Bakare Tasks Buhari on Restructuring, Corruption
The President Muhammadu Buhari-led All Progressives
Congress (APC) government has been tasked to demonstrate the audacity and
courage required to restructure Nigeria; stop corruption, set national goal and
move the country forward.
Making the call on Sunday during a state of the nation
broadcast held at the church premises titled: 'Looking into the Future with
the Eyes of Faith', Senior Pastor of the Latter Rain Assembly and former running
mate to President Buhari, Pastor Tunde Bakare, also urged the leadership to
adopt the Singapore model of fighting and conquering corruption.
While he underscored that a national vision must
galvanise and inspire corresponding action among the citizenry, including
individuals, families, communities, corporate organisations, Bakare said the
biggest indicator of the absence of a national vision is the preponderance of
sectional agitations.
He highlighted agitations by the Afenifere
Renewal Group (ARG) and the Oodua People’s Congress (OPC) in the South-west to
the push for secession by the Independent People of Biafra (IPOB) in the
South-east, from the terror unleashed by Boko Haram in the North-east to the
ugly development involving the Shiites in the North-west, from the violent
attacks by herdsmen in some parts of the North-west, especially the wanton
destruction of lives and property in Southern Kaduna, and in the North-central
from where it has spread down to the South, and the militant quest for resource
control in the South-south.
Identifying the absence of true federalism as
fundamental flaw in Nigerian federal system, Bakare, who is the convener of
the Save Nigeria Group, said though the "hues and cries for restructuring
in our nation appear not to have been well received by this present government,
it is the way to go.
“Why must we restructure? We must
restructure to correct the flaws in our federal system. A federated state is
defined as 'a territorial and constitutional community forming part of a
federal union’.
"Our founding fathers agreed that Nigeria
would be a truly federal state with limited and specific powers allocated to
the federal government and residual powers inherent in the regional
governments.
"This agreement was the social contract upon
which the Nigerian state was formed, but this social contract was broken on May
24, 1966, through the Unification Decree by Gen. J.T.U. Aguiyi-Ironsi’s administration,
and that was the day Nigeria died.
He lamented that the 36 federating states are
unable to generate significant internal revenue, unable to overcome economic
challenges and facilitate accelerated economic growth.
"These 36 states should in fact become
districts headed by mayors within the framework of six geopolitical zones,
because they will be stronger and more productive within a zonal structure.
As zonal structures, they can pool resources to
build transportation infrastructure; as zonal structures, they will empower
local governments to bring effective governance directly to the people.”
Eulogising the government for some achievements
recorded in the anti-corruption war, particularly with the recent searchlight
beamed on the judiciary, the clergyman-turned politician said Nigeria is
"still fighting corruption-our nation's perennial archenemy-with kid
gloves."
"It is very disheartening that allegations of
corruption remain rife in our country, even against key office holders in the
present government. In my search for solutions to our ingrained corruption, I
recently came across the Singapore model of fighting and conquering corruption
in a book by Jonathan Tepperman titled: 'The Fix: How Nations Survive and
Thrive in a World in Decline.'
"From being dubbed 'Sin-galore' after
independence in 1959 to being ranked the seventh least corrupt state in the
world by a 2014 Transparency International report, Singapore’s upward
trajectory provides a compelling contemporary case study (Tepperman 106-107).
He implore President Muhammadu Buhari to borrow a
leave from Singapore leader, Lee Kuan Yew, who took personal responsibility for
stemming the tide of decay, focusing his campaign squarely on corruption which
then, as in Nigeria now, was part of their culture.
"As Nigerians know too well, winning an election
is one thing, governance is another kettle of fish-but we cannot, in good
conscience, continue to make excuses. Thirty-five year old Lee Kuan Yew did not
only win but was, in the same vein as this administration, immediately
confronted with multi-faceted threats to Singapore’s stability, including
severe under-development, widespread poverty and ethnic divisions,” he noted.
No comments:
Post a Comment