmadu Bello University
Zaria, Kaduna State
Many Nigerians
have thanked President Goodluck Jonathan after October 1st he
agreed that Nigerians have to talk in a conference, otherwise called National
Conference, and dialogue on ways to move the country forward. Others have as
well, reviled him, for agreeing for the conference.
The Federal
Government had hence set up an advisory committee and gave it modules to
follow. Senator Femi Okurounmu was to head the committee and Dr. Akilu
Indabawa, as the Secretary of the committee.
In a countrywide
comment, while marking 53rd Independence anniversary of
Nigeria, Mr. President’s appointed committee, according to him, would propose a
framework and recommend the form, structure and mechanism of the conference.
It, however,
behooves the people not allow the President steal their sovereignty in the
conference, because the people are supposed to decide how and what they want at
the conference, and not to discuss what the presidency wants to be discussed,
with dictates of the modalities of the advisory committee.
It’s good that
Jonathan had said: Our politics should be an art of patriotic labour and
selfless service to the community, particularly by the political elite who are
placed in positions of great trust and responsibility. Politics has its own
high moral principles which abhor distracting and divisive rhetoric.
Therefore, it
cannot be taken as certainty, the comment by an opposition political party in
Nigeria, that it would not take part in the proposed conference, because it
sees dialogue as the constitutional amendment process. It had agreed that such
was already ongoing.
Conversely, the
party purportedly said that this kind of Jonathan’s proposed dialogue can never
be taken as the sovereign type, where stakeholders and opinion leaders in the
country have to sit together, to iron out their woes; instead, a few of their
disgruntled agents in the National Assembly are already doing the work?
Notwithstanding,
Nigerians have to have the depth of the formation of the country called Nigeria
today, before entering into any dialogue. The negotiation has to be that power
has to come to the people and the centre, which controls even the issuance of
driver’s license, is weakened. And the existing political zones instituted in
favour of the country’s politics have to be decentralised for the formation
regional government that would oversee people-oriented ideologies come to play.
With the
devolution of the old eastern region and the politics of state creation, where
the South-East has five state as against the six states or more that other
political states enjoy, is one of the undoing of the Nigerian Government in its
divide and rule way of dealing with any tribes in the country.
The country might
not have had a transparent conference in the past, but it is obvious that the
government has been having conferences against Ndigbo, as the political
equation above suggested, without the government addressing justice in the
country as they relate to economic, social, political and the most important
ones – cultural and religious justices.
In earnest, the
people are supposed to construct a new constitutional frame-work in the
country, but the government at the centre creates policies that make people
thrive in its caprices and whims, and not in the growth of the individuals. To
buttress this point, the government proud that its reserved account is fat,
when the individuals are very poor; what is the cause of this is that the
government has not allowed the people the willpower to develop, but, rather, to
follow the government at its dictates.
It is not a good
idea that the government continues to export raw materials abroad, when it
could have refined it in the country to create job opportunities for the
citizens and regain their sovereign. Professor Ebere Onwudiwe, a political
scientist and economist, who has taught at various universities in the USA., in
an interview with Vincent Kalu, Saturday Sun, Sep. 7, 2013, said inter alia:
“We have the best grade crude oil for refining in the world, the Bonny Light,
which is so easily refined that many countries buy it to help refine their own
bad crude that is very hard to refine.
“They buy large
quantities of Bonny Light to help refine their own oil and we turn around to
import these refined products, thereby creating jobs for people in other
countries... We produce raw material as in the colonial days and we are largely
doing that after 50yrs of independence. How can we be producing the most easily
refined crude in the world and be importing petrol, diesel, kerosene without an
iota of shame. If the world isn't laughing at us they are stupid...”
We can see that
the Federal Government continues to boast of being rich, whereas frustration it
creates among Nigerians in terms of poverty, absence of consolidated human
development and co are alarming, with shock of corruption that has become the
trademark of those that run the government.
In the absence of
sovereignty to the people by the Federal Government, the peoples of the country
enjoy tribalism, which was the result-effect of disuniting people in their
regions and creating of states; like Rivers State was created out of the old
Eastern region in 1967, just to weaken the sovereignty of Biafrans, who took up
arms to defend their lives, from being extirpated from the surface of the
earth, by the rapacious military government of Yakubu Gowon.
There is no how
the peoples of Nigeria can rebuild the foundation again, when the Federal
Government is the one playing the ostrich, destroying love, integrity and
respect for one another, with lucre of power and chicaneries to projects. The
peoples will never enjoy Nigeria, because the government is not reliable with
sacrificial leadership. Perhaps, these are happening in the country, because of
what the Governor General of Nigeria between 1920 – 31 , Sir Hugh Clifford,
described Nigeria as.
Clifford said
that Nigeria is “a collection of independent Native States, separated from one
another by great distances, by differences of history and traditions and by
ethnological, racial, tribal, political, social and religious barriers.”
(Nigeria Council Debate. Lagos, 1920). This description, perhaps, again,
compelled (then) Lt. Col. Gowon on November 30, 1966 to fire an Ad Hoc
Constitutional Conference.
It is very
imperative that the different peoples of the country are given their
sovereignty while Nigeria remains one, because before the amalgamation of the
country in 1914 by the cheap-wealth-seeking European colonialists, the people
in this amalgam were controlling their different fates in their different
kingdoms.
But since these
ethnic combinations, the government has been self-centered, bigoted and
troublesome to the fate of the collective Nigeria. To make this point home, the
now late Dr Ramsome-Kuti, as the former Director of the Centre for
Constitutional Governance, substantiated this fact, according to a file by a
group regarded as Niger Delta Congress.
The human rights
activist, Dr. Ramsome-Kuti, said: “Long before 1914, when Nigeria was
amalgamated, the present space was not a void. People, empires and modes of
production existed.
“The far North
was ruled by Hausa Habes, which was the home of many tribes, Hausa Magajiya,
Abyssinian or of coptic stock. From 900 to 1500 AD. The Hausaland was besieged
by political forces from Bornu, the Berbes, Tuyaregs and Arabs. The most
formidable was the 1804 Jihad which swept the Habeland, imposed an oligarchy,
seized the people and the land until the advent of British rule.
“The Yorubaland
had the Oyo empire, which triumphed until about 200 years ago, we also have the
Bachama, Birom, Angas, Tiv, Kaje, Nupe, Ijaw, Igbo and numerous others. The
merging of the Southern and Northern protectorates in 1914 was accidental so
also was the name, Nigeria given to its people.
“It is important
to say that British rule was not forged on negotiations with Nigerians, but
negotiations with ethnic nationalities. So also there was no “Nigerian
position,” but ethnic nationality positions.
“The 1960
independence, to our knowledge, was preceded by a curious finding conducted by
Henry Willink supported by Gordon Hardow, Philip Mason, and JB Shearer, which
compiled a report on July 30 1958, now known as the Willink Commission of
Enquiry...”
Now, those
concerned have to read cautiously the diverse positions of nationalities at the
conference to enable an emancipation of their sovereigns. To get it right at
the conference, the government must allow the notion that Nigeria has never
been a country of a people with one ideology, culture and tradition.
And this is why
the Federal Government is using the two alien religions – Islam and
Christianity – as tools to subject Nigerians to its administrative convenience,
but to the detriment of the different peoples.
The Federal
Government polarised these unfamiliar religions in two zones – Islam for the
north and, Christianity for the South, as a way to unite the peoples. But upon
all that, the cultural, religious, social, and linguistic differences of the
tribes continue to show that the peoples need their sovereign ideologies to
sooth their vitality as tribes.
To get this
conference right, the Federal Government must eschew deceitfulness, fraud,
egocentricity and self-centeredness, so that the many grievances and
accusations on each other in Nigeria, would be expelled into
annihilation.
Odimegwu
Onwumere
Poet/Writer
Port Harcourt,
Rivers State
Sovereign national conference, as the name implies, is the
convening of recognized entities in a nation to address socio-economic issues
for nation building purposes. The sovereign qualification carries serious and
huge legal weight implication as such meeting carries with the ability to
change the course of such nation from the existing path. For a sovereign nation
like Nigeria, calling for a sovereign national conference seems absurd but not
illegal, especially if it originated from the legislature. One of the greatest
legal underlinings of SNC is the option of member entities to seek
self-determination which is a double-edged sword that could slash at either
side by way of secession or continued association.
A series of meetings
between member entities of old Sudan paved way to the split of the nation into
two via self-determination provision which is embedded in sovereignty. Same
with Eritrea that parted way with old Ethiopia. Pakistan did with old India.
Chief Gani Fawehinmi, in 2000, opines that “the primary duty of the sovereign
national conference is to address and find solutions to the key problems
afflicting Nigeria since 1914 to date.” Further, he says “the concern is to
remove all obstacles which have prevented the country from establishing
political justice, economic justice, social justice, cultural justice,
religious justice and to construct a new constitutional frame-work in terms of
the system of government – structurally, politically, economically, socially,
culturally and religiously.” In essence, SNC attempts to arrive at for
acceptable or agreed terms of relationship between cohabiting entities amongst
each other within the common territory that they all shared for mutual and
peaceful survival. An absence of agreed and acceptable terms of association
spells doom for such society.
Sovereign national conference (SNC) is perhaps the most
vital channel to nation building, especially for nations with broad
multiculturalism like us still struggling to stand on its feet. It could be
continuous periodical session i.e. elected legislatures. Or it could be
designated conference. The common denominator is that when initiated, both
carries with it strong legal implication. Of recent, Nigeria had one –
designated - under the military regime that produced the 1999 constitution.
This paved way for the existing democratic system of government that Nigerians
enjoy today. It ended the military expedition in the public governance. That
shows the weight of SNC. Unless there is probable cause to reconvene a
designated SNC, it is usually a one-and-done adventure. However, it is
pertinent to state that the continuous form – such as National Assembly (NASS)
- will infinitely continue to convene as long as the democratic system of
government is practiced.
Discussing SNC, based on Nigeria’s existing socio-economic
status, one would be compelled to see SNC as a no-brainer. Nigeria still lacks
a functioning national system despite the human and natural resources it is
bestowed with. There are two distinct economic classes in Nigeria: the upper
class, and the lower class. The middle class is of no significant size. It is
extinct. Of the three recognized layers of government, the center – FG – holds
voluminous powers. It is so massive that it controls virtually everything in
the nation. Without the FG, several states will collapse in a week. In terms of
political participation, some notable regions, ethnics, certain demographics,
etc. claim marginalization of one sort or the other. Couple with this is the
security breakdown fuelled by nascent internal crises by rebels and freedom
fighters. One interest group vouched to make the country ungovernable for the
sitting president. The whole system is down. It is fast-revealing that this is
mere cosmetic cohesion. The questions from citizens’ mouths are ‘when will it
get better, and how?’ The vast human and natural resources abound, but it does
not translates to national development. There was leadership vacuum.
Politicians abound yet no end in sight to the despicable conditions.
The current administration headed by President Goodluck
Johnathan formed recently a committee to draw up a modality on national
conference. It gave the committee a blank check on matters to be discussed at
the conference. At this time, there is no sovereign qualification to it.
However, no issue is above discussion. Potential questions are: what if
sovereignty of the entities come up at the conference for discussion? How would
the recommendations of this conference be implemented from the legal point of view?
If legal grounds are attached to it, will the current administration honor
them? Isn’t this a political suicide for the sitting president should the
conference be concluded before 2015 election? All these and numerous others are
still vague to the masses. Some citizens saw this as a political ploy to
distract citizens from current burning issues. Others see this as part of the
long-abhorred South-East and/or South-South agenda. Or even that it is the hand
writing on the wall for the predicted split of the country on or before 2015.
It is too early to judge, but these issues deserve surgical dissection before
they hit us in the face.
The idea of a national conference or dialogue is not bad in
its right. It is the timing that becomes suspect. So is its historical trend as
well as the existing variables. At press time, the country is in bad shape,
both politically, and economically. The unemployment level is astronomical.
Healthcare system is absurd. Thousands and thousands are dying of lack of
family supports. To them, the Nigeria dream is dead. It is either you are rich
or you are poor. The middle class is extinct. For the working class, it is get
rich or die trying. A more robust and cursory examination of this poor
condition would reveal that the nation is in a coma. Citizens, regions,
ethnics, tribes, nations, zones and any applicable classifications in the
enclave are hungry for power to survive.
However, would it be applicable to go on rounds of debates
on ‘when, how, what, where, who’ with an individual plagued with terminal
chronic hunger? A rational approach would have been to resuscitate the dying
corpse first. Then he would have strength and patience to understand the
complexities of his problems. An adage
says: a hungry man is an angry man. Another, in Yoruba land, says nothing has
priority over hunger. It is deathly. Nigerians are hunger for quality standard
of living. It was not because of national conference that basic amenities were,
and still lacking. At 53 years, Nigeria, despite all the massive resources and
brains, is still struggling with 20th century innovations. A simple national
unique identifier does not exists yet it wants to fight terrorism, and allocate
its resources efficiently. How? In Nigeria with ‘citizens’ holding duplicate passports?
It would be rather beneficial to ensure that an atmosphere where certain
efficient infrastructures are in place first before such conference, be it
sovereign or conventional, is embarked on. Then we can sit at the round table
with no fear of suspect of each other on grounds of hunger for power as power
will become a common commodity soon afterwards. The absence of sociopolitical
hunger dictates a society foundationed on conducive atmosphere for such
deliberations and discussions. Then, politics will be less lucrative scheme for
upward economic mobility. God bless Nigeria.
Taohid Animashawn
Student
Student
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