Tuesday, November 26, 2013

National Restructuring: Lagos should be restored to its status as a Federal Territory!

by Eze Eluchie

One of the greatest fraud perpetuated on the peoples of Nigeria and the Nigerian federation is the conversion of Lagos from a Federal Territory to a State after the territory had served for almost a century as, first a Crown Colony, and then the Capital Territory of the Federal Republic.

Historically, at its inception, three territories, to wit: 1). the Crown Colony of Lagos (which later transformed to the Capital city of Lagos and then ultimately, Lagos State), 2). the Northern  Protectorate and 3). the Southern Protectorates, were amalgamated to form Nigeria in 1914. Lagos remained and served as the Federal Capital of Nigeria uptil 1967, when as part of ‘strategic’ efforts to restructure Nigeria and elicit primordial loyalties, it was transformed into a ‘State’ by the civil-war government of General Gowon.

It tantamount to a fraud in the sense that people from all over Nigeria and beyond had converged on Lagos, developed it into what it is, in pursuance of the fact and under the pretext that it is a Federal Territory, only to have the territory surreptitiously converted to a State, as part of the tragic and divisive decisions made during the period of national turbulence in the late 60’s.

The repeated clamor for special funding and treatment of Lagos, similar to what the Federal Capital Territory of Abuja receives, emanating from several quarters inclusive of the present political leadership in Lagos, civil societies and the residents of the territory, is though quite justified considering that Lagos is indeed a Federal Territory, only realizable when Lagos is restored to its real status as a Federal Territory.   

The restoration of the original status of  Lagos as a Federal Territory will in addition to assuring increased access to federal funds as often requested by the various political leaders and residents of the State and clearly discernible from the enormity of problems faced by the territory as a result of concentration of diverse activities in the territory also enhance the status of the territory globally.

A proper designation of Lagos as a Federal Territory will in addition to addressing the special funding and other needs of the territory, also redress the injustice meted out to the various peoples of Nigeria by a hurried and irrational military fiat in 1967, also align our federal structure with similar federations, such as the United States and the United Kingdom where in addition to the Federal Capital Cities of Washington DC and London respectively, the federal/central government also directly administers other Federal territories.

The recent spate of unconstitutional 'deportations' of Nigerians from Lagos carried out by the 'State Government' controlling the affairs of Lagos on account of their 'not being from Lagos', and the continuing threat of the same government to return Nigerians (some of whom were born and lived their entire lives in the Lagos federal Territory) to the places of origins of their forebears, reminds one of the ongoing 'indgene-settler' crisis which has engulfed the City of Jos and its environs in Plateau State, resulting in thousands of causalities, a crisis which must not be allowed to reoccur anywhere else in Nigeria.


A return of Lagos to its original status as a Federal Territory, administered by a Minister of the Federal Republic and where all Nigerians have equal access to governance, protection and other benefits attributable to citizens of the Federal Republic in any other Federal territory, such as the Federal Capital territory (Abuja) will surely be a vital aspect of our efforts at National reconstruction. 

The constant friction over ownership and management of Federal infrastructure and establishments, such as the Federal {sea- and air-}Ports, historical buildings and monuments, and a variety of other assets, located in Lagos originally on account of its status as a Federal Territory, will cease and the sense of loss of the fraud perpetuated in 1967 as a ploy to garner 'support' during the civil war era, will abate, if not cease entirely. 

The present situation where national assets and resources located in Lagos on account of its original status as a Federal Territory are now either allowed to rot, taken over by a few or expropriated from the Federal Government into the purse of a few by cunning manipulation of so-called 'Lagos State laws' is anachronistic to any known sense of justice and must be stopped to ensure equity, justice and goodwill.

The Federal Republic of Nigeria rightly has one Federal Capital Territory (Abuja) and a Federal Territory (Lagos).

The present status of Lagos as one of the 36 component States of the Nigerian Federation should be reversed to the original and rightful status of Lagos as a Federal Territory of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

Let us ensure a holistic restructuring and renegotiation of our contraption, to make it into a workable and livable Federation!


Picture: Map of the Lagos Federal Territory

Sunday, November 24, 2013

We need an apology from our Chartered Accountants!

by Eze Eluchie

Large scale corruption is perpetuated, not usually by physical stealing or movement of cash, but by a deft manipulation and adjustment of funds, usually by crafty (mis)representation of figures or accounting procedures and provisions.

It thus ordinarily follows that one group which might probably have helped to perpetuate the horrendous depletion of Nigeria through corruption and dubious money keeping and financial practices are our Accountants.

From the quasi-criminal certification, as vibrant and thriving concerns that our major Chartered Accountancy firms routinely stamp on the Annual Returns Booklets of firms and financial institutions which later collapsed after hapless citizens expend their life savings in shares on such moribund entities, to their willingness to collude with International oil conglomerates and those entrusted with our oil revenues to short-change the Nigerian treasury; from the creative voodoo accounting common place with our public sector which makes it easy for billions of Naira to vamoose from vaults without trace, to the depletion of our pension funds which makes it clear to most Nigerians who have labored in the public sector that their labor has been in vain as they look forward to very bleak retirement; our Chartered Accountants have been most unfair to the Nigerian contraption!

As part of the process of national reconciliation, it will be wonderful if this professional body, some of whom have gone ahead to occupy exalted positions in our contraption, were to come out and apologize to Nigeria and Nigerians for harm and pain caused us all.

I was thus thrilled to learn that a man who is in a position to render such an apology on behalf of his colleagues, and who is considered as the 'Doyen of the Accountancy Profession in Nigeria' and who has contributed enormously to that sector of our collective ruin is still alive and could hopefully voice the much needed and reconciliatory apology on behalf of his 'professional children'. Pa Akintola Williams, whose Accountancy firm, founded in 1952, and has played a pivotal role in all the issues described above and more recently in the scam perpetuated against hapless Nigerian share/stockholders in Cadbury Plc and the equally hapless British shareholders of Cadbury Schweppes Plc where bogus accounting practices caused financial losses in the millions to innocent investors who relied on the 'professional expertise' of our Chartered Accountants, has certainly lived through the ages and is best suited to proffer the much needed apology.

No doubt, the Doyen has retired from the profession at the time his 'professional children' executed some of these scams, but the firm used to perpetuate the rot, still bears his name and he still receives royalties therefrom. There is also no doubt that, out there, there are a lot of Chartered Accountants who, like the Doyen, discharge their responsibilities conscientiously in compliance with the highest dictates of their noble profession - the malfeasance of the bad eggs and the inability of their professionals disciplinary authorities to cleanse their body of bad eggs, has brought odium to their lot whilst pauperizing our country.


As we wish the 'Doyen of the Accountancy Profession in Nigeria' who recently celebrated his 93rd birth anniversary last August more years in good health ahead, he is humbly urged to on behalf of the thousands of  Chartered Accountants in Nigeria issue an unreserved apology to Nigeria and Nigerians for harm caused. Only such an apology will justify the several accolades that have most likely been lined up to be showered on the Doyen at an appropriate time in the near future.


Picture: Pa Akintola Williams


Thursday, November 21, 2013

Partisan CSO's and Activists: A worrisome development for our polity

by Eze Eluchie

At the political realm, it has always been clear that since our pretense at independence from our colonial overlords in October 1960, a very dangerous dichotomy exists in Nigeria, a system that has tended, over the years to elevate mediocrity above excellence, leading to the confinement of our contraption in the very sorry state it presently find itself.

In all those years, Civil Society Organizations and those portrayed as ‘activists’ had created a very necessary semblance of a contraption still interested in cohabiting and coexisting as a unit and  finding common grounds to address issues.

Events in the past couple of weeks are beginning to reveal some elements of the CSO’s, or rather those amongst the CSO’s who seem to have the wherewithal to buy media presence, these purported ‘activists’ are likewise fractured and divisive as their political brethren or perhaps even worse as they are able to camouflage their dubious partisan nature by a mien of objectivity.

A contemporary issue that has highlighted this unfortunate scenario is the arrest of two children of the Jigawa State Governor, Sule Lamido, for laundering/diverting over Ten Billion Naira of Jigawa State funds into private accounts. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission has detailed that the sums involved are presently lodged in private accounts traceable to the two urchins and their father, Governor Sule Lamido.

This coming on the heels of the indifference the CSO community and ‘activists’ to the monumental fleecing and public thievery which has continued across the various States of the federation, particularly Lagos State (which is mentioned here because of the enormous wealth inherent therein and the use to which such has been put, {Forinstance see:  http://ezeluchie.blogspot.com/2013/08/the-4-billion-naira-us-24-million-bail.html })

The loud silence that has greeted the fleecing of Jigawa and Lagos State’s (amongst others) from the ordinarily vociferous ‘anti-corruption activists’ is deafening!

Juxtaposing the silence on the Jigawa State imbroglio with the lynch mob which evolved over the purchase of ‘bullet-proof’ vehicles by the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria/Aviation Ministry, involving the sum of approximately one-quarter of a billion Naira, less than one-fortieth of the amount involved in the Jigawa scam, one cannot but wonder if the two events took place in the same solar system, talk-less of the same country.

The loquacious ‘activist’ attorneys, disgraced former federal legislators, organizations with penchant to petitions the United Nations Security Council over mundane issues such as when the President coughs, the several partisan CSO’s and others who journey alongside them, who took to the streets threatening and blackmailing every public office imaginable over the ‘bullet-proof’ vehicle issue have eerily gone comatose in the face of much larger looting.

Is reaction to large-scale corruption based on partisan and or ethnocentric considerations? Is the ethnicity or the political affiliation of the suspects in the corruption cases above highlighted instrumental to 'CSO' and 'activists' reactions?

May I remind all that large-scale corruption irrespective of who perpetuates it, has served to debase us, pauperizing our being, prostituting our youth, desecrating our heritage and mortgaging our future, as such we cannot afford the present despicable and reprehensible two-faced approach CSO’s appear to be confronting the issue with.

The only thing worse than corruption is to pretend to be tackling it in a corrupt manner.

From the Federal to the Local Council levels, from the ruling party to all opposition parties, corruption and corrupt tendencies exists and we should address this societal scourge equally wheresoever it is identified.

This coming on the heels of some 'activists' with well known partisan affiliations who use the instrumentality of their 'CSO's' to serve as domestic election 'monitors' and 'observes' and thereafter proceed to announce preconceived notions as results of such 'elections monitoring' or 'observations' spells truly worrisome times for our contraption.  

As CSO’s, we represent, perhaps alongside with the military, the last threads holding our contraption together. If we allow our vision and purpose to be diluted by partisan and or ethnocentric coloration's, we risk irrelevance and the accompanying odium associated with it, in addition to hastening our contraptions descent into a bottomless abyss.

A look at other territories where large scale conflagrations have erupted and that abyss has been attained, such as Syria, Afghanistan and Congo DRC, will inform us that when the “cookie crumbles” everyone is affected. We should get our acts together and do what we have to do to salvage the contraption from its free fall.

A holistic restructuring and renegotiation of our contraption will go a long way to address these schisms.


Picture: Nigeria's beautiful colors.