The Unlearned Lesson of Plateau Emergency Rule
 

By

 

Bolaji Akinyemi

Former Minister of Foreign Affairs

 

culled from GUARDIAN of June 8, 2004

SINCE the proclamation imposing an emergency on Plateau State, the mass media has been awash with comments and commentaries. They have been very illuminating and have shown that Nigerians still care a lot about this country, that people from all strata of society still believe that their views matter sufficiently for them to take the trouble to put pen to paper or appear on television screens. And that is to be regarded as a saving grace. The end is in sight when the thinking people who form the critical mass of the citizenry think it is no longer worth it to care enough to express a point of view.

The comments and commentaries have been so many that it will be invidious to draw attention to some of them and yet I cannot help but mention the highly touching and personal angle introduced by Mrs. Funmi Balogun-Alexander, Plateau Emergency Rule: Another View; ThisDay, May 29, 2004. It may not assuage the pains but I will share with her a more harrowing tale involving a distinguished female jurist. She was born in Ibadan and come from a distinguished and ancient Ibadan family. She went to school in Ibadan, studied law and settled down to practise there. She got promoted to the bench in Ibadan, Oyo State and progressed through the ranks until it was her turn to become the Chief Judge of Oyo State. Then it was discovered as if it was hidden for over 30 years, that she was married to someone from Osun State. She was denied the appointment. And that would have been the end of the story if not for the fact that vacancies on the Appeal and Supreme Courts are filled on zonal rather than state quota basis. And yet at one time, Ogun, Oyo, Osun, Ondo, and Ekiti states used to be one Western region. And just in case any of the readers of this article and that of Mrs. Balogun-Alexander is about to jump into conclusion that it is a Yoruba disease, let us remember the brouhaha over whose state quota Mrs. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, the Minister of Finance, is filling. The argument is between those who believe she is filling the quota of her husband's state of origin. The President and the Vice President should be congratulated for ensuring that the First Lady and Second Lady are not from their husbands' states.

I also found Rev. Father Matthew Hassan Kukah's Plateau: State of Emergency As Metaphor, The Guardian, Sunday, May 30, 2004, instructive and ingenious. It was a treatise on where our rulers both colonial and post-colonial took the wrong turning off the road.

Is there anything new to be said

" Should it have come as a surprise that there would be a feeling of hostility towards indigenes of the new state by the indigenes of the old state

The way forward

Excessive drive for state creation has led us to the stage where we now have the dichotomy of indigene-settler as the mother of all evils all over the place. Father Kukah is absolutely right that the superimposition of the Christian-Moslem dichotomy as an analytical concept is misconceived. Mrs. Balogun-Alexander's example and that of the one, which I made reference to, and several others have nothing to do with religion. We have not got to the state where senatorial zone or local government zone matters. I was once involved in a situation where we had to select a candidate only to be told that the most capable and eminent candidate came from a ward which had already produced a vice-chancellor.

The elite is responsible for the agitation for state creation. They are the beneficiaries as they eye the offices of the Governor. Chief Judge, Permanent Secretary etc. The peasant farmer in Adamawa or the fishermen in Epe or the cattleman in Bauchi could not give a damn about state creation. Yet, when things fall apart, these ordinary citizens become the victims. They are the ones who get slaughtered in these orgies of violence.

There are aspects of the past we cannot unravel. State creation is one of those aspects. Even if Nigeria is restructured, and we have the superimposition of zones on the states, that will still not address the issue behind this crisis. The political elite will have to get together to address this issue on a policy level.

Governor Bola Tinubu, who is turning out to be one of the most innovative governors around, seems to have addressed his mind to this problem and came up with a solution on a limited scale. Tinubu has a few non-Lagos indigenes in his cabinet; he has two non-Lagos indigenes as special advisers and a couple of non-Lagos indigenes as High Court judges - two as former chief judges - and hundreds in the civil service. Tinubu deserves a lot of praise for this and not the brickbats he has received from so-called Lagos indigenes whose roots can be traced to some Nigerian hinterland. Tinubu has sent a political message to the residents of Lagos that he would minimise the "settler-resident" dichotomy in Lagos. But Tinubu alone cannot achieve it as a national goal. Reciprocity should come into play and it must go beyond token appointments as special advisers as I am aware that some governors have appointed non-indigenes as special advisers and they have not been heard of since then. I recall that in 1999, after the first elections, some non-Lagosians came to speak to me to lobby Tinubu to appoint at least one non-Lagosian into his cabinet in order to cement the NADECO links. My reply was that I would do so provided one Governor from their zone would reciprocate. I never heard from them again.

At the Council of State level, there should develop a consensus that governors should give one or two cabinet posts, a few posts in the judiciary, and a few board memberships to non-indigenes. This will send a thunderous message to all, troublemakers and peacemakers, an antidote has been found to the settler-indigene syndrome.

Symbolism matters in human affairs. Symbols speak volumes to listeners. Perception often matters more than realities on the ground. If government policies create the impression that it has taken sides on this issue, government would only provide an environment, which would nourish the continuation of the crisis. It is in this light that I think it is to be regretted that the state of emergency was limited to Plateau State. A similar message should have been sent to the self-righteous avengers of their kith and kin.

And while we are at it, let us be careful that we also do not deliberately or otherwise create the consciousness that the posts of Chief Judge and Minister of Federal Capital Territory are reserved. One of the politically astute appointments by Prime Minister Abubakar Balewa in 1960 was that of Alhaji Shehu Yar'Adua as Minister of Lagos Affairs. Prime Minister Balewa was simply saying to the country that the Federal Territory of Lagos was the symbol of all Nigerians and he would appoint a non-indigene of Lagos to symbolise that.

If a state of emergency can be declared based on sectarian killings in a local government, then which state is safe in a multi-ethnic nation

In the absence of goodwill and there has been a considerable shortage of goodwill and plenty of bad temper under the current dispensation, any local tin god can engineer sectarian disturbances in any ward of any local government, and you have all the ingredients for proclamation of emergency from a hostile Federal Government`

I am afraid we have not heard the last of the capacity for political mischief making of Section 305 of the 1999 Constitution dealing with the power to declare a state of emergency. In a political system, where there was collusion between the Federal and state governments to dissolve all elected local governments and postpone local government elections for two years, where is the guarantee that come 2007, there could not be collusion between Federal and state governments (including National and State Assemblies) to declare a national state of emergency and extend the life of all elected institutions

This is the first unexplored minefield