FG contravenes constitution by funding local govts–Darah
Darah
Prof.
G.G. Darah, a former lecturer, Department of English, Obafemi Awolowo
University, Ile-Ife, is a Delta State delegate to the ongoing National
Conference. He speaks with FRIDAY OLOKOR on the recommendation of the Committee on Devolution of Powers among other national issues
The National Conference ends in few weeks, can you give us a brief overview of what has been done so far?
When I reflect on the work we have done,
it is obvious that we have made more progress than we even anticipated.
We had a lot of hiccups at the initial stage which were a consequence
of what I call “bottled up prejudices.” This was expected with many
politicians as delegates who have fought themselves over the years on
ethnic and regional grounds. In the first three weeks, these were drama
that we were witnessing. In the process, we began to learn from one
another; people have become more sober now and they are ready to listen
to one another. Listening is actually the tonic; it has changed the mood
of the conference. This is in addition to the overall general pressure
from the Nigerian society that had doubts. I think this has also
motivated members of the conference to do something better than late
General Sani Abacha’s conference of 1995, and also avoid a breakdown
like ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo’s conference. As you can see,
history is working and people are conscious of those pitfalls. So,
people want to overcome them so that they can enter a more positive page
in Nigerian history. The third factor is that President Goodluck
Jonathan, the engineer of this conference, does not seem to have what I
describe as a “satanic agenda.” If it is, it will be reflected every
day. He has kept aside having poured out what he asked us to deal with
on March 17, 2014. If you add all these factors together, it is
understandable to know that in terms of quality of output, this
conference has made a lot of progress than the other two that I referred
to earlier. You said we have few weeks to go, yes! We have taken the
report of the committees, one after the other and we had 20 of them. The
Committee on Environment gave details of devastations of the oil wells
and oil fields, which is the one that hits the headlines. Look at some
of our Nigerian soils, for a thousand years, we have not fertilised
them; the soils are tired. Look at the description of Eastern Nigeria,
there is a book in which I read that the soil erosion in Eastern Nigeria
is a thousand years old. Now you have gullies and where such exist, you
cannot plant. That goes to show why most Igbo elite are always mobile;
they cannot have a stable life in the East no matter how gifted they
are. They need a peaceful and protective Nigeria. They will not be
interested in breaking Nigeria up because the Nigerian market is their
asset. So, each of the committees is throwing up new challenges.
You said the conference was
devoid of a “satanic agenda” but some critics will disagree with you
that the composition of the conference itself was a grand plan by the
government to make sure that its interest was fully represented.
The federal and state governments are
well represented; when you are asked to pick who is going to represent
you, you will not pick a moron, you will pick one who will effectively
represent you. Those chosen by the federal and state governments are not
mediocrities. What is more important is: Do they have the credentials
that can match what the conference requires? There is no way you can
avoid certain Nigerians. If we had used election to select the members,
as was the case before the Abacha’s conference, those with money would
have won the election. What has happened here is a mixed grill. There
are people here who are friends of the President. He will not put his
adversaries there; otherwise, the conference will capsize in advance.
The governors also nominated competent people because each state has at
least one interest that needs to be defended. Like in my state (Delta),
the governor (Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan) selected three of us. If it was
purely a matter of ethnic consideration or friendship with the governor,
I will not be selected. Although the governor and I were school mates, I
am a critic and a journalist and so I cannot be considered as one of
the men who sing the slogan of the Peoples Democratic Party. He had
other people to choose, but he did not. The people of the ethnic group
which I belong, the Urhobo, were happy. They even wrote to the governor
in advance that I was their number one if he wants to choose people. But
I am not representing the Urhobo people alone because Delta State sent
me to the conference. I am representing other people in the state, oil
workers are there; Shell, Chevron, and I am representing the interest of
all these people.
Generally, what do you think about the representation?
I think that the selection is an
improvement on the previous ones. In 1994/1995 when Abacha convened his
conference, the country was split into two; Abacha vs NADECO and the
South-West states refused to take part. So the best brains stayed back.
The South-South states came because they had some issues; at least they
got 13 per cent derivation. In 2005, there was meritocratic
consideration because the nine people that we brought- Chief E.K. Clark,
Gamaliel Onosode, two generals and seven professors- were a solid team.
We brought the conference to a premature close when the conference was
not in our favour. It is the delegates that are showing the quality of
the conference now. This is however a mixed grill.
What do you think about the
reports on issues of resource control and degradation of the Niger Delta
as championed by the likes of Ankio Briggs?
I foresee a hot debate at the plenary. I
foresee controversy and antagonism because we are going to the heart of
the matter. It is not for nothing that Delta State has the slogan “The
Big Heart”. It is not for nothing that Edo State calls itself “The
Heartbeat of the Nation”. All these slogans are reflective of their
self-image in terms of the quantum of contribution they make to the
national treasury. There are 10 of such states; nine are oil producing
then Lagos. Only those 10 states contribute the money that Nigeria is
using now and they are cheated, exploited, marginalised and even
insulted by those who do not know, including those who are beneficiaries
of the inequality in the federal arrangement. All these states that are
victims of Nigerian oppression are represented in the conference and
they are there to mount a liberationist campaign: Change this law so
that we can feel that we are not a colony. Those issues will naturally
arise. We had already played the micro drama in my Committee on
Devolution of Powers. After self education and the quality of data that
came in the process, many began to admire and respect each other. The
Northerners were hostile to anything on derivation or that the exclusive
list should be relaxed to give more powers to the states. Every federal
arrangement in the world has two tiers of government: the central and
the state or province or region. It is awkward in Nigeria where there is
a federal, state and local government, and all these are entrenched in
the constitution; as such you cannot touch them unless you reverse the
constitution. For that to be done, you must go round the 36 states’
Houses of Assembly.
How does your committee think this anomaly can be corrected?
First, we agreed that the local
government will not be a tier of government. While we were deliberating
in our committee, those in the Committee on Political Restructuring and
Forms of Government had already decided so by defining the tiers of
government and who should share money at the federation account. We did
not abolish the local government. We are only rescuing the Federal
Government from an illegality. The constitution states that local
governments shall exist in the country but the Houses of Assembly will
determine their duration, election and funding. Meanwhile, since 15
years of democratic rule, the Federal Government has been funding the
local government as it used to during the military era. The Federal
Government is even disobeying the constitution. Logically and legally,
it should be a straight forward fight. There are many states in the
country that are economically unviable and therefore do not even qualify
to exist as a state. They exist because of what we call “feeding bottle
federalism.” Those ones have so many local governments as vessels which
they use monthly to collect money from Abuja. Now, when you say that
local governments will no longer go to share money in Abuja, it is a
major political decision that will please some parts of the country, but
will injure some other parts. No matter how radical you are in
defending the interest of your region, you cannot prevent the negative
impact it will have in terms of provoking crisis.
What is this idea of Cultural Central Bank that you have suggested? Can you enlighten us more on it?
I coined that phrase to represent an
area of my own involvement and competence. I am a cultural scientist, or
you can call it cultural folklorist but it is a science. We gather
cultural materials, analyse them using certain scientific criteria. I
have headed the Nigerian Folklorist Society for eight years. I am also a
member of the Nigerian UNESCO Oral Cultural Heritage and have some
knowledge of the vast wealth that culture has and reproduces which
orthodox economists like the Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi
Okojo-Iweala, may not have or will just take for granted. And I also
know that there are some countries in the world that are surviving
without minerals.
Unlike oil, culture does not pollute. I
used that phrase to draw attention to the vast wealth in culture and if
you have a country with over 170 million people, then you have potential
singers, dancers and drummers. What this requires is to map it. So if
you have 5,000 festivals, how many should be made annual? Government
should make laws and provide loans so as to attract foreign investment
into the country. That is what Botswana and Kenya are living on. In
music, names like Fela, Timaya, P-Square, have made global headlines. If
a band is set now, a lot of people will benefit from it in terms of job
opportunities. Stories make the world: from simple stories in the
Bible, there are over two billion people in Christianity today. People
are being paid millions from film making today. When I made my
presentation at the conference, if I had illustrated with a Nigerian
example, they will say it lacks value, so I illustrated with a Greek
folktale about Icarus and Didalos. Icarus was the father while Didalos
was the son. They both said they wanted to fly to visit the sun. So,
they used feathers with wax on their hands and they took off. The heat
of the sun melted the wax and the feathers fell off and a result, Icarus
fell and died. In America today, “The Journal of the American Academy
of Science” is called Didalos. “The Journal of Aerospace Science” is
called Icarus. The Americans name their journals after Greek myth of
5,000 years ago. I have categorised them into sub-sections; stories,
music, fine arts, furniture, hair dressing and embroidery. The rebasing
that the Minister of Finance did the other time did not include the
cultural sector. In my paper, I said the Federal Government should put
in N50bn yearly for collectors and translators and they will employ two
million Nigerians in that field.
Does that suggestion of N50bn still stand?
I have increased it because I have more
knowledge now. I have said that if the government can give N200m to
Nollywood, which is only one branch of the cultural production, it
should invest N200bn in the collection of these Nigerian tales.
2015: Security agencies probe northerners movement
Security
agents have launched a probe into the movement of northerners to the
South-East and the South-South regions of the country with a view to
find out if it has any link with the 2015 general elections.
A security source, who spoke with select journalists in Abuja on Saturday on condition of anonymity, said the probe was as a result of the clamour by the northern region to win the presidency on the platform, especially on the platform of the All Progressives Congress.
He said this was the issue being raised with their investigation of some 486 northerners arrested while travelling in a convoy of 33 buses to Abia State on June 16.
He said, “There were allegations that the All Progressives Congress wants to move thousands of eligible voters from the North-West and North-Eastern part of the country to the South-East and South-South in the next few weeks where they could register as eligible voters ahead of the Presidential election in February next year.
“Many of the 486 people who were arrested and detained had confessed to having been mobilised by political party chiefs to relocate to the South and integrate into the civil populace ahead of the 2015 polls.
“The plan, according to some of those interviewed, is to increase the voting strength of the opposition political party and secure the mandatory 25 per cent of votes cast in those states and thereby enhance its chances of winning the Presidential election.
“When one considers the fact that the constitution requires that for a person to be declared winner in a Presidential election, he must score at least one quarter of votes cast in 24 states in addition to scoring the highest number of votes cast nationwide, it becomes clear that a party which does not score this mandatory percentage in the 11 states of the South-East and South-South will be in a very precarious situation.”
He also said that the investigation team was also said to have gathered that the arrested travelers could be just one tranche of thousands of others who he said might have moved earlier into different states and registered during the continuous voters registration exercise in six states.
“Most of the arrested persons said they had never travelled out of the North and were told that arrangements had been made for their accommodation and feeding for the next six months,” he said.
The source added that an unnamed leader of the group who is from one of the states in the North-West had confessed during interrogation that the logistics for the night journey was provided by an unnamed former member of the National Assembly.
According to our source, “Several funds transfer by politicians into accounts of those arrested are currently being investigated while security agents have been put on alert to mount surveillance on those who had moved into the South much earlier.
“The nation’s law does not recognise migrant voters. Everyone is expected to vote in his or her normal place of residence. This development is worrisome as it portrays the desperation of our politicians.”
But the National Publicity Secretary of the APC, Lai Mohammed, defined the accusation as after thought.
He said those arrested in the first place with fanfare on the allegation that they were members of Boko Haram but were later released quietly, should be apologised to,
Mohammed said government should take its time to read the reports by the US Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Linda Thomas-Greenfield, that Boko Haram was being sponsored or funded by those opposed to the President Goodluck Jonathan administration.
He said, “You see, government and those responsible for the arrest of these people should apologise to them in the first place. If this number of Boko Haram could be arrested once or at any at giving time, it would be a major breakthrough.
“When they were arrested, it was with fanfare but they were later released one father the other after they were wrongly labeled. Don’t you think these set of people deserve apology after they were wrongly accused?
“Government should stop shadow-chasing. If they do not have any clue on Boko Haram, they should own up. Let them go and read what Thomas-Greenfield said in the report. Enough of this shadow-chasing.”
A security source, who spoke with select journalists in Abuja on Saturday on condition of anonymity, said the probe was as a result of the clamour by the northern region to win the presidency on the platform, especially on the platform of the All Progressives Congress.
He said this was the issue being raised with their investigation of some 486 northerners arrested while travelling in a convoy of 33 buses to Abia State on June 16.
He said, “There were allegations that the All Progressives Congress wants to move thousands of eligible voters from the North-West and North-Eastern part of the country to the South-East and South-South in the next few weeks where they could register as eligible voters ahead of the Presidential election in February next year.
“Many of the 486 people who were arrested and detained had confessed to having been mobilised by political party chiefs to relocate to the South and integrate into the civil populace ahead of the 2015 polls.
“The plan, according to some of those interviewed, is to increase the voting strength of the opposition political party and secure the mandatory 25 per cent of votes cast in those states and thereby enhance its chances of winning the Presidential election.
“When one considers the fact that the constitution requires that for a person to be declared winner in a Presidential election, he must score at least one quarter of votes cast in 24 states in addition to scoring the highest number of votes cast nationwide, it becomes clear that a party which does not score this mandatory percentage in the 11 states of the South-East and South-South will be in a very precarious situation.”
He also said that the investigation team was also said to have gathered that the arrested travelers could be just one tranche of thousands of others who he said might have moved earlier into different states and registered during the continuous voters registration exercise in six states.
“Most of the arrested persons said they had never travelled out of the North and were told that arrangements had been made for their accommodation and feeding for the next six months,” he said.
The source added that an unnamed leader of the group who is from one of the states in the North-West had confessed during interrogation that the logistics for the night journey was provided by an unnamed former member of the National Assembly.
According to our source, “Several funds transfer by politicians into accounts of those arrested are currently being investigated while security agents have been put on alert to mount surveillance on those who had moved into the South much earlier.
“The nation’s law does not recognise migrant voters. Everyone is expected to vote in his or her normal place of residence. This development is worrisome as it portrays the desperation of our politicians.”
But the National Publicity Secretary of the APC, Lai Mohammed, defined the accusation as after thought.
He said those arrested in the first place with fanfare on the allegation that they were members of Boko Haram but were later released quietly, should be apologised to,
Mohammed said government should take its time to read the reports by the US Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Linda Thomas-Greenfield, that Boko Haram was being sponsored or funded by those opposed to the President Goodluck Jonathan administration.
He said, “You see, government and those responsible for the arrest of these people should apologise to them in the first place. If this number of Boko Haram could be arrested once or at any at giving time, it would be a major breakthrough.
“When they were arrested, it was with fanfare but they were later released one father the other after they were wrongly labeled. Don’t you think these set of people deserve apology after they were wrongly accused?
“Government should stop shadow-chasing. If they do not have any clue on Boko Haram, they should own up. Let them go and read what Thomas-Greenfield said in the report. Enough of this shadow-chasing.”
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