–Says insecurity”s greatest challenge of national
development
—-Explains rationale for N500bn Social Investment in 2017
budget
By Johnbosco Agbakwuru
ABUJA – THE Acting President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo has
attributed the upsurge in agitations in the country to the failure of the state
to create an inclusive society under the existing constitutional arrangements
to guarantee the security of lives, livelihoods and liberties by the agencies
saddled with the responsibilities of maintaining law and order.Acting President
Yemi Osinbajo;
Prof. Osinbajo also stated that one of the greatest
challenges to the national development in Nigeria today was the issue of
insecurity.
The Acting President who stated this Friday at the opening
session of the Golden Jubilee Conference of the Nigerian Association of Law
Teachers at the Nnamdi Azikiwe University Awka, Anambra State, stated that
corruption had led the country to terrible depths of misery.
He said, ´In the past two years we have unearthed cases of
embezzlement of public funds that show that if we could recover all that was
stolen we could easily double our external reserves. That level of corruption
is an existential threat to any nation.
“The abject poverty of millions in every zone of our nation,
the absence of good roads, schools, hospitals, is largely because some have
pocketed the common wealth.
“Boko Haram for example could have cost us less-loss of
lives of our brave soldiers and over 20,000 civilians- if the government and
military authorities had not corruptly enriched themselves with the funds to
purchase platforms, equipment, uniforms, and pay allowances.
“About 2.3 million persons in the North East are displaced
from their homes and their livelihoods today, thousands of children cannot find
their parents.
“This is why the vast majority of our people are confused
about our system of justice especially in its response to the stealing of
public resources. How, for example, does it take so long to prove in court that
a man earning a civil servants salary has billions in his bank accounts? The
gradual loss of confidence in our administration of justice system is a real
threat to social cohesion.
“Almost daily you hear on radio and read on social media how
easy it is to jail a man who stole a goat or a phone within months and how
difficult it is to prosecute a public officer who has stolen billions of public
funds.
“Consequently we must redefine the offence of corruption and
our approach to its prosecution, taking into account its profoundly destructive
impact on lives and property. Such an offence is worse than homicide; it is a
crime against humanity. The approach of the trials must be time bound.
“In many judicial systems more often than not in serious
cases part of the reason why bail is not easily granted is because the trials
are time bound and usually not longer than six weeks. Dilatory tactics on the
part of lawyers is sternly viewed, adjournments are usually not allowed or if
so at great financial and professional cost to the lawyers on either side.
“Today the most obvious cases of corruption are interminably
delayed; indeed the strategy of many defence counsels is delay. In a recent
UNODC study, about 43% of judicial officers surveyed reported that the main
causes of excessive delay in our courts were “ploy by parties”, “requests for
unnecessary adjournments” and “interlocutory applications to protract
proceedings” and it was similarly found that most adjournments were caused by
the absence of the accused, the defendant, their lawyers or of a witness.
“This suggests that the stakeholders in the justice sector
are mostly responsible for the problem of delay in the administration of
justice. The delays in our system of justice are becoming a source of derision
of our trial system by judges in other jurisdictions.
“In 2014 for example, an English Court of Appeal decision-
IPCO (Nigeria) Limited v. Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation [2014] EWHC
576 (Comm), the Court ruled that a pending challenge in a Nigerian court to a
US$340 million award should not be a bar to enforcement in London, because the
Nigerian proceedings could take “up to a generation” to be resolved. The Court
also described the Nigerian judicial system as being bedeviled by
“catastrophic” delays.
“Our system of justice is clearly under siege; most of it is
self-inflicted – delays by counsel, weak control of proceedings by courts, and
corrupt practices, a subject which in and of itself is a matter of serious
concern.
“We as law teachers must ask ourselves whether our legal
system can survive and serve its purposes to society without a serious and
incisive rethink and reconsideration.
“So, how should the state react to our other security
challenges, the Boko Haram terrorist activities in the North East, tensions in
the Niger Delta, herdsmen and farmer clashes, and threats of secession and
counter threats of forced excision. In addition are the overarching issues of
poverty, unemployment and corruption.
“First we must recognize that a lot of these agitations
center around the alleged failures of the state to create an inclusive society
under existing constitutional arrangements, to guarantee the security of lives,
livelihoods and liberties by the agencies charged with maintaining law and
order and to build trust around the rule of law and the system of
administration of justice.
Agitations and absence of inclusive society
“First, on the matter of inclusion and inequalities, there
is little doubt in my mind that the provision of the basics of life to the
largest number of our people remains the greatest source of tension in the
polity.
“The daily struggles of many, for healthcare, a means of
livelihood and the absence of a socially just means of ensuring that many,
especially young people, have access to education and jobs provides a
constantly replenished pool of young malcontents, ready to be recruited into
any sort of Army, whether it be of kidnappers, terrorists, or violent or
antisocial agitation for one cause or the other.
“Besides, the constant agitation for share of national
resources, is a product of individual-elite- deprivation, taken up by ethnic
nationalities and socio-cultural groups. Each group views the other with
suspicion when it comes to matters of resources, and government appointments.
“As it is at the Federal level, so it is at the State level.
In my state for example, the Egba and Ijebus in Ogun State are constantly
arguing over who is getting a better deal in government appointments or
infrastructural development.
“Unfortunately, in order to give our campaigns greater
acceptability and resonance, we often characterize them as ethnic or religious
agitation. The right to a decent existence, to education, healthcare or jobs
must not depend on how loudly my ethnic or religious group agitates; no, these
are my rights as a citizen of Nigeria.
“It is the failure of the State to deliver on these
essentials of life and livelihood that compels our people to run to their
tribal and religious camps to seek succour by way of agitation for basic rights
and services.
“Unfortunately, it is the same elite especially the
political elite, who fail the people by the wastage and embezzlement of their
funds who are at the forefront of pretending that their deprivations are caused
by other ethnic nationalities.
Hunger, poverty not a tribal, religious issue
“Having gone round this nation to its villages and settlements,
everywhere in the course of the campaigns, and after, there is no doubt in my
mind that poverty has the same character in Bodinga Local Government in Sokoto
State as in Ayanmelum Local Government here in Anambra state; poverty on an Ibo
man is not more dignified than on a Hausa Fulani man. Hunger is neither a
tribal or religious issue.
“o the question for us is how to resolve these issues. First
is to place responsibility where it rightly belongs.
“It is the business of government, by that I mean the
executive, legislature and judiciary to provide the enabling environment for
the quality of life that people expect.
“Indeed the constitutional obligation to do so is clear.
Section 14(2 ) (a) says that sovereignty belongs to the people of Nigeria from
whom government through the Constitution derives all its powers and authority ;
and assures that (b) the security and welfare of the people shall be the
primary purpose of government. This is crucial.
“Whereas the classic overriding obligation of the State is
Security our constitution places Security and Welfare on the same pedestal as
the primary purposes of government.
“Coming from this perspective, the fundamental objective
must become the founding principle for legislation, executive action and the
observance and enforcement of the rule of law.
“For example, the provision of section 16(1) (b), 16(2)(b)
and (d) which provide respectively as follows: “the control of the national
economy(shall be) in such manner as to secure the maximum welfare, freedom and
happiness of every citizen on the basis of social justice, equality of status
and opportunity; (b) that the material resources of the Nation are harnessed
and distributed as best as possible to serve the common good; (d) that suitable
and adequate shelter, suitable and adequate food, reasonable national minimum
living wage, old age care and pensions, and unemployment, sick benefits and
welfare for the disabled are provided for all citizens.”
“These directive principles must be regarded as justiciable
in order to realize the Nigerian dream.
“It is the duty of our association to champion this
important pillar of our national development. Governments must be compelled to
show by budgetary provision and executive action how they have complied with this
constitutional imperative. Often in government, the issue of how to adequately
provide for the poor, create jobs and welfare for those who cannot work becomes
an ideological debate.
“The classical view had always won the argument namely that
when you enable private commerce and industry, jobs will be created and that
direct job creation and social welfare schemes are wasteful and achieve little.
This is the so called trickle down approach.
“However in the current Federal Government the argument is being
won by those who believe that government has a central role to play in the
provision of social welfare. That extreme poverty is not only immoral, it
should be illegal.
Why the N500bn Social Investment
“This has led to the largest single provision in our history
for social welfare. In the 2017 budget we are providing N500 billion for social
investment alone; N100 billion of that is for part of our social housing fund
and the total value of that fund is N1 trillion; the provision for cash
transfers which is for the poorest and vulnerable is 1 million Nigerians; the
N-Power, which is the provision of direct jobs to young graduates for two years
is 500,000 and 200, 000 jobs have been created already but certainly we can do
more.
“It is important that our budgets are crafted in such a way
that we take into account the aspect of social welfare.
“Like I said, it is an ideological battle. It is a battle
that must be contended for and must be contended by all of us especially law
teachers. I was speaking to a group of law teachers and I was telling them that
we have not engaged government, we have to engage government.
“It is also true that we do not engage the judiciary
anymore. In the past; we had journals about all manners of judgements from all
of our courts, in fact there were journals that even analyzed high court cases
and even exceptional articles by some of our colleagues that drew the attention
of judges. There was an article by Prof Amos Utuama titled Crocodile tears by
the Supreme Court and he was talking in particular about Certificate of
Occupancy and all that; and the Supreme Court in one of its sittings contended
that its tears were not crocodile at all.
“I believe that today we must pay more attention to what is
going on in our court system, what is going on in the executive, it is our
business as law teachers to critique everything that is going on. That is why
we have been entrusted with this great duty to teach the would-be lawyers and
be the thinkers of our profession and our justice system.
“It is also probably true that our corporate existence and
security have been put at risk by the failures in the enforcement of law and
order but also our failure especially we as legal intellectuals to correctly
dimension the problem. Our contributions to the various disputes in our society
must be to properly dimension the problem so that we are not just joining
argument. We have the tools, the training to present the problems to society
along the lines of the constitution, public law and our different disciplines.
“Take the herdsmen and farmer conflicts. As justice Amina
Augie just said, it is first and foremost a struggle for food security, land
and water resources. The context of environment and environmental justice sets
the stage for meaningful engagement and arbitration.
“We must also admit that these conflicts are not new. But
engagement and law enforcement had kept things in check. Law enforcement must
move apace with engagement. The President for example had issued a directive to
the police to arrest and prosecute anyone found with weapons. This is important
not only to assure the citizenry of safety of their lives and property but to
prevent resort to self-help. There is a long way to go.
Meets with security agencies
“Just last week, I was meeting with our security agencies to
sharpen our response to this problem. Our discussions centered on the
robustness of law enforcement. There is no half-way house in maintaining law
and order and the safety of the citizen. It is the very core of government.
“So, we must creatively and innovatively provide for
maintenance of law and order.
“Let me close with a brief comment which touches on the
questions of victim justice and transitional justice alluded to by the deputy
governor of Ebonyi State, but I would want to leave this matter for fuller
consideration by this very august body.
“But the issue of what happens to victims of conflict within
society; victims of the Herdsmen clashes with farmers, victims of the
insurgency in the North-East, victims of environmental degradation in the Niger
Delta; the question of what happens to them is certainly captured in
transitional justice.
“I think that these are aspects of law that are developing
and are developing very rapidly because people are asking all sorts of
questions. What happens to me when my property is destroyed by insurgents or
herdsmen or what happens to me when the only source of fishing for me and
entire environment is damaged by activities unrelated to me in anyway.
“I think the most important thing is to start from
analyzing, but first government must take responsibility because government is
expected to maintain the rule of law and it is the failure of the rule of law
and the failure of the administration of justice that is usually the first culprit
when there is any kind of victimization.
“To go beyond that, there is also the question of communal
responsibility, what are the responsibilities for communities, civil society,
and non-state actors.
“For example, in the North-East, hundreds of people have
been killed, children have seen horrible violence, some have seen their parents
killed and have faced severe hunger, and all kinds of situations that you would
not wish for your enemy; how do you reconcile these people to society?
“There are all of these transitional justice vehicles such
as truth and reconciliation commission and all of that. There are all sorts of
international compensation models that could be adopted to resolve these issues
because societies in conflict issues are becoming part of our lives and it is
not just in Nigeria, it is across our continent and the globe.
“I think the issues that call for our attention today are so
many. These are challenging times for us but also times of great opportunities
because our society rely a great deal on our law teachers to find solutions to
these issues and to teach a new generation of students the types of problems
and issues that are relevant to our own time. And I believe it your
responsibility and I believe at some time it will be mine too.”
Stressing that the greatest challenge to national
development today was insecurity, he said that security must be defined
correctly.
He said, “Security cannot merely be State-centric or
military i.e. security of lives and livelihoods from internal and external
threats. This focuses solely on the role of the State in the maintenance of law
and order.
“I think it was Kofi Annan, the former UN Secretary General
who defined security with a broader and more contemporary description when he
said, “human security can no longer be understood in purely military terms.
Rather, it must encompass economic development, social justice, environmental
protection, democratization, disarmament, and respect for human rights and the
rule of law,’’ to which we must add as a distinct category, governance.
“The most important subtext in this definition is the
growing influence and power of non-state actors, including big business,
socio-cultural groups, ethnic nationalities, terrorist organizations and
tendencies, religious organizations and criminal networks. Because of the more
pervasive roles of those non -State actors, often acting on legitimacies not
necessarily conferred by formal laws, the robustness of the state’s response to
its primary role of maintaining security is often called to question.
“The measure of security within a nation is therefore a
function of the state’s capacity to maintain this broad definition of security,
on the other hand, the degree of lack of capacity is an index of where the
State is in the spectrum of State failure.
“Consequently, our definition of the role of the State in
maintenance of security in contemporary jurisprudence must change. Our laws and
jurisprudence must recognize this as such. Take corruption as an example and
corruption of course is an issue of governance which is part of our definition
of security.”
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