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Nigeria’s Problem Goes Beyond Restructuring – VP Yemi Osinbajo

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Restructuring is not the solution to the problem of Nigeria as being suggested in many quarters, the Vice President Yemi Osinbajo says.

The Vice President gave this opinion through his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Mr Laolu Akande in a statement, while he was answering questions  from Nigerians at a town hall meeting in Minnesota, the United States of America, on Sunday.

Accroding to The Punch, he also wondered how past Nigerian leaders, including a military dictator, Ibrahim Babangida; former President Olusegun Obasanjo and former President Goodluck Jonathan, spent the oil revenues that accrued to the country during their administrations.

Osinbajo insisted that the problem with Nigeria can only be alleviated through the proper management of the nation’s resources and not necessary through about geographical restructuring.

“The problem with our country is not a matter of restructuring and we must not allow ourselves to be drawn into the argument that our problems stem from some geographical restructuring. It is about managing resources properly and providing for the people properly, that is what it is all about.

“I served for eight years as Attorney General in Lagos State and one of the chief issues that we fought for in Lagos State was what you call fiscal federalism. We felt that there was a need for the states to be stronger, for states, to more or less, determine their fortunes.

“So, for example, we went to court to contest the idea that every state should control, to a certain extent, its own resources (the so-called resource control debate). We were in court at that time up to the Supreme Court and the court ruled that oil-producing states should continue to get 13 per cent derivation.

“While we were at the Supreme Court only the oil-producing states and Lagos were interested in resource control, everybody else was not interested in resource control for obvious reasons.

“Now, that is the way the argument has always gone. Those who have the resources want to take all of it, while those who do not have want to share from others.” he said.

Osinbajo said his view was that the government must create an environment that would allow people to realise their economic potential.

In June, Osinbajo had said that the present administration was not opposed to restructuring as being canvassed in many quarters.

Osinbajo stated this while addressing traditional rulers from Ekiti State at the palace of the Ewi of Ado-Ekiti, Oba Rufus Adejugbe, ahead of the governorship election in the state.

He had said, “I want to say that this country is strongest, this country is best when we are one, when we are united. It is a united country that can make a difference.

“We are fully in support of any form of restructuring that benefits the people of our country.

“That is why, for example, the President just signed this into law, a bill which enables Houses of Assembly to be autonomous; so that their finances are autonomous. This is some form of devolution of powers.

“We are also keenly supportive of anything that gives a measure of independence for states so that the states can realise their own potential and do very well for themselves in every way. The President is keenly supportive of all of those things.

 



Joshua Oyenigbehin is an introvert who is passionate about Storytelling, writing and teaching. He sees his imagination as an unsearchable world, more magical than a fairyland. He has written a novel and working on another.