In the New Year message delivered by President,
he said: “I have kept a close watch on the on-going debate about
“Restructuring”. No human law or edifice is perfect. Whatever structure we
develop must periodically be perfected according to changing circumstances and
the country’s socio-economic developments. We Nigerians can be very impatient
and want to improve our conditions faster than may be possible considering our
resources and capabilities. When all the aggregates of nationwide opinions are
considered, my firm view is that our problems are more to do with process than
structure”.
Nigeria is bigger than every single citizen and
therefore, the interests of Nigeria should be prioritized above anybody’s
interest. This is not the time to play ego games or the game of ‘who says what
happens’. This is the time to think about growth and development of Nigeria
which is also the growth and development of Nigeria citizens. Foundations of
Nigeria must be revisited before any positive change can take place.
Restructuring is the answer.
Meanwhile, the southern region
and the middle belt have reacted to buhari’s statement on restructuring. This
Day of January 2, 2018 has the full report.
The president had in his New
Year broadcast Monday said that the problem with Nigeria was not with its
structure but its processes.
However, disagreeing with the
president’s stance on the thorny issue, the Southern and Middle Belt Leaders’
Forum insisted that restructuring was the only way to go to save Nigeria from
imminent collapse.
The group said: “We cannot
become a productive country under a 1999 Constitution which keeps 68 items on
the Exclusive List including mineral resources which abound all over the
country but which the states whose governors are constitutionally vested with
authority over land cannot touch.
“It is a call for the return to
a Nigeria that worked under federalism as against the failing state we are
becoming under a unitary structure.
“Nigerians must organize, mobilize and work
towards building an inclusive and productive country in 2018 using all
democratic and peaceful means.
“It is a year to battle for the
soul of the country by the forces of federalism and upholders of a suffocating
unitary system. “May victory be on the side of
those who seek the progress of Nigeria.”
Continuing, the forum said the
president could not resolve Nigeria’s problems by either running away from it
or ascribing it to the wrong source.
“Unfortunately that is what we
are doing as a country by playing down our crisis of ‘structure’ while on a
wild goose chase about ‘processes.
“This is akin to a man going to
Benin City while driving towards Benin Republic. The faster he runs the farther
he is away from his destination.
“The truth of the matter is
that our nationhood crisis has peaked and there are no further opportunities to
guarantee opportunities for our citizens no matter the good intentions of
leaders or even unrealistic promises packaged to offer them false hope.
“In 1983, when the Shehu
Shagari administration was overthrown, its budget for a country of 80 million
people was $25 billion. Thirty-five years after, the Buhari government has just
proposed a $23 billion budget for about 180 million people!
“The above clearly shows that
there is no way out of our systemic crisis except we resume productivity which
was our hallmark in the years that we practiced federalism as an entity.
“We have exhausted all
possibilities of a rentier and sharing economy and all that is left is
unemployment, hunger, gnashing of teeth and conflicts among nationalities over
shrinking opportunities,” the forum added.
It noted that the National
Bureau of Statistics (NBS) reported a loss of four million jobs in 2017 with
millions of those employed working without pay for several months.
“On the home front, life is
becoming short, nasty and brutish as death and violence are now common place in
the hands of AK 47-wielding herdsmen, armed robbers, kidnappers and enraged
spouses.
“It is a time when we should be
having national introspection to know where the rain began to beat us, how to
dry our clothes, and ensure that we are no longer exposed to rainfall.
“Unfortunately, we are not
addressing the cause of our affliction and only trying to rationalize our
needless failure, passing the buck and running from the solutions to our
problem.
“We are in a period where empty
platitudes are being offered our people instead of concrete assurances on
reasoned prescriptions,” the forum said.
Nwodo, who also spoke with
THISDAY on the phone, said that he was yet to read the president’s speech but
with Nigerian’s main source of income from crude oil threatened, government
must unleash Nigeria’s potential by devolving powers to the states.
He warned that the world’s
demand for oil was receding and that it might even further decline
substantially in the next seven years, with implications as the main stay of
the nation’s economy.
“Unless we begin to develop
alternative sources of revenue our country will cease to exist. The only way to
avoid this is to release our potential by devolution of powers.
“Until the government is nearer
to the people and the people take their destiny into their hands the country
cannot progress.
“We never agreed to be a
country where the federal government will be a united policeman for the whole
country. We are not running a federation, we are running a unitary government
and we cannot escape this,” Nwodo said.
Musa made the call in a phone
interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) Monday.
The former Kaduna governor said
the problem with Nigeria has always been leadership rather than its structures,
explaining that the regional system failed because leaders were pursuing a
secessionist agenda.
Although he aligned with the
president’s position that the process of governance needs to be improved upon,
he faulted the economic system being operated currently.
Musa said the economy was in
the hands of the private sector, hence the impoverishment of the masses, and suggested
the restructuring of the economy to ensure that the government plays a greater
role.
“The economy should be
restructured. What we are operating now in which the economy is in private
hands cannot help us.
“We should restructure the
economy so that government can play a greater role for sustainable
development,” he said.
The former governor agreed that
saboteurs were behind the current fuel crisis and urged the government to
address the situation.
He also called on Buhari to
form a government of national unity in the New Year for all-inclusiveness,
adding that Nigeria would be better off in 2018 if people subordinated personal
interests to the public interest.
In his reaction, the publicity
secretary of Inter-Party Advisory Council (IPAC) in Lagos State, Shakirudeen
Olofin, commended the president for restating the government’s commitment to
the fight against corruption.
He, however, advised that the
president should ensure that all pending corruption cases are speedily resolved
to serve as a deterrent to others.
Olofin urged Buhari to be
decisive in dealing with the fuel crisis, especially persons suspected to be
responsible for the situation.
Culled from This Day
Back on the issue of restructuring, some politicians and activists have also disagreed with President Muhammadu Buhari on the same issue he raised in his New Year broadcast against restructuring. Never the less, Chairman, House of Representatives committee on information, Hon. Abdulrazak Namdas says the National Assembly is committed to ensuring that the voice of Nigerians prevails in the current calls for restructuring. If President Buhari cannot respect and work towards meeting the needs of Nigerians, then he is not worthy to be called a president.
Brought
to you by Olive Chinyere Amajuoyi
Powered
by Samweld Nditah
No comments:
Post a Comment