Unity Without Understanding - A Logical Fallacy

Admin Fields
Highlight on homepage: 
No
Top Item: 
No
By Nnaziri Ihejirika

Those who follow my writings and comments on twitter, Sahara Reporters and Africa Eagle are well aware of my mantra: "Nigeria, nay Africa, cannot progress without holding a National Conference".

Some have been upset by my insistence on this point, in particular those who envision a conference where different groups complain and drag up shameful aspects from the past that vested interests would rather see silenced. Others who are focused on their personal "unity" and "power to the people" projects may - understandably -be concerned that the reopening of old wounds and the potential realignment of 'progressive' forces along tribal-religious fault lines may spell doom for their 'vision'. Regardless of the reason for avoiding the debate, opponents of independent African nations holding sovereign national conferences are proving to be as blind to the real issues that plague the continent as the leaders they take joy in castigating, reprimanding and upbraiding.

I will use Nigeria - as I often do - as my case study here, but the lessons and suggestions are equally applicable to any African country that has not had a citizen body gather to answer the age-old question that has bothered many a nation - Quo Vadis (Where Do We Go)?

Ultimately, such a conference would identify and propose implementable solutions to national issues starting with the question: "what does it mean to be Nigerian"?

In answering this question and addressing the issues that divide us, we will be better able to understand our brothers and sisters from various tribes and religions.

So which issues facing Nigeria would be solved by a National Conference - assuming its recommendations are signed into law?

The answer is "all of them".
Seriously. Let us examine the main issues that would be addressed by this potential conference:

Fears of marginalization/domination: This fear led to the counter-coup of 1966, as well as the ongoing security concerns in the Niger Delta and North.

Federal Character/Quotas: This is also known as the lack of meritocracy and has caused a decline in the quality of education, healthcare and industry in the country.

Structural Defects in the Federation: Whether you are pro-unitary or pro-confederacy or pro-federacy, I think we can all agree that the existing mishmash of unitarism and federalism does not work.

Nature of Government: Do we want an executive that rules by fiat (a bastardization of the American system it was supposedly modeled after) as exists today or a governing parliament whose membership accurately reflects the tribal diversity of the country?

Injustice: The civil war discussion has never been fully had, including allegations of genocide, forced starvation and illegal acquisition of properties; Ogoniland and much of the Niger Delta is an environmental nightmare while leaders feed fat; Boko Haram and the lack of opportunities for Nigerian youth and the list goes on.

"Wait a second", you may be saying. "What about all the constitutional conferences and how was Nigeria formed anyway if we never sat down at a table?"

We didn't.
Let us examine history.

Pre-Berlin Conference: Until the Berlin Conference of 1884-85, there had been no concept of nations outside of the tribes that existed in the area known as Nigeria today. For that matter, this pattern was repeated throughout the African continent. Ergo, the concept of 'Nigeria' would have been non sequitur. Simple enough.

Post-Berlin Conference: After the Berlin Conference when the British 'right' to the area now known as 'Nigeria' was recognized, the Royal Niger Company was formed. It was in fact this consortium that spent the next sixteen years identifying the tribes and territories to be amalgamated into what became the Southern and Northern protectorates of Nigeria. Again, no one consulted the Igbo woman or the Hausa man or the Tiv woman.

Amalgamation: This much-maligned event took place in 1914, not because the Yoruba man said he didn't like the idea of requiring a passport to visit his Fulani bride. No, it happened because the two protectorates were proving difficult to govern from an economic standpoint. Again, no one consulted the local population.

Colonial Conferences: The value of these conferences is hard to gauge. The nationalist leaders, for all their intellect and patriotism, were not necessarily concerned with the details of citizenship and governance. They just wanted the yoke of British rule removed. Warning signs of future conflicts based on utterances by certain party leaders were missed by many in their haste to be independent. After all, it is on record that the north would not have wanted a union with the south if they were economically viable (Governor-General's Report, 1958).

Post-Colonial Constitutional Conferences: All of these were convened by the military regimes in power who appointed mostly self-seeking political and economic jobbers to the conference. The result was a series of incoherent and bland documents, one of which we still unashamedly call a constitution today.

I should note that only the Aburi Conference in 1967, constituted by young military officers, comes close to being called a 'national conference'. If a hastily convened conference at the height of the nation's division can have such a profound impact nearly 50 years later, how much more one today in this age of social/citizen media!

Ergo, we can conclude that there has been NO independent gathering of Nigerians in a democratic setting to sit down and outline their differences, unifiers and chart a clear path forward.

THE CONFERENCE
I won't go into what I think the composition of the conference should be - those are details that an independent planning committee, made of a combination of unions, political parties and professional groups will determine. Suffice to say that for this conference to be successful it is important that all sessions are open-door with both local and foreign observers given full access to the proceedings. In addition, the resolutions of the conference should be subject to a referendum which every Nigerian will be able to vote in. The plan, if approved, should be passed into law and incorporated into the constitution as amendments.

If people want to gripe, moan and complain, let them. It is part of the healing process. Once everyone has done that, tackling the issues raised earlier can then be approached with an aware, understanding mind by everyone in the room and will be easier because there will be no pussyfooting or dancing around sensitive issues

Such an open, independent approach to nation building will do more for Nigeria's future growth than any "let's oust the present corrupt government in exchange for another one which may be just as bad" project. Nigeria needs surgery, not a facelift, as much as some of us may want to hasten the process and get to the utopic future of our dreams as soon as possible.

Early in the last decade, the late Beko Ransome-Kuti said "without a Sovereign National Conference, the future of Nigeria remains threatened and monumental pitfalls await the country."

Events of the last 12 years have proved Dr. Kuti right. Right now, our future is threatened and we have evidence of the monumental pitfalls that await us if we proceed along the path we are on.

There can be no real unity without understanding the reasons for the disunity, and there exists no better way to identify and propose the solutions required to heal our ailing continent than the individuals of these countries voicing their fears, concerns and hopes through a gathering that pays no heed to tribe, gender or social stature.

Only a sovereign national conference provides this avenue. In agitating, let that be our cry. A joint cry as an oppressed people. A cry for our voices to be heard.

Comments
6 comment(s)
Post a comment

SNC

Re: Ibrahim below, the writer is clear in his position that the SNC is about nation-building, not only resource control. I think the biggest obstacle to a SNC is the fact that some regions of the country see it degenerating into a fight over resource control which could see them "lose out". If that's all such narrow-minded people take away from the SNC, then yes it makes no sense to hold a conference. In which case we have 2 options:
1)Continue to wander aimlessly as a nation and as a people
2)Wait until the oil from the Niger Delta dries up in 25-30 years and then sit at the table of nationhood.
3)Hold a protest similar to the #OccupyNigeria ones and demand a SNC where EVERY group has a seat at the table.

DEMOCRACY IS NOT FOR THE WEAK

THE CURRENT CONSTITUTION HAS GIVEN US LOTS OF RIGHTS. THEY ARE RIGHTS THAT ARE THERE FOR THE TAKING. FOR EXAMPLE THE RIGHT TO CHOOSE THOSE WHO WILL REPRESENT US, THE RIGHT OF NIGERIANS TO LIVE WHERE EVER THEY WISH AS FREE CITIZENS, THE QUARANTEE OF SAFETY AND SECURITY FOR ALL NIGERIANS. A CABAL IS DENYING US THESE RIGHTS AND WE CANT EVEN FIGHT THEM TO HAVE WHAT IS OURS HOW THEN DO WE CONVINCE OURSELVES THAT WE CAN HANDLE A NATIONAL CONFERENCE.
WE HAVE A SYSTEM THAT WE DO NOT INSIST MUST WORK INSTEAD WE ARE TREATING OUR UNION AS A REGION OR TRIBE FORCING ITS WILL ON OTHERS. THE CABAL HOLDING US HOSTAGE IS MULTI ETHNIC AND MULTI RELIGIOUS AND JUST AS THEY HIJACK OUR DEMOCRACY THEY WILL DO THE SAME FOR THE SNC. THEIR OVERRIDING OBSESSION IS THE PROTECTION OF THEIR PREVILEDGES AND IT DOESNT MATTER HOW OUR UNION IS CONSTITUTED THEY WILL MAINTAIN THEIR ADVANTAGE UNTIL WE UNITE TO SAY NO.

Where are the labor leaders??

NLC, Tunde Bakare , TUC, Shehu Sanni & all labor leaders, this is an opportunity if you really care about nigeria. we need mass protest to force the govornment to acept National Conference. any other protest you are calling is nonsense, rubbish, stupid, and is for your own interest and not for the interest of nigeria. you people don't protest what will benefits nigeria. a police man killed a driver in onitsha, none of you labor leaders & rulers have call for mass protest against the police. you people are STUPID

Thanks

Again & Again, the labor readers or what ever they call their self should begin to organize mass protest to occupy nigeria. this is the only way nigeria can be truely occupy in truth and sincerity for progress to florish. any other protest apart from this is rubbish and complete rubish. is fuel subsidy more important than Sovereign National Conference? if they are really concern about nigerians this is a great opportunity. maybe if they don't do it MASSOB will seperate nigeria. remember, Mend was seeking resource control for niger delta, bokoharam is seeking religious right or sharia law for the north. MASSOB is for BIAFRA and this is we can't negotiate. if the nigerian state continue to wobble we will leave the union

Harnessing People Power

Most opponents of a SNC (or such gathering) have selfish interests, on both sides of the PDP/everyone else divide. The new arguments against the SNC are "how will such a body gather?" or "who will be in it?", instead of "what shall we discuss?"
As the comment above succinctly discerned, if we could organize mass protests on short notice against a single economic issue (fuel price increases), why doubt the capacity of the nation to convene a National Conference? Do the citizens of those countries who have done it have two heads? If we don't think we can convene a National Conference, then we have no hope.
The impact, not the logistics, of a National Conference is what should be debated.

OCCUPY NIGERIA!!!

For a "mess of porridge" NLC, Tunde Bakare , TUC, Shehu Sanni and millions of short sighted Nigerians organised "Occupy Nigeria" rallies that were re-enacted around the globe. That is exactly what the fuel subsidy issue was, when compared to the more daunting national question facing Nigeria.
If these cheap publicity seekers mobilize with the same fervour the national conference that the thieves in power do not want to see the light of day will be convened within three months. However, it is a cause too noble for their little minds, besides the puppet masters behind them just might cut the strings if they dare....