
In this Interview with JOHN ALECHENU,
the spokesperson for the Northern Elders Forum, Prof. Ango Abdullahi,
speaks about the forum’s position on a number of issues at the National
Conference
A document being circulated by
northern delegates at the National Conference contains so many demands.
Some of which include calls for the scrapping of the amnesty programme,
do you support this?
Obviously, it makes sense for government
to provide protection for our land and sea resources from degradation
and irresponsible oil exploration and exploitation by foreign companies.
But when you look at the political intention of government trying to
say that certain areas of the country
should be treated in a special
manner in contrast to other parts of the country that have similar
concerns and problems then it doesn’t make sense.
Over the years, there has been a lot of
politisation of the oil and where it comes from. This is what led to a
lot of these policies that appear discriminatory against other parts of
Nigeria.
Why do you say so?
I did an exercise recently and people can
go and verify by looking at the budget of 2014. If you add the approved
budget of the six South-South states for 2014 and add the budget for
the Ministry of the Niger Delta and add the budget of NDDC and add the
provision for the militants, the total amount of money that will be
spent in the South-South in 2014 is N2.6tn against the N2.4tn for the 19
Northern states; N2.6tn in a place where only 12.6 per cent of the
population of Nigerians live against N2.4tn for the entire 19 northern
states. The discrimination is quite obvious if you look at the provision
of the constitution where it says no group of people or section of the
country should unfairly corner the resources of the country to the
exclusion of the rest. You will see the debate in terms of general
principles, if you look at the constitution of this country. Every part
of Nigeria has a right to be developed.
There is a provision for even development
of the country. This is not what is happening now because of these
policies that appear to discriminate against some sections of the
country. Take for example, the budget which allows for about N40bn for
militants’ rehabilitation in 2014 while the grant given to Borno State
or is it whole of the North- East to cope with the consequences and the
crisis arising from the insurgency is N2bn. This is so patently clear
that these policies are deliberate and of course they will not promote
peace for the country. But we are hoping that you are referring to the
government that is one that is seeking to share things fairly and
equitably so that Nigerians can see themselves as their brother’s
keepers.
What about the position that the revenue allocation formula be revisited?
That, I agree with completely. This over
centralisation of functions is obviously detrimental to a federal
arrangement of the type we would want to see. If you go back to the
early part of our independence, what we had were regions and each region
had its own constitution and in fact, this is what I would prefer for
the restructuring of the country into some zones or whatever. We should
have a federal constitution and state constitution and a lot of the
functions that the Federal Government is carrying out now are functions
that should be performed by the local governments and states. What is
the business of the Federal Government dealing with primary education?
The Federal Government is involved in primary education; it is also
involved in secondary education and these are the responsibilities of
the other tiers of government. The only area where I would say that the
Federal Government should have exclusive responsibility is the military,
customs and immigration. These are the key areas that all the
federating units should be able to say yes; we should have a central
control somewhere. But all these other functions, including the police
should be on the concurrent list so that the state or whatever the
federating units are willing to partake in them can do so.
… And the offshore/onshore debate?
The onshore/offshore issue
is against any international practice and of course it is against the
laws of the country where the resources of the country designated as
underground and some in the sea are owned by the entire country not by
any section of the country. This has been an irresponsible decision
which was taken by the National Assembly some years back and it must be
reversed.
http://www.punchng.com/politics/northern-demand-at-confab-reasonable-ango-abdullahi/
No comments:
Post a Comment