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Presidency revokes all C of Os in Abuja

LogoDaily Independent Online.         * Wednesday, July 07, 2004.

Settlership: A challenge to the Nigerian State

By Mike Ikhariale

[email protected]

There is the overwhelming evidence that the idea of Nigeria is still quite distant and somehow alien to most people despite their being “trapped” within its jurisdiction. They continue to identity themselves as “indigenes” and “subjects” of their respective tribes and ethnic nationalities while others are regarded as intruding aliens or settlers. The position of our Constitution (until 1999) was that every Nigerian has the status of a citizen and that remains valid wherever he finds himself within the territory of Nigeria. That simple juridical postulate has proved to be too difficult for our people to accept, governments and individuals alike, and has contributed in no small measure to the ruination of the Nigerian Dream upon which the federal republic was built, namely, unity in diversity. Rather than “unity and faith” as the original motto of the nation prescribed, we are growing apart in “disunity and despair” as we now wear the divisive labels of “aliens” and “settlers”, depending on where we find ourselves in the country.

It is either the colonial administration that turned over sovereignty to the emergent Nigerian State in 1960 could not eliminate the strong affinities that subsists between the colonialised people and their hitherto existing pre-colonial ethnic nationalities or that the nationalists that took over power from them mischievously repudiated the sovereignty of the new state and reverted to their ancestral nationalism in their myopic hope of carving out monopolistic empires for themselves from their various tribal cocoons.

The truth however is that both suppositions cannot be valid in the face of the new political realities that gave meaning and signification to the idea of Nigeria as a sovereign entity. It is a proposition too plain to be contested that when individuals get their citizenship from the same source, none can claim superiority over the others. Illusion aside, the only legitimate linkage between a Nigerian and the state is the status of citizenship. Unless we say that the concept of Nigeria has gone legally otiose and out of relevance, then, there is no other valid classification that can be made about any Nigerian citizen without running the risk of defamation, more so, when it is a fact that the highest honour that the state can bestow on any national is that of citizenship.  That is why the President is often described as the “first citizen”. How come that some people have been making some arcane distinction between themselves and other Nigerians as “indigenes” and “settlers”, respectively?

In the good old days Nigerians moved far and wide to trade and school freely. While people belonged to ethnic groups for cultural and sectarian renewal, they saw themselves first and foremost as Nigerians, able to settle anywhere they liked. But today, not to belong to one ethnic group or the other is to open oneself to severe vulnerability within the society as the official mechanisms for citizens’ protection have all broken down. Notably, the ethnic card has been very helpful for mediocres in government who shamelessly play it to obtain what ordinarily was beyond their ability and the result of that is the progressive devaluation in the quality of services from government. The same can be said about the nation’s educational sector where the quota system and allocation of spaces along nepotistic ethnic lines, euphemistically called federal character, have killed merit thereby leading to a generation of mediocres.

The 1999 Constitution which was foisted on the nation by the retreating military seems to have added additional impetus to the settler/indigene nonsense by making it constitutionally mandatory for certain positions to be filled in accordance with the appointee’s indigeneship. This is a veritable recipe for national catastrophe and what is happening now is merely the harbinger of greater evil ahead. It should have been anticipated that good-for-nothing political scavengers would latch on this indigeneship clause to foment trouble if only to keep others from the national cake. We must here congratulate Governor Tinubu of Lagos State who bravely broke out of this myopic bondage by hiring people according to their competences once they are Lagos residents, instead of their ethnicity.

I recall that when the President said recently that anyone who cannot die for Nigeria is not fit to be a Nigerian many people derided him. But I think he is quite right. The only missing element in the equation is that Nigeria does not seem to be capable of avenging the death of its martyrs simply because the state itself is in trouble. The prevalent of the indigene/ settler dichotomy is one of the unmistakable symptoms of a failing state.

The strength of Nigeria ought to be in her diversity. Many nations that had played the racial cards paid dearly for it and had wisely abandoned the divisive ideology. America has since discovered that it became a better nation since it embraced cultural diversity and today, the man who argued that a person should never be judged according to his race but his personal qualities, Martin Luther King, is a national hero. Same with Nelson Mandela who transformed apartheid South Africa into the “rainbow nation” that it has become today. Unfortunately for Nigeria, we continue to have tribal bigots as political leaders who in turn fuel ethnicity.

Why did the military introduce divisive criteria as bases for disbursing public positions and recklessly ventured into sectarian indiscretion like joining the Islamic OIC, thereby undermining the secular nature of Nigeria? My explanation is they were naively unable to appreciate the philosophy under which the Nigerian state was brought into being. It also served their "divide and rule" stratagem because they were usurpers of power. Even now it still only those with strong military ties that are in power. So, instead of strengthening the federation by inclusive polices, they have embarked on a misguided unitarism that actually promote divisions and mutual hatred amongst the various peoples of Nigeria. Another explanation is that the idea of “indigenes” and “settlers” in postcolonial Nigeria is a painful reflection of the fact that the Nigerian state is yet to gain subjective acceptance before the people and that the vacuum is being filled by the various pre-colonial tendencies as well as the failure of contemporary leadership to prove its relevance.

It is a shame that after forty years of nationhood, we are still debating who and who is a Nigerian and what rights do they have. For a country that fought a civil war to preserve its corporate existence, such ideas ought to be by themselves treasonable, but when the government and its officials continue to allocate resources on the basis of ethnicity, religion and other petty considerations, then, it is good time to question the viability of Nigerian state. 

As a federation, Nigeria is broken into states and citizens are at liberty to live in any of them without any sense of inferiority. Accordingly, residents of a particular state may claim certain privileges that are directly derivable from their higher responsibilities of sustaining that state over non-residents but such privileges must not be allowed to derogate from the fundamental rights that are constitutionally attributable to all Nigerians irrespective of where they come from. The idea of “state of origin” or “indigeneship” as official classifications is clearly counterproductive, if not discriminatory. We should rather be talking about “state of residence” instead of “state of origin” because we may never know the origin of our origins since the whole of humanity has been proved to be of a common source.

The present constitution is fundamentally flawed as an instrument for nation building and until it is replaced by a more forward looking one, our attitude to the Nigerian Project may never be positive. The case for a Sovereign National Conference thus speaks for itself and it is only a government that is playing the ostrich that would refuse or postpone it. The dichotomy of settlers/indigene is a challenge to the Nigerian state and the earlier we tackle it the better all.

 

 
 

Copyright� 2002. All Rights Reserved Independent Newspapers Limited
Block5, Plot 7D, Wempco Road, Ogba, P.M.B. 21777, Ikeja, Lagos State, Nigeria.
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