Dr. Junaid Muhammed in a recent interview said the northerners fought and died to create South-South states. Do you agree?
I believe that Junaid Muhammed must have
been misquoted. If he said northerners fought and died to create
South-South states, the statement is not clear. The issue here is that
without the South-South, Nigeria would not have been one today. When you
talk of South-South, two thirds of South-South are in Bayelsa, Rivers,
Akwa Ibom and Cross River states. And they were supposed to join the
South East to form the Republic of Biafra but because those four states
opted out and wanted Nigeria to remain one, that is why Nigeria is one
today.
If those four states had backed the five
South Eastern states to stay with Biafra, no northerner could penetrate
the Niger Delta. You remember that we lost some of the greatest brains
during the war. You talk of Isaac Boro, Major Yanayo, you talk of Major
Amangala – these were first class brains that we lost because we in the
South-South wanted Nigeria to remain one. So, anybody who is saying they
fought for South-South is talking rubbish. I still believe he must have
been misquoted or he does not know what he is saying.
He also said it is wrong for South South to lay claim to Nigeria’s oil resources, that the resources belong to all Nigerians?
I expected him to say the groundnut
pyramid belonged to all Nigerians before the military intervention. I
was expecting him to mention the tin mines in Jos, what of the lead and
gold in Zamfara. Wherever you go in the North, they are mining solid
minerals illegally and the money is not going into the federation
account and nobody is saying anything. Then how can he now come and
claim that the one in the South-South belongs to all Nigerians?
Yes, we are not saying it does not belong
to Nigerians, if it does not, we wouldn’t have been sharing the
revenue. That is why we are sharing because we are part of Nigeria. But
there are owners of the resources. Because we believe in one Nigeria, we
are sharing everything with them. What are we getting? Just 13 per
cent, Yet during their own period with the groundnut pyramids, it was 50
per cent. That was the money they used in building the North. Now it
has come to South-South, they are saying no, you cannot benefit from it
separately, that it must be shared equally. And they have also forgotten
the terrain where God has put these resources. To build a house here
today, you spend what it takes to build four of it in Abuja, Kano,
Sokoto and anywhere in the northern region. I am telling you the truth.
Find out what it costs to build a structure here. So, they should not
deceive us.
Some northerners are saying the issue of resource control is capable of splitting Nigeria. Do you believe this?
Look, the best thing that will happen to
Nigeria is fiscal federalism, in the sense that states source for their
resources, use them, pay specific tax to the centre and then use the
money to develop their own states, their own environment at their own
pace.
Oil money is making Nigeria to be very
lazy. We are not ready to source for any resource. Those people that
were in agriculture have abandoned it because of free oil money. And the
federation we are practising today is like an employer-employee
situation where the President is the employer and the 36 state governors
are the employees. At the end of the month, they go to Abuja to receive
their salaries. That is the system making Nigerians to be very lazy.
Secondly, with this type of system,
demand for creation of states will never stop. Immediately you introduce
fiscal federalism and each state is told to source for funds, develop
their resources and pay specific tax to the centre and use their own to
develop their areas, this incessant demand for creation of states will
stop. If we continue with this system, we will continue to create more
states, until may be we get 774 states.
Muhammed also claimed that resources from the North had been used to develop South-South in the past, do you agree?
He does not understand the system – how
we operate in the oil industry. I am a petroleum engineer and a lawyer.
So, he is not right. How much did Nigeria contribute for the oil
exploitation? Almost nothing. The white men came, used their own money
to source for it. After the oil had been discovered and the first
shipment made, then Nigeria had its own money out of it, then we went
into joint venture partnership. Nigeria did not use its one kobo of
groundnut money, cocoa money or palm oil money – nothing whatsoever. The
white men came in and worked for it. It was after the discovery of oil
and sale of oil that Nigeria started adding its own part of money from
the profit it got from the sale of oil. Nigeria did not use cocoa, palm
oil and groundnut money. He does not understand the working of the
system as far as oil industry is concerned.
Could that lack of
understanding make him to say that the offshore resources belong to the
whole country instead of the oil-producing states?
Are we claiming everything? That
statement itself is not right. We are not claiming everything. When we
say resource control, we are not claiming everything. If we are claiming
everything, we will not pay the tax and royalties that we are paying.
Even internationally, I am the owner of this house I have here. I own it
from this ground level to the sky. I can add and add as I wish. The
same thing, I can add and add, downward to the bottomless pit. That is
the known law; it is only Nigeria that practices something different.
So, the oil found under land is ours. But because we are Nigerians, we
do not want to take all – we said, look, identify us as the owners but
we will pay certain percentage to the centre and that the centre can
distribute it to the less privileged states and so on, but each state
should fend for itself.
As a member of the National
Conference, everybody thought that the confab would give Nigeria fiscal
federalism, what happened, why did it not come to pass?
You have just mentioned an interview
granted by Junaid Muhammed. How could we achieve things like that with
characters like that within the system? Because some people believe that
as far as they are concerned, the 1999 Constitution is a perfect
document; that nothing should be touched there.
Why is that so?
The so-called group believed that it was
done by their military leaders with the help of civilians. So, as far as
they are concerned, the 1999 Constitution is their own baby and nobody
should touch the baby.
But the generality of Nigerians feel that
this document is not perfect and that it is not ‘we the people of
Nigeria’ that have done this; that if we are not changing it completely,
we need to do some panel-beating. So, we wanted 70 per cent, if we
can’t get consensus, 70 per cent must agree – it became very difficult.
They used that one to strangulate the system. But we tried. There were
some key issues that we passed. But because of resource control, nobody
is ready to go to the land to farm or industrialise. Okay, a lot of
money flowed during the military era. Where are the industries? Go to
the North, you can see abject poverty. They (North) do not believe in
the middle class; that is another problem they have. So, any government
coming to create the middle class is their enemy. They believe they will
remain upstairs and drop food for the masses to struggle over. They
still believe in that dirty system. We said no, every right thinking man
will like to create the middle class so that things can easily flow to
the grassroots. So, anybody who is kicking against fiscal federalism is a
lazy man and does not want to generate funds for his people.
There is this argument that
13 per cent derivation fund for oil-producing states is not well
accounted for and can’t be justified. What is your reaction?
I have given you an example, 13 per cent
over hundred. What is the difference? 87 per cent. The cost of
developing infrastructure in these areas is by far four times higher
than anywhere else. Have you ever seen a two-storey building here
without piling? Do they pile their houses before they build? You know
how much you will use to sink foundation. The foundation itself will put
up two-storey building in any part of the North. We have very difficult
problems. That is why we need enough funds to develop this area. If you
go to Texas in the United States, they have the same terrain as Niger
Delta, but Texas is a beautiful city like Houston. They are beautiful
cities because they control their oil money. They pay tax to the centre.
They were able to use it to build skyscrapers and flyovers. If you go
to Houston, you will see it. So, we also want to develop our areas,
using our own oil resources. We also have gas now. So, we need this
money to develop our areas. I hope you will visit Oloibiri (a place
where oil was first discovered in commercial quantities). What is
Oloibiri today? Just recently, they were able to construct road to
Oloibiri.
In Nembe, Bayelsa State, former Head of
State, Yakubu Gowon, awarded this road (the sand you came through) in
1974. Forty three kilometres of road could not be completed in 40 years
because they were ruling. But what we believe today is that Nigeria is
owned equally by everybody. So, no Northerner can dictate for anybody in
the South-South. We are equal holders and Nigeria must not break.
Nigeria must remain one, but every nook and cranny must get what is
theirs. So, nobody can dictate for any other group.
Do you support the proposal that some northeast states should get special funds to rebuild states destroyed by Boko Haram?
That is a fund I call criminal fund.
Unless you do not want Nigeria to progress; if you now say you want to
set aside five per cent to develop North- East because of Boko Haram,
good. Southeast has MOSSOB; MOSSOB will rear its head, so that they can
get five per cent; the OPC, they are there. So, if violence will attract
money to them, they have to get involved too. So, it will now be a
recurring decimal. We should not try it at all. If you call it
reconstruction, stabilisation fund, whatever fund you call it, for the
whole nation, fine, no problem. At the confab, that was my speech. I was
strongly against it because I believe that if we try it, it will never
end.
Do you share the belief that the north desires strong central government because it virtually lives on federal allocation?
It shows sign of laziness. Somebody
mentioned at the confab that the North has more population than the
South. And the reason he gave was that in the North, they marry four
wives while the Southerners marry one wife. Can you comprehend that
somebody made such a statement? If you have four wives, must you come to
the man who has one wife and then say, feed my four wives? You are free
to marry your four wives; you are free to feed them. You have to source
how to feed them.
Secondly, it is only in Nigeria where
more people live in the desert than in the coast. Go to Algeria, Libya,
Tunisia, concentration of population is in the coast. But here in
Nigeria, they say it is in the desert.
Are you invariably saying that census figure for the North is exaggerated?
Yes, very much exaggerated. It is simple
to know. Where an enumeration officer will go to a house and the owner
of the house will come out with a list and say you cannot go in here, my
wives are here. How do I know that your wives are there? And they give
figure and the enumeration officer records. Is that how you get the
population?
Some have argued that Boko
Haram in the North might be a political reaction against President
Goodluck Jonathan’s rule, do you agree?
Yes, I agree totally. I agree for two
reasons: Initially, we were thinking that it was a religious stuff. But
now in order to spread out, thinking that it was not a religious thing,
they have started torching mosques too. Initially, it was churches
alone. If it is ordinary religious problem, it would have ended by now,
but if you look at the set up, somebody or some group of people said in
2011 that if Jonathan won, they would make the country ungovernable for
him. This is exactly what they are tying to practise. Unfortunately, it
is now backfiring. Nobody thought Boko Haram would become what it is
today. Now, it has happened, people are now worried; they are looking
for a way to escape but for now, they can’t escape.
In your own opinion, what do you think is responsible for Boko Haram activities?
I am saying Boko Haram was a political
set up by a group of northern elite but they did not think the rug will
be removed under their feet. Now, they cannot control Boko Haram any
longer. That is the problem we have. I was very happy during the confab
debate when somebody came up and narrated how it was formed, the people
that formed it and so on. So, people formed it; it did not come from
nowhere but now it is above their control. I am afraid even though
people using Boko Haram want to force President Jonathan out of office,
which is not possible; they will not be able to control Boko Haram with
the level it has taken because the sect is getting funds from outside.
They are no more depending on the elite that formed them. Boko Haram is
now so powerful both financially and technically.
With the Chibok girls missing
and incessant attacks by Boko Haram, do you think Jonathan could still
go ahead to seek re-election?
Elections are being conducted in Libya,
Iraq and even in Somalia. So, there is nothing stopping Nigerians from
going ahead to elect their own President. So, nothing will stop him from
seeking re-election. We are not electing him to control North East, we
are electing him to control Nigeria. So, he is still free to seek
reelection.
In your recent interview, you said North-West should wait till 2031 to contest the Presidency. Could you shed light on this?
I still maintain it. Now we have agreed,
the so-called northern oligarchy – those who are not ready for Nigeria
to move forward, wanted only South and North presidency. The president
should come to the South, the next to the North. We insisted that it
cannot be the North and the South, but the six geopolitical zones. I
have achieved my aim by that. In that case, after Jonathan, if the
Presidency is going to the North, it must not be the North-West. It
could go to the North East or North Central, then the other one should
be South East, etc., then I have achieved that. When you calculate it,
it will be around that time before the North West can get it again.
When you raised the alarm about oil theft, who in your view do you think are responsible?
Oil theft is being done by high level
people. The creek boys – I am advocating modernisation of the so-called
illegal refineries. I do not call them illegal refineries. I call them
crude refineries. What we need do is to modernise it and teach them how
to use them properly.
In Biafra in those days, we refined our
products in crude ways and we were driving our vehicles. It is a
technology that these boys are developing. So, you can assist them;
modernise them so that they can save the ecosystem. They discharge about
60 per cent of crude into the rivers and take very little. So, if you
can first group them and teach them what to do, you will get the best by
developing local technology to refine our products. We can do it.
These boys are not ship thieves, they are
bucket thieves. The ship thieves are the big ones; you do not find them
here in the Niger Delta. They are either found in London, they take
breakfast in London, they go to New York and take lunch and return to
Lagos for dinner. Those are the people. They have private jets. They
have very fat accounts. Go round and investigate how many of those boys
they arrest everyday have any account that can boast $1m. These people
are not the thieves; the thieves are far away. They may be known or not
known, but I strongly believe these boys are not the thieves that we are
looking for.
Some people say that when the
North ruled, they used the resources to build roads for their
region…The people of South-South are saying that Jonathan is not paying
attention to the zone. What can you say about this?
It is not true. I do not believe when the
North was ruling, they used the whole money to develop the North rather
the money was being siphoned out. The people are poor. Those beautiful
roads you see in the North now were done by Obasanjo and Jonathan.
The people were wallowing in abject
poverty when they were ruling. That is why their leaders are not getting
the main support they want. The northern people are now very wise, but
these elite are now causing confusion in the system. They are better off
today than when their people were ruling. Find out. So, Goodluck is not
supposed to divert every resource or fund to develop the Niger Delta.
We are not complaining because we are Nigerians. Our major concern is
that we should be able to get resource at the state level to develop our
states. It is not the Federal Government’s responsibility. That is why
we went to the confab. We need devolution of powers. The Federal
Government is not supposed to construct roads, public toilets, jetties,
primary health centres, classroom blocks etc. These are the things that
are crippling Nigeria.
The northern oligarchy is still insisting
that type of system is okay. They say the Federal Government should
construct health centres in their local governments. No, how can Nigeria
grow? These are the problems. Do not blame Jonathan. His constituency
is Nigeria, not Niger Delta. And he is doing the right thing. We have
the 36 states and local governments to do their own work.
Are you saying the North is dragging Nigeria backward?
Definitely, that is the truth. It is the
truth, and they know it. That is why majority of northerners are not
happy with the so-called oligarchy.
Some northerners have accused
the South-South governors of not justifying the resources allocated to
their states, what is your take on this?
It is because of our difficult terrains.
You know development takes long time here. And we have only four months
sunshine. So it is always difficult. If you want to construct roads,
greater part of the roads will either go for piling or it will fail
after few years. If you are constructing a house, you have to do very
firm foundation and so on.
So, you cannot blame the South-South
governors and say they are not doing anything. Whether you like it or
not, things are happening in Yenagoa. That flyover they are building, if
it is to be built in Plateau or any other part of the North, you would
have constructed two or three of that type. So, you just don’t open your
mouth and say they are receiving 13 per cent. What is 13 per cent?
Those who are blaming the South-South governors are ignorant. If you go
to Akwa Ibom, you will see what is happening there. It shows that the
governor is really spending the money he is getting.
The local government system created problem at the confab, what happened?
The same people refused, saying the local
government should be part of the federating units. Today, what we have
proposed is the federal government and state government. In that way,
you cannot go and collect from the Federation Account because you are
running a local government. The LGs are being controlled fully by the
governors and the other ones were being created not by law but by fiat.
Some of them, I do not even know what they are doing – some of the LGs
are being donated to their girlfriends because there is no law. If there
is law, can you explain the law that gave Kano (which by 2006 Census,
has 9.5 million), 44 LGs but Lagos (with about 9.2 million according to
the census), 20 LGs? Another scenario; Bayelsa by 2006 census was 1.7
million, Nasarawa by the same census, 1.8 million. Difference of 100,000
but Nasarawa has 13 LGs while Bayelsa has eight, difference of five
LGs. What criteria did they use?
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