State Of The Nation: Implementation Of 2014 Confab Report Is The Only Way Out Of The Doldrums! (2)
HARRISON MADUBUEZE

This article is a continuation of my conversation on the need for the Government of the day to dust-up the 2014 National Conference Report of the Goodluck Jonathan’s administration.
I have decided to keep the discourse on the same title to enable readers follow-up. In my last episode, I promised to highlight the basic resolutions on the POLITICAL RESTRUCTURING OF NIGERIA! as contained in the Confab Report.
Friends, permit me to digress a little. I would like to say NO THANKS! to politicization in this country. I say this because, if not for politics, the immediate past administration under Goodluck Jonathan was able to lay a foundation for solutions to the hydra-headed problems facing Nigeria.
I have concluded that the phrase “Government is a continuum” is relative or better put, it is a mere academic or theoretical statement and never so in practice. The cheerless aspect of it, is the fact that the circumstances becomes worst if we have an entirely different political party in power. For us to make meaningful progress into a sustainable and prosperous future, we must as a matter fact, embrace the aforementioned phrase both in theory and practice, and fix Nigeria!
Nevertheless, I would like to urge the present administration to think of “Nigeria First” and dust-up the 2014 Confab Report and move to work immediately. Pretending over this, will undoubtedly leave us at a case of “one step forward, two steps backward”.
In the main and as promised, in my last publications on this issue, below, were the Confab recommendations on RESTRUCTURING.
In Unit 5.12, page 277, report reads inter alia;
POLITICAL RESTRUCTURING AND FORMS OF GOVERNMENT
1. FEDERALISM
Conference agreed that Federalism denotes a political arrangement in which a country is made up of component parts otherwise called Federating Units. Thus in a Federation, political powers are constitutionally shared between the central government and the federating units.
These powers basically, represent the functions of each tier of the federation. Conference also noted the inherent advantages of a federal system of government in a heterogenous society such as ours.
These include: – the sustenance of unity in diversity; – expanded opportunities for the various peoples, including minority groups, to participate in the governance of the country; thus minimizing the fears of domination and/or marginalization among minority groups. It also and promotes broad-based development. Consequently, Conference unanimously resolved as follows:
1. Nigeria shall retain a Federal system of Government;
2. The core elements of the Federation shall be as follows:
i. A Federal (Central) Government with States as the federating units; and ii. Without prejudice to States constituting the federating units, States that wish to merge may do so in accordance with the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended). Provided that:
(a) A two-thirds majority of all members in each of the Houses of Assembly of each of the States, in which such merger is proposed, support by resolution, the merger;
(b) a Referendum is conducted in each of the States proposing to merge with 75% of the eligible voters in each of those States approving the merger;
(c) the National Assembly, by resolution passed by a simple majority of membership, approves of the merger; and
(d) States that decide to merge shall also reserve the right to demerge following the same procedure and processes for merger.
Provided that: (a) A two-thirds majority of all members in each of the Houses of Assembly of each of the States, in which such merger is proposed, support by resolution, the merger; (b) a Referendum is conducted in each of the States proposing to merge with 75% of the eligible voters in each of those States approving the merger; (c) the National Assembly, by resolution passed by a simple majority of membership, approves of the merger; and (d) States that decide to merge shall also reserve the right to demerge following the same procedure and processes for merger.
2.
On REGIONALISM, Conferees said;
At independence in 1960, Nigeria had three regions and by 1964 had added a fourth region. All four were autonomous but subordinated only to the Federal Constitution. Then came the Military in 1966 when aspects of the Federal Constitution were suspended leading to the creation of 12 states, (six in the north and six in the south) in answer to political exigencies including the protection of minority rights;
More states were created to satisfy the yearnings of various ethnic nationalities which fear domination by some others. Nigeria now has 36 States plus the Federal Capital Territory.
In spite of this subsisting arrangement, there continues to be demands for the creation of more States.
After extensive consideration of Regionalism/Zones, Conference decided as follows:
(i) The States shall be the federating units; and
(ii) Any group of States may create a self-funding Zonal Commission to promote economic development, good governance, equity, peace and security in accordance with the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended).
…. to be continued next on STATE CREATION!
Yes, the conferees never left out the issue of STATE CREATION. In fact, like I said earlier, you really need a copy of this document and you will agree with me that, we have a solution.
What we need is to continue urge the Government to do the needful regardless of political party because, like I always say, at the end, we all desire to bequeath a better and stronger Nigeria, to generations yet unborn.