Opinion
If And Only If..!

The Column “Catalogue” which started last week Wednesday with the topic “The Nigerian Factor” is expected to be a regular feature on this page.
In this Context, Catalogue here refers to the readiness of the columnist to display burning issues and their interplay in national development. It promises to be a cerebral articulation of challenges and solutions. Happy reading.
If we could get it right, at the level of development in
a country where the youth population is more than 65 percent, Nigeria would be ready for Vision 2050, which was recently launched.
If we had realised that a sustainable development of the educational system would guarantee a healthy and smart youth population, we wouldn’t have found this country in the present quagmire.
If Nigeria had pursued the millennium development goals with serious strides to reduce poverty to halt by 2015, there wouldn’t have been a boil over #ENDSARS demonstration that has cost the country billions of Naira in damaged properties, loss of productive hours and precious lives.
Nigeria wouldn’t have been gravely divided as it is today, with ethnic warlords threatening secession, if we got the federation right, in distribution of power and allocation of values to different levels of the society.
The high and mighty contrive ethnic and religious sentiments to divide and impoverish the people more. If we must solve the problem of Nigeria, then, the Nigerian question must be targeted and addressed quickly with speed and precise sustainable approach.
If our problem were a dance, it wouldn’t be the dance of an old woman with snuff in her hand. It would surely not be a boogaloo dance, a slow motion dance. It would be dancing to a boogie-woogie, a fast rhythmic beat of jazz.
Indeed, it would not be a macabre dance to the evil drums of divisiveness or a one step forward, two steps backward dance of action and inaction we see in the Presidency.
If the leadership of this country would follow national action plans to eliminate the things that divide this country like the unbundling of the powers of the Federal Government and the quick introduction of fair revenue allocation formulae, resource control and distribution, there will be equity and justice.
How on earth can one justify the policy of Gold resources for Zamfara and Zamfara only, while the oil of the Niger Delta region is for all Nigerians and the Federal Government?
If we knew how to put together a good mixture of mutter to build solid building blocks of peace by ensuring that there is justice in the fiscal Federalism, where every state would be made to reap the full benefits of its natural resources, Nigeria would be a true egalitarian society.
Today, oil mineral producing states take 13 percent derivation for the proceeds of hydrocarbon, while some states in the North own and mine their solid minerals. Too Bad! This is the main thrust of the so-called Nigerian question.
Mutual ethnic co-existence, religious harmony, the issues of marginalization of minority ethnic nations are all part of the Nigerian question.
Leadership, corruption, poverty and diseases are also issues that need to be addressed in the Nigerian question. Every question needs an answer. What are the answers for the much-talked about Nigerian question?
Many patriots have talked about a sovereign national conference to discuss the Nigerian question. Others talk about renegotiating Nigeria. In many quarters, many speak of the report of 2014 National Conference convoked by former President Goodluck Jonathan. Why is the implementation of that report another national question?
The bottom line is to bring Nigerians together to renegotiate this country for good. The country was never negotiated. It was given to us by the British in 1900 through 1914 amalgamation of North and Southern Protectorates and independence in 1960.
Indeed, the agenda for all the constitutional conferences, Clifford of 1922, MacPherson 1951, Richards 1946, Lyttleton 1954, to the independence constitution were set by the colonial masters.
Sadly, the present grand norm, the 1999 constitution as amended, is also not the people’s constitution as it was compiled by the Military and dumped on Nigerians with all the inadequacies.
These inadequacies gave rise to the Nigerian question that needs a lot of answers, which include the Federal structure that is gravely convoluted, poverty, unemployment and half-baked educational system. Growing trends of divisiveness as exemplified by calls to divide Nigeria into Biafra, Niger Delta, Odua, and Middle-Belt by different sections of the country are the backlash from the inadequacies of a poorly structured country.
According to Winston Churchill, “it is better to Jaw Jaw than to War War”. No time can be better than now. Time is running out!
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