At the 40th annual conference of the Nigerian Association
of law Teachers, the then versatile Dr. Yusuf Bala Usman, the iconic historian
of the then once foremost Ahmadu Bello University Zaria in Kaduna State,
NorthWest Nigeria, once gave these impressions of his understanding of the
concept of globalization.
He affirmed as follows: “There are so many definitions of
globalization. But, the essence of the conception of it, which is dominant now,
seems to me to be that globalization is, basically, the intensification, over
the last two decades, of the interconnection and interdependence between all
parts of the world, particularly at the levels of the economy and
communications, such that former national barriers to the movement of
information, finance, goods, services, and entrepreneurship, are being
drastically reduced and everybody now has to compete with everybody in what has
now become a global village and a single global market".
He argued further: "This is presented as a new
phenomenon, marking a distinctly new epoch in world history, which had roots in
earlier periods, but which has come up, since early 1980s, sweeping everything
before it”.
To me i think this represents a brilliant attempt at
encapsulating the real import of the word globalisation. I so adopt.
My reflection on the recent one day whistle stopover but
totally unannounced visit to London, the
United Kingdom by Nigeria’s Acting President Professor Yemi Osinbanjo has
understandably commenced with a brief take on the concept of globalization
because of the sad scenarios playing out at the top most echelons of Nigerian
Presidency.
This is because of the indisputable fact that as a member of the comity of
nations experiencing the almighty globalization, it is expected that Nigeria
must comply with global best practices. Since we are citizens of the global
community of humanity, that subscribes to international affiliations to
advanced civilisations in the West, we are obliged as of necessity to behave as
sane and civilised members of the human race coexisting under the same epoch
and time.
Sadly, Nigeria is politically governed in such medieval
fashions that a calm, calculated and meticulous thinker would inevitably begin to imagine how come we cling on to the
farcical claim of being a constitutional democracy but yet turn the rules of
the game upside now but still expect sane persons in saner climes to take us
serious.
This is because globally, especially in democracy,
accountability by leaders is sacrosanct. But who cares about accountability in
contemporary Nigeria.
But here we are in Nigeria, whereby the president
Muhammadu Buhari has spent virtually one hundred days in a foreign medical
facility at grave financial burden to the common wealth, but the people are
deliberately denied of their legal and constitutional right to know how much of
their resources are being spent medically attending to just one citizen even
whilst over 100 million citizens out of over estimated 150 million population
go through excruciating economic perils. This is even as the Constitution says
that Sovereignty belongs to the people of Nigeria who periodically and
willifully donates authority and legitimacy to those of our brethren occupying
political offices.
Again, here we are in Nigeria with all the constitutional
provisions, but yet the political elite have breached the most fundamental
tenet which obliges them to be transparent and to live beyond reproach if they
must serve and not to be served. In Nigeria of today political leaders live
like masters and treat the citizens like conquered slaves.
Who knows, perhaps, the way governance is witnessing
speedy decline in much of Africa with such presidents like those of Nigeria and
Zimbabwe frequently been flown abroad to distant jurisdictions for expensive
medical emergency treatments, that made the young president of France Mr.
Emmanuel Macron to question the validity of the claim of civilization and
willingness to abide by democratic norms by Africans.
As reported Yesterday by a British Press, Mr. Emmanuel
Macron has faced criticism in some quarters for claiming “civilizational”
problems and women having "seven or eight children" as factors
hampering development in African nations.
Independent
newspaper reports that while speaking at the G20 summit, the French President
was asked about the possibility of implementing a policy in the continent like
America’s Marshall Plan for rebuilding Europe after the Second World War.
“The problems Africa face today are completely different
… and are ‘civilizational’,” Mr. Macron told a reporter from former French
colony Ivory Coast. “What are the problems? Failed states, complex democratic
transitions and extremely difficult demographic transitions.”
In a lengthy reply, Mr. Macron also listed issues
including Islamist terrorism, drugs and weapons trafficking but said there were
examples showing the “continent is a land of opportunity”.
He said that
although France, a former colonial power that controlled dozens of territories
across Africa, accepted responsibility to help with infrastructure, education
and heath, a “simple money transfer” was not the answer.
“It’s by a more rigorous governance, a fight against
corruption, a fight for good governance, a successful demographic transition
when countries today have seven or eight children per woman,” Mr. Macron added.
“At the moment,
spending billions of euros outright would stabilize nothing. So the
transformation plan that we have to conduct together must be developed
according to African interests by and with African leaders.”
Although, one may not totally subscribe to the whole
thesis of civilizational issues tearing down Africa as has just been postulated
by the French president who was a diplomat even in Nigeria, but if we must tell
ourselves the truth, we must acknowledge that the political elite have been
left to push Nigeria to the Medieval period whereby a Philosopher Thomas Hobbes
called it a state of nature that made life miserable, short, uninteresting and
pathetic. Come to think of it, Mr. Emmanuel Macron may be substantially correct.
Is it the question of collapse of national
infrastructures? Is it the question of large scale theft of public fund by
state governors?
Is it the matter of the incessant violent attacks of
farmers by armed Fulani herdsmen and the apparently conspiratorial silence and deliberate criminal inaction of the armed security forces to
check these ugly trends?
The questions begging for a civilized response in Nigeria
are widening by the day but the total disrespect of the people by the
presidency in this case of the ill-health of President Muhammadu Buhari is
pathetic.
Three scholars-John M. Shishi; Yakubu Isa and Abdulkarim
A. Kana contributed a researched paper in the book titled: “Globalization,
National Development and Law”, and
affirmed that good governance is a Sine qua non for a legitimate
democracy.
Their words: “Good governance can be identified more than
defined. It can simply be defined as governance according to agreed rules and
regulations that satisfy the development needs and aspirations of the members
of a given society. Good governance emanates from a legitimate government that
does not act arbitrarily and achieves the common goals of a nation.”
The scolars quoted the multilateral finance institutions
the World Bank as viewing good
governance as “the manner in which power is exercised in the management of a
country’s economic and social resources for development”.
The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) on the
other hand, sees good governance as “the use of political, economic and administrative
powers at all levels of government to deal appropriately with the problems
facing a country".
The main ingredients of good governance to the UNDP are:
Citizen participation in governance, the rule of law, transparency, and
equality”.
In Nigeria however, the political rulers have little or
no regards for the constitutional right of the people of Nigeria to participate
in the governance process.
A situation whereby the presidency conceals the real
health status of the president and the ship of state has continued to remain
unstable is totally unwarranted.
This sad situation has even culminated in a bad history
been recorded for the first time since 1914 that the name Nigeria was imposed
on us by the British colonial overlords.
For the first time, both the president and the Acting
president met in a foreign jurisdiction and for 24 hours the country ran
without any leader in what is a clear breach of the constitution and even the
law of nature which abhors a vacuum.
Nigerians must collectively take a position on how best
to salvage this ugly situation and demand for openness and accountability from
the president.
The Nigerian Presidency shouldn't be administered as a
cult whereby certain elected and unelected persons are constantly engaged in
the deadly game of selfish political warfare at the detriment of the wellbeing
of the nationState and the collective welfare of the People.
The substantive President elected by 15 million
voters cannot continue to travel to
foreign medical facilities whilst political instability and economic collapse
steer us in our faces. He had better thrown in the towel and allow the constitutional
mechanisms to be activated.
Let the constitutional provisions as set out under
Section 144(1) and (2) take its full course so we do not collapse as a nation.
For the avoidance of semantic doubts, these are the exact
wordings of the 1999 constitution specifically in section 144(1) and (2
(1) "The President or
Vice-President shall cease to hold office, if (a) By a resolution passed by
two-thirds majority of all the members of the executive council of the
Federation it is declared that the president or vice-president is incapable of
discharging the functions of his office; and (b) The declaration is verified,
after such medical examination as may be necessary, by a medical panel
established under subsection (4) of this section in its report to the president
of the senate and the speaker of the House of Representative; and (2) Where the
medical panel certifies in the report that in its opinion the president or
vice-president is suffering from such infirmity of body or mind renders him
permanently incapable of discharging the functions of his office, a notice
thereof signed by the president of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of
Representative shall be published in the official Gazette of the Government of
the Federation."
We must be governed by law and not by the whims and
caprices of a cabal.
*Emmanuel Onwubiko is Head of Human rights writers
Association of Nigeria (HURIWA)and blogs
@@www.emmanuelonwubiko.com, www.huriwa@blogspot.com.
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