Sunday, 26 August 2012

Nigeria’s Wonky Federalism.


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WAZOBIA

Abiola Ajimobi looks at the skewed features of Nigeria’s federal system
Nigeria is a country with an estimated 350 ethnic groups which have largely contiguous territories.  It is therefore a natural candidate for the federal system of government. However, in spite of these federal properties, Nigeria has been grappling with a struggle between forces in support of true federalism and its antagonists.  To be sure, the struggle for true federalism began even before the independence of Nigeria in 1960.  The failure of all pre-independence constitutions, beginning from the Clifford Constitution of 1922, up to the Macpherson Constitution of 1951, was largely due to their shortcomings in meeting the federal expectations and agitations of Nigerian nationalists.  Although they differed in the specifics of their federal expectations, the cream of Nigerian nationalists, as represented by the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo, Sir Ahmadu Bello and Dr. Nnamdi Azikwe, all of blessed memories, advocated the federal system for Nigeria.
For instance, while Chief Awolowo contended that “the constitution of Nigeria must be federal …. any other constitution will be unsuitable and will generate ever-recurring instability which may eventually lead to the complete disappearance of the Nigeria composite State”, Sir Ahmadu Bello contended that federalism provided the “only guarantee that the country will grow evenly all over, we can spend the money we receive, the money we raise, in the direction best suited to us”.  Dr. Azikwe, on his part, was insistent that the strength of Nigeria as a nation lies in its heterogeneous composition and the potentials that a federal structure possesses for the release of the energies of these component parts for national development.
As I noted before, these founding fathers of Nigeria, in spite of their unanimity on the appropriateness of federalism as a form of government, differed on the specifics of such system.  This lack of consensus persists to date in the struggle for the enthronement of true federalism in Nigeria.  It is noteworthy that the positions that advocates and opponents of true federalism take largely depend on how advantaged or disadvantaged they think they are in the operations of the extant system of federalism in Nigeria.
For a proper appreciation of the debate, it would be appropriate to highlight what I believe are the elements of true democracy.  From literature on federalism and practice, the core element of federalism is the existence of a system based on the sharing of power between at least two levels of government (federal and state) that allows each level to make final decisions on matters concurrently and exclusively.  The core federal principle has the following core characteristics (Osaghae; 2012): No level of government is subordinate to the other; The two or more levels of government operate directly and simultaneously upon the citizens; There is a written constitution which is supreme – amendments especially on matters related to the formal division of power should not be the exclusive preserve of one level of government; There is an independent and supreme court which serves as final arbiter in constitutional disputes; The levels of government, especially state governments, should have reasonable levels of viability and relative economic autonomy both to ensure that they are able to perform their constitutionally assigned functions and that they are not subordinate to the other level; and the constitution does not contain a secession clause that allows federating units to secede at will and does not also grant the federal government emergency powers that can make the states subordinate when used.
One major element of federalism is that it can only thrive in a democracy.  This explains why in spite of spirited efforts by successive military governments in Nigeria through what Prof. Isawa Elaigwu calls “military federalism”, they fell short of appropriating true federalism in Nigeria.
This is because of its very nature as a constitutional system characterized by relative autonomies, rights and freedoms and contiguous bargains, a federal system requires thorough going democracy as represented by elements like rule of law, separation of power, independent judiciary, multiparty politics, participation and representation to thrive (Osaghae, 2012). I wish to note that it is possible to identify four (4) phases in the struggle for the democracy in Nigeria.  The first was under colonial rule when Nigerian nationalists struggled for the enthronement of a federal system as an integral part of the political independence agenda.
The second phase of federalist struggle was immediately after independence when the political class debated the political architecture bequeathed by the departing colonial power.  Again, the dramatis personae differed on their preferences and made requests that sought to enhance their hold on power in their respective regions (and at the national level in the case of the Northern Peoples Congress (NPC) and reduce the viability of opposition parties.
The third phase in the struggle for true federalism in Nigeria was under military rule when Nigerians rose against elements of military unitary system that ran contrary to their federalist expectations.  These agitations reached a crescendo with calls for confederacy under the regimes of Generals Muhammadu Buhari, Ibrahim Babangida, Sanni Abacha and Abdul-Salam Abubakar.  The outcome of this struggle is the 1999 Constitution.
The fourth phase began immediately the present democratic dispensation began in 1999.  The reason for such spontaneous agitation under the present dispensation is attributable to the authoritarian origin of the 1999 Constitution.  Although the Constitution is supposedly the cumulation of agitations under the military regimes, most especially under Generals Babangida and Abacha, the Constitution was an imposition of the military which merely incorporated the provisions that it was comfortable with.
Since 1999, the struggle for true federalism has been evidenced by agitation of AD (later ACN) controlled South-West for greater state autonomy; the enthronement of Sharia Law by many Northern States  which was a test of constitutional provisions on the extent of the power of States; the agitation for State Police; agitations, litigations and administrative policies on control of local governments; agitation for resource control in the Niger Delta; the agitation for the convocation of Sovereign National Conference and the Boko Haram Insurgency in Northern Nigeria. These are reactions to many elements of the 1999 Constitution that are considered antithetical to the federal system of government.
Without pretending to have an exhaustive list of such anti-federal elements, may I list the following as among these elements:  (Osaghae, 2012): Large number of matters on the exclusive legislative list; Limitations to the competence of States in matters on the concurrent list (by which state laws are constitutionally rendered null and void to the extent of their inconsistencies with federal laws); Provision of emergency powers that allow the federal government to take over the affairs of states; Over-centralization of control of the police; Provisions on local government that allow federal interference.
Extant laws that are anti-federal include the Land Use Act; the Laws on Petroleum and Gas that give these resources to the federal government; the Federal Inland Revenue Act of 2007 which empowers the Federal Inland Revenue Service to collect revenue for the three tiers of government, the Monitoring of Revenue Allocation to Local Government Act of 2005, which compels states to set up joint local government account committees and empowers the federal government to deduct from funds allocated to States money they failed to pay to local governments in the previous year.
Against the background of these anti-federal laws, it is understandable why there has been heightened agitation against the present federal system. As Nigeria ponders another review of the 1999 Constitution, arguments and counter arguments are being advanced for the change or retention of these anti-federal provisions.
From my experience as a Senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria between 2003 – 2007 and governor of Oyo State since last year, I make bold to say that there are too many responsibilities and resources at the federal level to allow for efficiency.  The federal government has become so big that it is theoretically and practically impossible to guarantee efficiency.  For instance, a report has indicated that the federal government is executing over 1,000 projects at a time.  There is no way, given the capacity of the bureaucracy at the federal level, that efficiency can be guaranteed in the deployment of resources in this circumstance.
Besides, Nigeria is too far-flung for a central authority to effectively perform some of the duties ascribed to the central government.  These include agriculture and food security, provision of water and management of water resources, policing, maintenance of roads and provision of tertiary education, to mention a few.
As a governor of the oldest state in Western Nigeria, we are faced with challenges in the area of public infrastructure, security, food security, tax collection and provision of educational services. Many of these functions are jointly performed by the federal and state governments, with the bulk of resources needed to perform them residing in the federal government.
Our experience has shown that there is no way the federal government can effectively maintain urban roads - a role which has been ascribed to it under the present constitution.  First, it is too far removed from the locations where such services are needed and the bureaucratic process of meeting such needs between the federal capital and under-funded state-based federal agencies are cumbersome and long.  More importantly, with an estimated 50,000 km - long federal roads, it is logically impossible for the federal government to promptly respond to infrastructure challenges as they emerge in the states.  This explains why pot holes that emerge on federal roads grow into craters unattended to, while files move from federal highway offices flung across the expansive country and the Federal Capital of Abuja.  The solution to this malaise is to grant the responsibility of all roads within a state to the state government with the complementary resource allocation to maintain them.
To cite just one more example.  The Federal Government, under the present Minister for Agriculture, has embarked on many initiatives to improve food production and guarantee food security.  But the laudable exploits are structurally hampered.  Food production takes place at the local level and the states are better placed to oversee agricultural services.
Even in Oyo State which is only one of the 36 states, we have had to devolve power to the local government councils and use extension officers to reach farmers in the quest to enhance food production.  It is therefore unimaginable that a far-away federal government would be saddled with the responsibility of managing this critical aspect of national life.
For me, the federal government should be limited to setting policies – after consultations with the states – on areas like road, agriculture, sports, etc. while the states are granted the powers and resources to manage these responsibilities that affect the lives of our people at the grassroots. In the last 16 months as the governor of Oyo State, our emphasis has been on the restoration of the glory of Oyo State as the cradle of development in Nigeria.
To this end, our development agenda include: (i)Infrastructural development and environmental protection; (ii)Education, Health and Social Services; (iii)Reform of the Civil Service; (iv)Promotion of investment and expansion of economic activities; (v)Youth development, employment and empowerment; (vi)Peace and Security.In the last 16 months, we have created 20,000 intervention jobs for our youths, rehabilitated over 200 roads, constructing a major flyover in the state capital, constructing over 10 major bridges, empower 3,500 agriculture extension cadets, introduce over 1000 tricycles to ease urban transportation, treated almost half a million patients in out mobile health initiative, rehabilitating over 300 blocks of classrooms etc.
The accomplishment of our vision for the state requires enormous resources.  Today, Oyo State receives monthly federal allocation of N4.1 billion while it generates N1.1 billion internally.  This is a far cry from the needs of the State which devotes about 92% of its revenue on payment of salaries. While we emphasize improvement in our Internally Generated Revenue (IGR), Oyo State deserves better resource allocation from the federal government.  Many of the services that are supposedly performed by the federal government are in the real sense, performed in part by the State.  For instance, all federal agencies including security agencies depend on the State for their routine needs like accommodation, electricity supply, transportation etc.  It is therefore illogical that allocations for these services are given to the federal government when in actual fact, it is the state that perform these functions or maintain these agencies.
A recourse to true fiscal federalism will ensure that states benefit from resources in their territories.  For instance, proceeds from the Value Added Tax (VAT) are distributed on principles that defy logic.  Consumption is a reflection of the population and the pressure they exert on the infrastructure and social services in the States.  The proceeds of Value Added Tax (VAT) should therefore go to the State who bear the burden of such social activities and consumption rather than be distributed otherwise.
With a population of 7 million people and harboring the largest city south of the Sahara, i.e. Ibadan, Oyo State deserves more resources than it presently has.  This will be achieved when the present allocation formula is reviewed to stop the Federal Government from receiving 58% of federal resources while 36 states and 774 local government councils share a paltry 42%.

The Way Forward for Nigeria
1.The way forward for Nigeria is evident in the foregoing.  For Nigeria to achieve its manifest destiny as the leader of Africa and hope of the black race, its Constitutional order must be such that its component units can release their energies for national development.
2.The elements of true federalism that Nigeria needs to enthrone include the following:
· A review of the 1999 Constitution to grant more responsibilities to the States;
· A review of the Constitution to reduce the responsibilities of the federal government to common services like Foreign Affairs, Currency, Immigration and Defence;
· Review of the Revenue Allocation Formulae to emphasize the Derivation Principle and allocation of larger percentage of resources to states;
· Provision for State Police with necessary inter-state and federal checks and balances to prevent or reduce abuse; and
· Removal of Local Government from the Constitution to make it a residual responsibility of the State.
• Governor Ajimobi delivered this keynote address at the Town Hall meeting held at DuSable Museum of African-American History, Chicago, United States.

BOKO HARAM: Their grouse, the solution, by Amb. Carson.


Vanguard News.
This is the concluding part of the abridged version of a recorded exchange during a Sub-committee on Foreign Affairs congressional hearing in America, with leaders of the Christian Association of Nigeria, CAN, in attendance.
In this concluding part, House members sought to know why Boko Haram leaders were designated terrorists and the group, not designated as  a FOREIGN TERROR ORGANISATION, FTO. It is revealing.
Ms Bass
One is about Boko Haram, the other is about corruption.  What is the real objective of Boko Haram?
Ambassador Carson
I think it is an attempt to both discredit and bring attention to concerns and grievances legitimate or illegitimate, of the people who are carrying out the activities and this is, in deed, by pointing out enormous economic deprivation that exists in northern Nigeria.
Ambassador Carson
It is not to suggest that poor people are terrorists but it is to suggest that that kind of environment helps to generate and feed the notion that the government is not providing adequate service delivery in all segments to the people of the country.  And I think it is largely in an effort to embarrass and discredit (the administration) by bringing attention to these sets of grievances.
And I think the core elements of Boko Haram are also ideological in their orientation.  I do not think they represent the views of the larger Muslim population that exists across Nigeria.  But it is the notion that they have a set of grievances.  One of the things that have happened is that Boko Haram leaders do not, in fact, put down on a piece of paper what they are actually striving for and one of the things the government has frequently said is ‘come forward and tell us what it is that you want us to do
Ms Bass
I appreciate your pointing  out that individuals were identified as terrorists as opposed to the overall organisation and you feel that the reason for that is that labeling the organization as an FTO would embolden its members, that it will boost their status.
Ambassador Carson
I think it will serve to enhance their status, probably give them greater international notoriety amongst radical Islamic groups; probably lead to more recruiting and probably more assistance.  One of the concerns (also, is that) we elevate them to a higher level and higher status than they deserve.  But these three particular individuals have showed the desire not just to go after the Nigerian government and Nigerian interests but also go after larger western interests including American interest.
But there is, in fact, a big distinction there; these individuals are prepared to go after larger interests beyond those that are Nigerian to discredit and embarrass the Nigerian government.
Ms Bass
And how will you asses the Jonathan administration’s strategy towards countering terrorism? I also wanted to know what, in general, extent are Nigerian intelligence and security forces cooperating with those of neighboring countries where AQAM is operating and where some members of Boko Haram have reportedly been trained
Ambassador Carson
Let me say that  the government could be doing better both in trying to combat the Boko Haram threat and it could certainly be doing better in trying to increase service delivery  across the North.
I know that government in neighboring states, particularly Niger and Cameron, to a certain extent, Chad, are concerned about the Boko Haram threat because many of the people now live in southern Niger and southern Chad, north western part of Cameroon, as well as going across to Benin and upper parts of Togo – these are ethnically linked (with) the same linguistics communities, so there is this concern about the spread of this kind of violence into their own countries
Ms Bass
You know one of the topics that we have not talked about today is the drug issue – drug trafficking.  So I wanted to know if you could comment about that especially if there is a relationship, what the Jonathan administration is doing to address drug trafficking; and is there a relationship between Boko Haram and the drug industry?
Ambassador Carson
I am not aware of any major link or connectivity between drug trafficking and the financing of Boko Haram!  We do know that drug trafficking is a major problem all along the west African coast; it continues to be a serious problem in Nigeria because of the use of human traffickers moving drugs and because of the use of ports, airports for movement of narcotics in West Africa and from there into Western Europe.  So it is an issue.
Ms Jackson Lee
(Why do we have these conflicts in Northern Nigeria, especially the attacks against the churches; why are we at this point of conflict?)
Ambassador Carson
Let me make quick global points: We here in Washington recognize Nigeria to be one of the two most important nations in sub-Saharan Africa.  We look at it as Africa’s largest democracy and our largest trading partner; our 5th largest supplier of crude oil and a country we seek to strengthen and broaden our relationship with.  So Nigeria is legitimately of great significance to us and we don’t want to ignore it.
Secondly, Nigeria faces the kinds of dilemma that many African states have because of the large number of different ethnic and linguistic, religious groups that exist there.  But the country’s people have decided over time that the best way to manage the country is through democratic means and democratic ways.
I think what we are seeing, the kind of problems in northern Nigeria with respect to Boko Haram do not represent the vast majority of people in the North, which does not represent the views of the overwhelming number of Muslims.
The Boko Haram group is made up of a small group of individuals that are indeed trying to play on the effort to discredit, embarrass and to under mine the credibility of the central government and it is not just the central government led currently by a Christian leader. I want to point out again that Boko Haram was active under President Yar’Adua  but the sense of hopelessness built upon a lack of service delivery, lack of opportunity, a lack of hope helps to contribute to this.

OIC: Nigeria remains a secular state, says Minister.


By
Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador   Ashiru Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Ashiru
•Asks citizens to shun moves to cause fresh religious crisis

THE Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Olugbenga Ashiru, yesterday said Nigeria remains a secular state regardless of its membership of the Organisation of Islamic Countries (OIC).
Its membership of OIC, he maintained, does not amount to the Islamisation of the country.
Ashiru, spoke exclusively to The Nation on Sunday in Abuja against the backdrop of the fresh controversy sparked by the recent OIC session.
He asked Nigerians to shun attempt by some people to stoke the fire of religious crisis in the country.
He said there is no move to Islamise the country as OIC has already   condemned the activities of Boko Haram as being out of tune with the tenets of Islam.
A statement credited to the Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Dr. Mohammed Nurudeen, has been generating reactions from the Christian community.
The minister was quoted as saying, “Nigeria is one of the most Christian-populated Islamic nations in the world.”
But the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Ashiru said there is no cause for alarm because Nigeria is a secular state as expressly stated in the 1999 Constitution.
He said he suspected that the Minister of State might have been misquoted.
Ashiru said: “The position is very clear, Nigeria is a secular state with the population of Christians and Muslims evenly divided at approximately 50-50. So, the statement credited to the Minister of State might have been quoted out of context.
“Our constitution is very clear that we are a secular nation and our Foreign Policy derives from that constitution. We will remain a secular state.
“We are members of OIC since the military regime of ex-President Ibrahim Babangida to satisfy the yearnings and aspirations of our Muslim brethren.  “In any case, we have been in OIC for many years we should not raise any issue about that. In fact,  a Nigerian, Amb. Hammed Opeloyeru is the Assistant Secretary-General of OIC.
“Our membership of OIC does not tantamount to the Islamisation of Nigeria. In any case, we have worked well with OIC to our own advantage.
“I assure all Nigerians that our policy as a secular state, which is enshrined in the constitution has not changed.
“On the issue of Boko Haram, OIC is one of the organisations that spoke against attacks by the group. It is an association that has been mutually beneficial.”
He appealed to Nigerians “not to allow the nation to be divided along religious lines.”

Jonathan assures on good governance.

Abuja – President Goodluck Jonathan said on Friday that his administration would work with Britain and other nations to promote good governance, political stability and socio-economic development in the country and other African nations.
Jonathan gave the assurance in Abuja at a meeting with the outgoing British High Commissioner to Nigeria, Mr Andrew Lloyd, who was on a farewell visit to the Presidential Villa.
He reaffirmed Federal Government’s commitment to evolving and implementing policies and measures that would help the country to overcome its current challenges.
The president noted that the excellent relations between Nigeria and Great Britain were significantly enhanced during Lloyd’s tenure.
He commended the High Commissioner for the efforts he made to boost trade and economic cooperation between the two countries.
Jonathan said the high point of such effort was Prime Minister David Cameron’s visit to Nigeria with a delegation of businessmen and investors.
“We shall continue to count on your support and I hope your successor will continue your good work here in Nigeria,” Jonathan said.
The President also received the outgoing Egyptian Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr Youssef Shawki, who is leaving only after two years of service.
He expressed the hope that both countries would continue to build up and expand areas of bilateral cooperation.
Jonathan wished Shawki well in his future endeavours and urged him to always consider himself “a life-long Ambassador of Nigeria to Egypt and the rest of the world”. (NAN)

Bakassi, Ogoni and the Gathering Storm of Autonomy.

ThisDay Live.

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Lt. Gen. A.F.K. Akale (r) in a chat with Senator Florence Ita Giwa


Amid furore over the declaration of autonomy by the people of Ogoni and Bakassi, many still believe those are only indicative of the restless desire for change among several groups in the country. Ernest Chinwo, in Port Harcourt, and Jude Okwe, in Calabar, write
Even though the Nigerian government and the media seemed to downplay it, the August 2 declaration of autonomy by the people of Ogoniland just screamed out at the whole country. The images of the crowds of men, women, and children celebrating the insignias of independence rekindled memories of the people’s past struggle for local self-government.
Mr. Goodluck Diigbo, who led the August 2 declaration, said it was a proclamation of local autonomy within Nigeria and in line with the Ogoni Bill of Rights. In August 1990, the Ogoni Bill of Rights was signed by Ogoni elders and presented to the then military government. It called for “political control of Ogoni affairs by Ogoni people, control and use of Ogoni economic resources for Ogoni development, adequate and direct representation as of right for Ogoni people in all Nigerian national institutions, and the right to protect the Ogoni environment and ecology from further degradation.”
The Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People was formed that year to engage in a non-violent pursuit of the special rights of the people within Nigeria. MOSOP was led by playwright, environmentalist and author, Mr. Ken Saro-Wiwa, who was slain on November 10, 1995 by the military dictator Sani Abacha in an outrageous judicial decision that was condemned worldwide as “judicial murder.”
Indigenous Rights

Diigbo, who is described as a factional president of MOSOP, in his statement declaring “Ogoni autonomy”, cited, among other things, the degradation of Ogoni environment and failure of the Federal Government to implement the United Nations Environment Programme report on Ogoni as motivation for the move.
He explained in a press statement published in MOSOP Media, “The urgency behind the declaration is that self-government for Ogoni was overdue in view of many important issues bordering on indigenous rights of the Ogoni people being tampered with now. The UNEP Ogoni Report is one out of many.”
According to Diigbo, “The Ogoni declaration of self-government now guarantees the Ogoni people the right to participate in decision-making in all matters which would affect their rights, through representatives chosen by Ogonis in accordance with own procedures, as well as to maintain and develop all our own indigenous decision-making institutions, which we started to set up since 2011.
“It is my hope that this self-government will help to provide just and fair redress to decades of deprivation of our indigenous rights.”
Diigbo was addressing jubilant crowds at Bane, hometown of Saro-Wiwa, on August 4, two days after the independence declaration.
“Importantly, Ogoni can no longer accept dictation, any institution, government and corporation, interested in investment in Ogoni will enjoy transparent partnership, because we will end corruption and irresponsive governance in Ogoni. This means partnership will be based on free, prior and informed consent before any of our partners adopt and implement any project, and before the national government adopt any legislative or administrative measures that may affect Ogoni people,” Diigbo maintained.
‘Treason’

However, Governor Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State, where Ogoniland is currently located, accused Diigbo of engaging in treasonable felony.
Amaechi said, “On Ogoni autonomy, I wish them well. Ogoni autonomy is not achievable. The man (Diigbo) who declared Ogoni autonomy will run into the bush tomorrow morning. What Diigbo is doing is treasonable felony. You do not declare autonomy on the pages of newspapers and magazines or on radio and television.”
But Diigbo issued another statement two days later, clarifying that he meant autonomy within the Nigerian state, quoting United Nations Conventions on the Rights of Ethnic Nationalities.
Amaechi questioned Diigbo’s claims of acting on behalf of the generality of Ogoni people.

Betrayal
Though, the Ogoni autonomy declaration is condemned in government circles, many believe Federal Government’s continued neglect of the people provided the push to undertake the course of self-government. Despite promises of healing and rebuilding of Ogoniland since the dawn of the Fourth Republic, there has been very little effort to meet the economic, political, and environmental aspirations of the people.
On August 4 last year, the UN released its report outlining remediation measures needed to reclaim Ogoni lands despoiled by decades of oil exploration and exploitation. The UNEP report said clean of the soil will take 30 years.
But the government of President Goodluck Jonathan, himself an indigene of the Niger Delta and under whom the UNEP report was released, has yet to seriously commit to its implementation.
Different Strategies, One Destiny

Even if within Ogoniland criticism rang out against the autonomy declaration by Diigbo, not a few, including the critics themselves, acknowledged that the Federal Government has not been honest and open regarding its commitments to Ogoni.
The statement signed by chairman of the Provisional Council of MOSOP, Professor Ben Naanen, and the secretary, Dr. Meshach Karanwi, said the declaration of autonomy went against the spirit and letter of the Ogoni Bill of Rights. But it acknowledged, “Ogoni people are dissatisfied with their condition in our country, Nigeria. But they do not believe the sovereign option is the answer. They are convinced that their non-violent struggle and the support of the international community will eventually make the Nigerian government respond positively to Ogoni’s legitimate demands.”
However, president of Ogoni Youth Council, Comrade Marvin Yobana, told THISDAY in an interview, “Although political autonomy was mentioned in the Ogoni Bill of Rights, that does not mean secession, they did not ask for their own country. They only asked for more constituency, more representation because of the geographical nature of Ogoniland.”
There is a growing impression within the oil-rich Niger Delta that the Federal Government is displaying bias in favour of groups that chose armed struggle against peaceful agitation. Ogonis have since the time of Saro-Wiwa chosen non-violent struggle, and has made many feel they are not speaking the language that the Nigerian government understands.

Enter Bakassi Freedom Fighters

The people of Bakassi, too, have been peaceful in their agitation for a fairer deal within Nigeria.
Perhaps, encouraged by the Ogoni and prompted by feelings of frustration about alleged neglect of peaceful agitators, the people of Bakassi in Cross River State declared their own local independence on August 6 – a few days after the “Ogoni Autonomy Day” declaration of August 2.
Natives of Bakassi have been uncomfortable with the Nigerian government’s perceived indifference to their socio-economic and political plight since the ceding of the oil-rich peninsular to Cameroun.
The French Revolution, which pioneered a large part of the political events of the modern world, unleashed forces that shaped the path taken by Europe and the rest of the world for over two centuries running. The revolution that provoked a clash between the monarchy and nobility over the latter’s refusal to compromise its immunity from tax payment has since become instructive as a vital impetus for revolts by the oppressed.
The problems that produce revolution are many and vary from country to country. They include marginalisation, oppression, injustice, annexation, religious differences and its associated sectarian violence. Nigeria has its fair share of some of these tendencies.
From the estuary of Cross River State, off the Gulf of Guinea, a revolution is brewing. The simmering crisis has its roots in the ceding of Bakassi Peninsula to the Republic of Cameroun following the judgement of the International Court of Justice on October 10, 2002. Leading this revolution is Bakassi Freedom Fighters, a group of militants opposed to the ceding of their ancestral home to a foreign country.
‘Rising Nation’

Led by Ekpe Ekpenyong Oku, the self styled Commander General of BFF, Bakassi people on August 6 made good their threat of hoisting the Bakassi national flag at Dayspring Island in declaration of the sovereign state of Bakassi. It also established a radio station, which broadcasts on shortwave to nationals of the new nation. Its flag of blue, white and red colours is festooned with stars – signifying the promise of a rising nation.
Bakassi radio broadcasts on 4. 2MHz and 5.2MHz bands.
In his maiden broadcast to the new nation, Oku declared, “Please, for the umpteenth time, we plead with our people to leave Abana now. The fight is going to be the thickest and fiercest now that our brothers from the northern and eastern borders have arrived.
Bakassi we hail thee.”
Oku called on “men of goodwill, human rights organisations and the indigenous people of Bakassi to join hands in resisting and fighting the present international conspiracy. Ours will be a classical story of the elephant and the ant. The elephant will soon be driven frantic with ants all over its enormous bulk. The elephant will be so harassed and will find no respite and dash itself against a tree trunk.
“Throughout history, injured people have had to resort to arms in their self-defence where peaceful negotiations fail. Bakassi people are no exception. Our right to self-determination is imminent. Some will die, but some will live to reap from our labour.”
The broadcast took both the natives and residents of nearby Calabar unawares, as they never anticipated such a bold action. The hoisting of the flag and broadcast gave substance to the march towards self-determination and has become their spring board.

Road to Self-rule

The search for self-rule for Bakassi began in 2006 when the Green Tree Agreement was signed. A nascent group, Bakassi Solidarity Front, soon emerged on the scene to sensitise the aborigines on the implications of the agreement ceding their territory to Cameroun. The group soon became a rallying point for the freedom of Bakassi people.
Led by Tony Ene, BSF wielded so much influence among the natives that the government of former President Olusegun Obasanjo became uncomfortable. Security operatives were unleashed on him. They trailed him everywhere he went. He was later killed on the Calabar-Itu Road in what many suspected to be an orchestrated motor accident.

Popular Appeal

Unlike the case of Ogoni, the declaration of Bakassi independence seems to have the blessing of most of the natives of the oil-rich island. Their support is not without reason. Torn between a hostile supposedly new compatriots, Cameroun, and an unsympathetic Nigerian neighbours, the people appear left with no other option that turn to God and take their destiny in their own hands.
Since August 14, 2008 when Nigeria’s sovereignty over Bakassi became history, the displaced people of the island have known no peace. With limited access to water to ply their traditional occupation of fishing, virtually no roof over their heads, and threatened livelihood, the people have become like refugees seething with anger.
A combination of these frustrations has pushed the people to the wall, prompting the current reaction in the form of a quest for self-rule. The declaration of independence is the climax of a long term aspiration, given that the Nigerian government, which willingly gave out Bakassi, has in the last 10 years shown a rather nonchalant attitude to the plight of Bakassi.
The people of Bakassi allege that neither the Nigerian government nor the United Nations has kept faith with the Green Tree Agreement signed in 2006, despite the fast approach of the October 10, 2012 deadline for the proposition of any reviews to the agreement by the two affected countries.

Unenthusiastic  About Appeal

Abuja has made no concrete efforts to appeal the ICJ ruling within the 10 years allowed. The nonchalant attitude of the Federal Government of Nigeria, according to BFF, is enough evidence that Nigeria has concluded the Bakassi question. Their conviction is further accentuated by the silence of President Goodluck Jonathan to calls to appeal the ICJ judgement before the expiration of the October 10, 2012 deadline.
Yet Jonathan knows so much about the ceding of Bakassi, as that responsibility fell under his office when he was the vice president of the country under late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua. The president also has ample understanding of the Akwa Ibom/Cross River oil wells imbroglio.

Third Term Connection

The people of Bakassi have not failed to blame the Obasanjo government for giving them out to Cameroun, allegedly, in pursuance of his failed third term bid. They say he did everything to curry favour with the Western powers in support of the scheme.
Bakassi Natives Assembly, the pan-Bakassi liberation group, alleges that Obasanjo’s implementation of the ICJ verdict, which they believe was merely advisory, was too hasty. Many countries have failed to implement such judgements without such nations suffering any sanctions.
To the group, Bakassi was easily ceded because it fell within the minority part of the country.

Uninhabitable Conditions

Though, there were robust resettlement plans for the people of Bakassi who elected to remain with Nigeria after the ceding of the territory to Cameroun, most of the promises came to naught. Many of the natives were abandoned to the elements.
Houses at the Bakassi Resettlement Camp at Akwa Obutong are grossly inadequate to accommodate the army of returnees from Abana and other creek communities of the peninsula. Those in charge of the operation said the N1 billion, which the federal government made available for the construction of the camp, was not enough, even with the amount added by the Cross River State government.
But most of the people preferred to be resettled at Dayspring Island, which suited their aquatic lifestyle. Dayspring Island is part of the peninsula not ceded to Cameroun. Considering the unfriendly nature of the aborigines of the three council wards of Ikang that formed the nucleus of New Bakassi Local Government Area, it is difficult for the settlers not to suffer political marginalisation.  The people want to be rehabilitated in a virgin land for the preservation of their identity rather than the current merger.  But the fund for such rehabilitation is the problem.

Camerounian Coercion

The Cross River State government is opposed to the action of BFF. Governor Liyel Imoke said the declaration was not necessary because the issues raised by the people were being addressed by government. The governor added that his administration will not tolerate a further balkanisation of the state.

Imoke who went to Abuja soon after the Bakassi independence declaration to brief the presidency on the development did not disclose the Federal Government’s response.

But the paramount ruler of Bakassi Local Government Area, Etinyin Etim Okn Edet, in his reaction, confirmed that his people were ready to become an independent sovereignty if the Nigerian government was not ready to guarantee their welfare and safety. He said the declaration of independence had the support of all well meaning people of Bakassi, who had become unsure of their citizenship in Nigeria given the Federal Government’s silence over all their requests for proper accommodation within the country.

Edet told the visiting House of Representatives Committee on Treaties and Agreement that his people never really had problems with Nigeria, but Cameroun, which according to him, was trying to force loyalty and patriotism among the people.

“But if Nigeria is not ready or willing to care for us and guarantee our peace, we can take our destiny in our own hands. Our national flag, coat of arm, national anthem are ready, even our radio station is now broadcasting. We can go our own way if Nigeria does not want us anymore,” said the monarch, who is also the chairman of Cross River State Traditional Rulers Council.

“The bombs thrown about by the Boko Haram people in some parts of the country are relatively small compared with the ones my people will unleash if President Goodluck Jonathan is still docile over the plight and petitions of my people. Many ethnic groups in Nigeria are looking for how to dismember this country. Bakassi would be one of them if care is not taken. If that happens, Nigerians would bear us witness for having been patient enough.”

He said Bakassi people have no affinity with Cameroun and wondered how they would fit into the government of that country. To Edet, the search for self-rule was a last resort in the face of the problems confronting Bakassi people.
Legislative Solidarity

Chairman of the House committee, Hon. Yacoob Bush Alebiosu, had earlier informed the royal father that the committee was in the state to get firsthand information on the issue of Bakassi independence.
Alebiosu said, “My committee is newly set up to look into all the treaties and agreements entered into by our country, including the vexed Bakassi issue. I want to let you know that no treaties shall have the force of law in this country if they had not been domesticated. Therefore, since the ICJ verdict on Bakassi has not been domesticated by the National Assembly, you have nothing to fear as my committee will go down to ensure that we shall not lose Bakassi. We are going to push the presidency into action, including appealing the October 10, 2002 judgement.”
Members of the committee visited Bakassi including Ikang the border community.

Common Complaints, Different Methods

But a group, Bakassi Peoples General Assembly, has dissociated itself from the declaration of the sovereign state of Bakassi. It sued for the acceleration of their resettlement in the location of their choice, instead of a declaration of independence. At a press conference in Lagos on August 17, the group, led by former Special Adviser to ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo, Senator Florence Ita-Giwa, said the people of Bakassi had no intention of seceding from the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

A statement read by Ita-Giwa and signed by 21 Bakassi leaders advised against violence with regard to the Bakassi issue, saying, “This will further exacerbate the already delicate security issues confronting the nation. We are Nigerians and descendants of the Efik Kingdom of Calabar in Cross River State.

“Our concern primarily is to ensure that our people are given a permanent abode; not to delve into controversial issues that would hardly yield any positive impact towards that goal. This mindset defines our reaction to the motion at the House of Representatives seeking a review of the International Court of Justice ruling that ceded Bakassi Peninsula to Cameroun.

“Of course, it would be a pleasant surprise if any campaign returns us to our ancestral homes. Yet we do not think that such effort should overshadow the need to permanently resettle our people. The need is of immediate nature whereas the possibility of a reversal of the ICJ verdict is more or less a remote hope that lies in the distant future even though it has all its merits.”

Bakassi Peoples General Assembly demanded urgent and expeditious development of the unceded parts of Bakassi known as Day Spring Island 1 and 2 as well as Kwa Island for the comprehensive resettlement of Bakassi indigenes whom it said had since 2006 been roaming hopelessly.

“It is our contention that this responsibility be carried out forthwith by the Federal Government and the United Nations as well as all countries that were signatories to the Green Tree Agreement. We make a legitimate demand on the Federal Government to initiate a programme of ‘Accelerated Human Capacity Development’ of the people of Bakassi, especially the youth, in the same way the Federal Government has treated ex-militants in the amnesty programme,” the statement added.
The group also condemned what it termed the “systematic marginalisation of Bakassi people with regard to top federal and state government appointments.”

Hard Road to Freedom

The Government of Cameroun is said to have positioned a security mast at Abana, the former headquarters of Bakassi Local Government Area, for round-the-clock 24 hours monitoring of movements in and out of Camerounian territory. Given this scenario, and the opposition from the Nigerian government, it is certain that BFF faces a tough long road ahead in its quest for sovereignty.
But Ogoniland and Bakassi are only symptomatic of the growing pressure for local autonomy among Nigeria’s diverse nationalities.

National  Conference

The full import of the declarations of autonomy by the people of Ogoni and Bakassi are yet to unfold. But analysts say the roots of the regional emotions lie in growing discontent over the general direction of things in the polity.

The calls for true federalism, state police, and fiscal federalism as well the insurgency in parts of northern Nigeria and the recent armed struggle by groups in the Niger Delta have been described as manifestations of the burgeoning pressure for local self-government. Many experts have suggested a national discourse by major groups in the country to reach a state of agreement on the various issues threatening unity and peaceful coexistence in the world’s most populous black country.

“We cannot be dealing with problems piecemeal. We cannot run away from a national conference,” says Colonel Anthony Nyiam (rtd).

Bakassi: 45 Days to Sunset on the Peninsula.

ThisDay Live.

The House of Representatives recently adopted a resolution asking the Federal Government to initiate  the  process of  reviewing the judgement of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) ceding the Bakassi Peninsular to the Republic of Cameroun. More than four weeks later, the government is yet to take action on the issue. Onwuka Nzeshi revisits the demand of the Bakassi people
Background
Controversy over the exact boundaries of Nigeria and Cameroun dates back to the colonial era when the territories of Southern Cameroun were part of the Southern Protectorate of Nigeria and administered from the British Colonial Office in Lagos . The dispute over the Bakassi Peninsular   arose essentially   because of the conflicting interests of the European powers that scrambled and partitioned Africa at the Berlin Conference.
The United Nations Chronicle  narrates that  the dispute effectively began in 1994 when the Republic of Cameroun  approached  the International Court  of Justice (ICJ)  to rule on a dispute “relating essentially to the question of sovereignty over the Bakassi Peninsula”, which it declared was under military possession by Nigeria. Cameroun also asked the ICJ to settle the maritime boundary between the two countries.
On 10 October 2002, citing a 1913 agreement between Germany and the United Kingdom , as well as the Thomson-Marchland Declaration of 1929-1930, the ICJ decided to award sovereignty rights of the Bakassi Peninsula to Cameroun . In response to this decision, Nigeria asserted that the judgement did not consider “fundamental facts” about the Nigerian inhabitants of the Peninsula , whose “ancestral homes” the ICJ ruled to be in Camerounian territory.
Before the ruling, on 5 September 2002, the Secretary-General met in Paris with Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo and Cameroonian President Paul Biya to discuss the Peninsula . Both Presidents agreed to respect and implement the decision of the ICJ and to establish an implementation mechanism, with the support of the United Nations. They also agreed on the need for confidence-building measures, including demilitarization of the Peninsula , and recognized that the issue needed to be considered in the wider context of the overall relationship between the two countries. Both were determined to restore neighbourly relations and discussed the possibilities of cooperation in the economic field, including joint ventures.
The  then  Secretary-General  of the United Nations, Mr Kofi Annan hosted talks on 31 January 2004 in Geneva between the Presidents of Nigeria and Cameroun to settle the dispute over the sovereignty of the oil-rich Bakassi Peninsula. The meeting, under the framework of the Cameroun-Nigeria Mixed Commission, is aimed at discussing progress made by the two countries, with United Nations support, in the implementation of the ruling of the International Court of Justice.
A second meeting between the Secretary-General and the two Presidents was held in Geneva on 15 November 2002, during which they agreed to resolve their differences and consider all implications and ways of following up on the ICJ ruling. Subsequently, the two countries agreed on the way forward culminating on the signing of the Green Tree Agreement.
Hon Aminu Tambuwal
Parliamentary Intervention
On Wednesday, July 18, 2012, the House of Representatives passed a resolution   demanding a review of the judgement of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) ceding the Bakassi Peninsular to the Republic of Cameroun .  The House   charged the Federal Government of Nigeria to commence the process of the review of the judgement as well as prevail on the United Nations to conduct a plebiscite on the disputed territory to give the people of Bakassi an opportunity to self determination.
The Bakassi territory   was ceded to Cameroun ten years ago in controversial circumstances. As part of the implementation of the ruling of the international court, Nigeria and Cameroun signed a treaty known as the Green Tree Agreement.
In a motion of urgent national importance sponsored by Hon. Essien Ekpenyong Ayi, member of the House representing Bakassi/Calabar South/Akpabuyo Federal Constituency, Cross River State, the lower chamber of the parliament cautioned that time was fast running out on the matter as the ten year window allowed for reviews of judgements passed by the ICJ would elapse on October 10, 2012.
In the lead debate, Ayi said that the ICJ ruling delivered on October 10, 2002 was unacceptable to the natives of Bakassi as the court did not take into consideration all the issues at stake.
“We the people of Bakassi, up till today, reject the International Court of Justice judgement whose focus was on oil and not the people. We reject the cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment meted out on us by the omission of the Federal Government of Nigeria to exhaust all remedies open to Bakassi.
“New facts have emerged showing that the ICJ reached its judgement in error. One of these facts is that the 1913 Anglo-German Treaty relied upon by the ICJ to cede Bakassi to Cameroun is in breach of Article 6 of the General Act of Berlin Conference that enjoined European powers ‘to watch out over the preservation of the native tribes and not to take over or effect transfer of their territory’.
“We have other legal, historical and geographical facts that were not considered by the International Court of Justice. In due time, our legal team will present these facts to the ICJ but we need the Federal Government of Nigeria to put the machineries in place for the review of the ICJ judgement since the case is between the Federal Government of Nigeria and the Republic of Cameroun,” he said.
Article 61 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice provides that an application for the revision of a judgement may be made only when it is based on the discovery of some facts of such a nature as to be a decisive factor, which fact was, when judgement was given, unknown to the court and also to the party claiming revision.
According to the lawmaker different countries had in the past applied for a revision of ICJ rulings on them.
Ayi disclosed that the Bakassi people would insist on having a United Nations supervised plebiscite where they would exercise their right to self determination which is an inalienable right provided for in Article 1 of the 1966 International Convention on Civil and Political Rights. He said that the demand is also in line with the UN General Assembly 2200 which provides for the right of all people to self-determination by virtue of which they freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural development.
Chairman, House Committee on Rules and Business, Hon. Sam Tsokwa said there was need for the Federal Government to expedite action on the issue because Nigeria’s right to seek a revision of the judgement would elapse by the 10th day of October this year, the tenth anniversary of the judgement. Tsokwa said Nigeria still had a chance to remedy the mistakes of the past particularly as the Green Tree Agreement was yet to be ratified by the National Assembly.
The motion which coincided with the visit of a delegation of the Bakassi people to the House of Representatives    was unanimously adopted by the House in a voice vote.
At a media briefing afterwards, leaders of the Bakassi people warned against the looming danger of a civil uprising in the area if the Federal Government failed to take action on the matter.
Paramount ruler of Bakassi, Etinyin Etim Okon Edet said the struggle should not be left to the people of Bakassi alone but should be a collective effort.
“This country ( Nigeria ) is not fair to us. Our people were told to leave their ancestral home in a hurry and we obeyed for the sake of peace. But we found out that even the place they asked us to relocate to there were no arrangements to make us comfortable there. The people have been abandoned to their fate, but we are Nigerians,” he said. The people of Bakassi, Edet said,   needed justice; equity and fair play to enable them   reclaim their ancestral lands in the Bakassi Peninsular.
The royal father observed that though   the indigenes of Bakassi were peace loving,   there was a limit to human patience.  He blamed the United Nations and the International Court of Justice for the plight of Bakassi, warning that the world   should not allow the situation to degenerate into a violent conflict before they intervened in the crisis.
Declaration of Autonomy
Barely three weeks after the intervention of the House of Representatives, had the Bakassi people made good their threat to resort to self help if help was not forthcoming from the government. The Bakassi Self-determination Front declared the territory an independent state,   launched   its own national flag and established a radio station to propagate the aspirations of the indigenous people of   the oil-rich peninsular.
The  flag  which has  blue, white and red  colours dotted  with stars was hoisted  at  Dayspring Island to signify the dawn of a new era and the determination of the people to liberate themselves from a system that had rendered them homeless in the land of their forefathers.  The radio station had   commenced test-transmission   a few days before the formal declaration of autonomy in the territory.
Commander-General of the  Bakassi Self-Determination Front, Ekpe Ekpenyong Oku, in his maiden broadcast to the people of Bakassi  pleaded  with  them  to leave Abana, erstwhile headquarters of Bakassi Local Government Area  to avoid being caught in a cross fire  between the local army and the Cameroonian forces .
Oku disclosed that the fight was going to be thick and fierce and   warned   all travellers on coastline of Bakassi Peninsula to steer clear of the disputed   territory. He called on all men of goodwill, human rights organisations to join hands with the people of Bakassi in resisting what he described as the “international conspiracy” Bakassi.
“Ours will be a classical story of the elephant and the ant. The elephant will soon be driven frantic with ants all over its enormous bulk. The elephant will be so harassed and will find no respite and will dash itself against a tree trunk.
“Throughout history, injured people have had to resort to arms in their self-defence where peaceful negotiations fail. Bakassi people are no exception. Our right to self-determination is imminent; some will die, but some will live to reap from our labour,” the Commander-General stated.
Setback
The declaration of independence and the threat to resist any threat to the survival of the   nascent Bakassi Republic has elicited mixed reactions.  Although, the move by the Bakassi Self-Determination Front has been hailed in certain quarters, it has been condemned in other quarters as well.   The Nigerian government has largely treated the development like a joke but the government of the Republic of Cameroun is not leaving anything to chance and has reportedly deployed more troops to the Peninsular to forestall the looming threat to its sovereignty over the peninsular.
So far, the greatest setback to the rise of the new independent state of Bakassi is coming from within and among its political elite.  A few days after the declaration, Senator Florence Ita-Giwa popularly known as Mama Bakassi led a group of human rights activists under the aegis of Bakassi Peoples General Assembly (BPGA) to protest against the revolution on the peninsula.
The dissenting group   dissociated itself from the declaration of independence championed by the Bakassi Self Determination Front and instead renewed the agitation for the resettlement of the Bakassi natives who were displaced from their homes as a result of the ICJ ruling and Green Tree Agreement.
“We completely dissociate ourselves from the purported declaration of a sovereign state of Bakassi. For the avoidance of doubt, we have on more than one occasion expressed our desire to be resettled in the only portion of Bakassi Local Government Area that was not ceded to Cameroun under the Green tree Agreement. That place is known as Day Spring 1, 2 and the Kwa Island.
“It is our view that the issue confronting us is not served by a declaration of independence, but by accelerating the resettlement of our people to a location of our choice. We have no intention to secede from the Federal Republic of Nigeria,” Ita-Giwa said.
Given Ita- Giwa’s   position in the   political history of the Bakassi people, her position on the current development in her homeland cannot be glossed over. She   once   represented the Cross River South Senatorial district at the National Assembly. Bakassi was part of that   constituency and she hails from one of its communities.
But where does this leave the struggle of the people of Bakassi for justice? Where do the divergent views on Bakassi leave the House of Representatives that had overwhelmingly voted in favour of a review of the judgement?
A former Nigerian Ambassador to Ethiopia and serving member of the House of Representatives, Hon. Nkoyo Toyo   said   the renewed agitation by the natives of Bakassi   to reclaim their ancestral lands is more or less an indication that they have exhausted their patience waiting for the Nigerian state to act on their behalf.
“What has happened is that a radical arm of the struggle to redeem Bakassi has informed us that it will not wait on the Nigerian state to act on its behalf. What this shows is that when state responses are weak, groups become emboldened to act. “The National Assembly, particularly the House of Representatives is taking some steps and hopefully the Federal Government will have to provide a new direction. Put simply, we have lost sleep on this matter and there are no short cuts to its resolution,” Toyo said.
Some legal luminaries   have dismissed the renewed struggle by the Bakassi people as a belated attempt to seek justice after a ruling of a court of competent jurisdiction. They argued that the current move would at best rake up old wounds, but would not change anything.  These positions appear to shut the windows of opportunity which some elements in   Bakassi saw before they started the agitation to possibly upturn the judgement of the International Court of Justice.
There seem to be a concerted effort by the   government and the political establishment in Nigeria to write off Bakassi as a bad case and foreclose any review of the matter.
Article Six of the Statute of the International Court of Justice provides that “an application for the revision of a judgement may be made only when it is based on the discovery of some facts of such nature as to be a decisive factor, which fact was, when the judgement was given, unknown to the court and also to the party claiming revision”
Open Wounds
Contrary to the position of some legal luminaries in Nigeria, empirical evidence shows that the International Court of Justice had in the past reviewed its judgements based on the provisions of Article Six of the Statute establishing the global court.  In the case of El-Salvador Vs Honduras, the ICJ in 2002 revised its earlier judgement of September 11, 1992 concerning the land, island and maritime frontier dispute between the two countries. Similarly, the ICJ in 2001 revised its judgement of July 11, 1996 following an application of the convention on the prevention and punishment for the crime of genocide in a case of Yugoslavia Vs Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The court also revised itself following an application for revision and interpretation of its judgement of February 24, 1982 in the case concerning the continental shelf between Tunisia and Libya Arab Jamahiriya.
In line   with the principle of   precedence, it would be wrong and hasty to dismiss the call by the Bakassi people on the government of the Federal Republic of Nigeria to invoke the machineries of justice and demand a review of the ICJ judgement on Bakassi Peninsular.  Proponents of the review of the Bakassi case claim that new facts have emerged showing that the ICJ reached its judgement in error. “ One of these facts is that the 1913 Anglo-German Treaty relied upon by the ICJ to cede  Bakassi  to Cameroun is in  breach of Article 6 of the General Act  of Berlin Conference that enjoined European Powers  to watch over the preservation  of the native tribes and not to take over or effect transfer of their territory.”
If the review comes and the court returns the same verdict, the Bakassi people still have another option of insisting on a United Nations supervised plebiscite where they will exercise their right to self determination which is an inalienable right enshrined in Article 1 of the 1966 International Convention on Civil and political Rights.
The United Nations General Assembly Resolution 2200A also provides for the right of all people to self determination by virtue of which they could freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural development.
The entire world could recall the recent United Nations supervised referendum held on January 9th – 15th, 2011 where the people of Southern Sudan opted for independence and separation from their compatriots in Northern Sudan .
It  must be emphasised that time is running out   on Bakassi Peninsular and the last window of opportunities closing.
If Nigeria failed to commence the process of the review of the ICJ judgement   ceding Bakassi to Cameroun before the 10th day of October, 2012, the sun would finally set on the controversial decision and anarchy may be loosed upon a once peaceful island.  The clock is ticking   and   time for action is between now and the next forty five days.
What the ICJ Statue Says
Article 61
1. An application for revision of a judgment may be made only when it is based upon the discovery of some fact of such a nature as to be a decisive factor, which fact was, when the judgment was given, unknown to the Court and also to the party claiming revision, always provided that such ignorance was not due to negligence.
2. The proceedings for revision shall be opened by a judgment of the Court expressly recording the existence of the new fact, recognizing that it has such a character as to lay the case open to revision, and declaring the application admissible on this ground.
3. The Court may require previous compliance with the terms of the judgment before it admits proceedings in revision.
4. The application for revision must be made at latest within six months of the discovery of the new fact.
5. No application for revision may be made after the lapse of ten years from the date of the judgment.

Jonathan, Obasanjo part ways?


By .

Obasanjo Obasanjo
The emergence of President Goodluck Jonathan on the highest seat in the land has been largely credited to former President Olusegun Obasanjo, but the frosty relationship between the duo in the last one year is giving their loyalists a cause for worry, writes Remi Adelowo

It took the surprise visit of the Bayelsa State Governor, Seriake Dickson, to the hilltop residence of former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo in Abeokuta, Ogun State, to arouse any suspicion that indeed, all may not be well between President Goodluck Jonathan and Obasanjo.
A further proof that Obasanjo may have distanced himself from the president was the widely reported outcome of the meeting between the former president and former military leader, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, in Abuja.
A joint statement issued by the two former leaders had suggested on the way forward to addressing the incessant security challenges in the country, while albeit insinuating that the president seems incapable of providing the right leadership at this critical period of the nation’s history. 
Originally planned as an incognito visit, it was a shocked Dickson, who on sighting newshounds after he stepped out of Obasanjo’s residence, searched for the right words to say on the reasons for his visit. Obviously laboring to sound convincing, the governor disclosed that he was simply on a courtesy visit to pay homage to the former president.
His aides had also reportedly told some journalists that the governor had come to solicit for the intervention of the former president on his (governor’s) alleged frosty relationship with lawmakers in the Bayelsa State House of Assembly.
Impeccable sources privy to the discussion between the governor and the former president, however, revealed that Dickson, at the instance of the Presidency, was on a fence-mending mission to repair the relationship between his godfather, Jonathan and Obasanjo, which despite denials by the principal characters, has almost completely broken down in recent times.
The governor, it was learnt, had allegedly pleaded with Obasanjo to join hands with the president in tackling the various challenges that the present administration has been battling with in the last two years. Dickson was also said to have worked on the emotions of the former president, reminding him on the roles he (Obasanjo) played in the emergence of Jonathan, both as acting president in 2009 and later as president in 2011.
In rounding up, Dickson told Obasanjo that now is the time that his support is most needed to stave off the several attacks directed at the president, particularly from influential political players from the North.
Wily as ever, Obasanjo according to sources, simply thanked the governor for the visit and said nothing more. “He was non committal to the requests of the governor, but promised to get back to him”, said a source.

Composition of PAC
The prelude to the thawed relationship between the erstwhile close allies started shortly after Jonathan was sworn-in as acting president following the death of late Umaru Yar’ Adua in April 2009. To chart an agenda and bring as many stakeholders as possible on board, Jonathan had inaugurated a Presidential Advisory Council (PAC), headed by former Army Chief and ex-Minister of Defence, Gen. Theophillus Danjuma, to come up with a blueprint for the fledlging administration. 
The council had as its members distinguished Nigerians, which included former Secretary General of the Commonwealth, Chief Emeka Anyaoku, Professor Ben Nwabueze, to mention but a few.
Obasanjo, The Nation learnt, felt slighted that he was not consulted on the issue, but never broached this with the then acting president.  “He (Obasanjo) was not comfortable with Danjuma’s headship of the Council; you know his relationship with Danjuma has remained frosty since the latter quit his cabinet in 2006.”
The outcome of the 2011 general elections in which the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was swept away in all the South West states controlled by the party, according to sources, is also another bone of contention. Obasanjo, revealed another source, believed the president did not do enough to ‘support’ the party at the polls. “Right now, the man (Obasanjo) does not have a support base and he is blaming the president for this.”

The godfather palaver
Another complaint of the former president is the alleged refusal of the current president to seek his opinion on key national issues, but rather prefer the counsel of a prominent Ijaw leader, who is widely acknowledged as the president’s new godfather and an influential South-South politician.     

Cabinet reshuffle
 The first cabinet reshuffle carried out by President Jonathan in early 2011 was also cited as another grievance of Obasanjo. One of the former president nominees in the cabinet, Chief Jubril Martins-Kuye, who served as the Minister of Commerce and Industry was dropped, a decision that did not go down well with Obasanjo.

Alleged second term ambition
While the former president still feels proud that he played a significant role in ensuring power shift from the North to the South-South, he is, however, not comfortable with the alleged surreptitious moves by loyalists of the president urging him to contest for another term in office in 2015. Obasanjo wants power back in the North in 2015 to guarantee the political stability of the country, The Nation reliably gathered.

Early signs
The first early sign that the former president’s relationship with President Jonathan has not been cordial came when the former resigned his chairmanship of PDP Board of Trustees (BOT) early this year, citing the need to have more time to attend to his international engagements as the reason for his action.
Not a few Nigerians were also surprised when, at the last Council of States meeting held at the Presidential Villa in Abuja, the former president quite unusually was conspicuously absent even though sources said he was in the country. The other ex-leaders absent at the meeting were Gen. Babangida, Gen. Yakubu Gowon and Gen. Muhammadu Buhari.
According to a source, “the former president is not hiding his displeasure with Jonathan; that explains why he has washed his hands off the affairs of the party and also stayed away from the Villa or calling the president to offer any advice.”
The icy relationship between the two men remains unresolved, just as the camp of the former president is allegedly working behind-the-scene to promote Governors. Sule Lamido/Rotimi Amaechi for the PDP presidential and vice-presidential tickets in 2015. The former president’s camp has since denied this report.