Former President Olusegun Obasanjo on
Monday accused some state governors in the country of living like
emperors while demanding sacrifice from the citizens for Nigeria to
survive the prevailing hard times.
Obasanjo spoke at the inaugural
conference of the Ibadan School of Government and Public Policy at the
University of Ibadan, where he was the chairman on the occasion.
The two-day conference has as theme, ‘‘Getting government to work for development and democracy in Nigeria: Agenda for change’’.
The Chairman, Board of Governors of the
ISGPP, who is a former Secretary-General of the Commonwealth, Chief
Emeka Anyaoku, and a professor of international history and politics,
John Evans, also delivered addresses among other speakers.
Obasanjo said when he became President
in 1999, he recognised corruption as a major impediment to the
development of the Nigerian state.
This, he added, informed his decision to
set up the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and the Independent
Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission to fight the
bane.
He, however, said after he left,
corruption returned to Nigeria with a vengeance, draining billions of
dollars from the nation’s economy that could hardly afford to lose even a
million dollars.
He said while Nigerian leaders demanded sacrifice from the citizens, they lived in opulence.
Obasanjo added, “Leaders, who call for
sacrifice from the citizenry, cannot be living in obscene opulence. We
must address these foundational issues to make the economy work, to
strengthen our institutions, build public confidence in government and
deal with our peace and security challenges.
“We must address the issue of employment
for our teeming population particularly for our youths. Leadership must
mentor the young and provide them with hope about their future as part
of a process of inter-generational conversation.
“Nigeria is a country where some
governors have become sole administrators, acting like emperors. These
governors have rendered public institutions irrelevant and useless.
“Is there development work going on in
the 774 constitutionally-recognised local government councils, which
have been merely appropriated as private estates of some governors?
“Some governors have hijacked the
resources of the local governments and this has crippled the development
of the local government councils in the country. The National Assembly
must also open its budgets to public scrutiny.”
Obasanjo accused the local government
chairmen of embezzling the remaining council funds after the governors
would have diverted a sizable portion of the funds.
He stated, “Of course, when governors
take their money, the chairmen of the councils take the balance of the
money, put it on the table and share it out among council members. In
some local governments, have the governors not hijacked most of the
resources in them and expended them to serve their whims and caprices
instead of using the resources to galvanize growth and development?
“Have we embraced the principles and
values of the presidential system of government such as to enable us to
realise our vision of a great country?
“When are we going to be able to
practise federalism in a way that promotes healthy competition among the
states for the benefit of the citizens? When are we going to
subordinate partisanship to collective goals and deploy the full
potential of our diversity in advancing public causes that serve the
aspirations of the teeming masses of our people crying under the cringe
of poverty, disease, unemployment and neglect? When shall we all unite
around the Nigeria dreaming our quest to be the giant, which God has
graciously endowed us to be?
“Why is it that every model that has worked elsewhere never seems to work sustainably in Nigeria? I can go on and on.”
The former President said the drastic
fall in the price of oil in the international market had exposed the
weakness of governance in Nigeria, while also noting that Nigeria was
racing towards becoming a nation of debt with its attendant burden on
the citizens.
Obasanjo stated, “The Minister of
Finance recently announced that the 2016 budget deficit might be
increased from the current N2.2tn in the draft document before the
National Assembly, to N3tn due to the decline in the price of crude oil.
“If the current fiscal challenge is not
creatively addressed, Nigeria may be on its way to another episode of
debt overhang which may not be good for the country.
“It will be recalled that a few years
ago, we rescued Nigeria from its creditors with the deal in which the
Paris Club of sovereign creditors wrote off $18bn of debt, Africa’s
largest debt cancellation. Nigeria then used windfall earnings from oil
export to pay off another $12bn in debts and arrears.”
On the establishment of ISGPP in Ibadan,
Obasanjo said there was clearly a need for schools of its kind that
would use research and teaching to implement policies and making the
government work well in Africa.
“I hope it will generate ideas that will
lead us from thinking to doing. It must not only generate ideas, it
must foster a willingness to use those ideas within government and
non-government sectors,” he added.
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