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Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House - Politics - Nairaland

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Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by Eastfield1: 11:27am On Sep 29, 2017
Restructuring Nigeria: Decentralisation for national cohesion
A presentation by John Nnia Nwodo, President-General of Ohanaeze Ndigbo on behalf of the organisation on the current agitations for restructuring of the Nigerian federation at the Royal Institute of International Affairs, Chatham House, London, on Wednesday 27th September, 2017.

Nigeria became a united British colony by the amalgamation of its Northern and Southern Protectorates in 1914. In 1960 it attained independence, fashioned a federal Constitution, which had three and subsequently four regions as its federating units. The pre-1960 and the 1963 constitutions of Nigeria were fashioned by the people of Nigeria as represented by the leaders of their ethnic nationalities. The coup of January 1966 and the counter-coup of the same year occasioned by ethnic tensions and disagreements within the military-led our country to disastrous consequences.
Our first Prime Minister, Rt. Hon Tafawa Balewa and the then premier of Northern Nigeria, Sir Ahmadu Bello, as well as the then Minister for Finance Festus Okotie-Eboh, were murdered. A massive pogrom was unleashed on South Eastern Nigerians living in the Northern Nigeria. A sitting Head of State from the South East, Major General Aguiyi Ironsi and a governor from the South West Col. Adekunle Fajuyi were murdered. The military suspended our 1963 constitution and adopted a unitary system of government to fit their command and control structures. Opposition to this move by Southern Nigeria led to constitutional talks in Aburi, Ghana. The agreements reached Aburi were jettisoned. War broke out and claimed more than three and a half million lives mostly from the South East. After the war, the military-authored two more constitutions, one in 1979 and another in 1998/99. The two military constitutions were finally approved by the Supreme Military Council.
Under military rule, this organ was the highest legislative organ for the country. It was made up of senior military officers, a majority of whom were from Northern Nigeria. The last constitution of 1998/99, which the military approved, was the legal instrument that governed Nigeria’s transition to democracy. It is still in use in Nigeria today. It was not subjected to a national referendum. It created 19 states out of the old Northern Region, 6 states out of the Western Region, 2 states out of the old Midwestern Region and 9 states out of the old Eastern Region.
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An agreement by a constitutional conference convened by General Abacha divided the country into six geopolitical zones. This agreement was never incorporated into a legislation even though it continues to be adopted for administrative purposes by Government and the political parties. The creation of states and local governments in these six geographical areas did not respect any equitable parameter.
Our present constitution is not autochthonous. It was not written by the people of Nigeria. It was not approved in a National referendum. In jurisprudence, its effectiveness will score a very low grade on account of its unacceptability. Regrettably, it continues to hold sway and begins with a false proclamation, “We the People of Nigeria….”
Our present constitution was written at a time of unprecedented increase in National revenue following the massive discovery of oil in Nigeria and its global reliance as a source of fuel for mechanical machines. It had as its centrepiece, the distribution of national revenue and national offices using states and local governments as units for division. It constructed a federation in name but a unitary government in practice following the pattern enunciated in 1966 from the inception of military administration in Nigeria.
Competition and drive for production by the federating units was destroyed. Each state and local government waited every month for proceeds from oil generated revenue to be divided out to them.
The Federal Government became enormously powerful taking over mining rights, construction of interstate highways, major educational establishments, rail and water transportation, power and several infrastructural responsibilities previously undertaken by the regions. Competition for control of the Federal Government became intense and corrupted our electoral system. Corruption became perverse as the Federal Government became too big to be effectively policed by auditing and administrative regulations.
As I speak to you today, Nigeria has a grim economic outlook. Nigeria’s external debt has grown from $10.3 billion in 2015 to $15 billion in 2017. Her domestic debt has also grown from 8.8 trillion Naira in 2015, to 14 trillion Naira in 2017. Domestic debt component for the 36 states rose from 1.69 trillion Naira in 2015 to 2.9 trillion Naira in June 2017.
The Federal government has on two occasions released bailout funds to enable states to meet their recurrent expenditure requirements. Only about eight states in Nigeria namely Lagos, Kano, Enugu, Edo, Delta, Abia, Rivers, and Kwara have their internally generated revenue sufficient enough to cover their interest repayments on their debts without depending on allocations from Federally collected revenue.
For the Federal Government close to 40% of its annual revenue was spent on servicing of interest repayments on debts and according to International Monetary Fund (IMF), this percentage is expected to increase further. According to Fitch ratings, Nigeria’s Government gross debts is 320% of its annual revenue!! – one of the highest in the world.
In the face of this economic reality, the Population Reference Bureau predicts that Nigeria will in 2050 become the world’s fourth-largest population with a population of 397 million coming after China, India and the United States of America. This is only 33 years away.
In 2011, five Colonels in the United States Centre for Strategy and Technology, Air War College did a case study on Nigeria and the global consequences of its implosion and came out with a conclusion that, “despite its best efforts, Nigeria has a long-term struggle ahead to remain a viable state, much less a top-20 economy.”
Faced with this grim economic outlook and a structure inimical to growth what is, therefore, our way forward? Our growth model has to change for us to survive as a country.
A model based on sharing of Government revenue must give way to a new structure that will challenge and drive productivity in different regions across the country. This new model must take into account that the factors driving productivity in today’s world are no longer driven by fossil oil but rather the proliferation of a knowledge-based economy. The restructuring of Nigeria into smaller and independent federations limits and the devolution of powers to these federating units to control exclusively their human capital development, mineral resources, agriculture, and power (albeit with an obligation to contribute to the federal government) is the only way to salvage our fledging economy. Restructuring will devote attention to the new wealth areas, promote competition and productivity as the new federating units struggle to survive. It will drastically reduce corruption as the large federal parastatals, which gulp Government revenue for little or no impact dissolve and give way to small and viable organs in the new federating units.
Those campaigning against restructuring in Nigeria have painted an unfortunate and untrue picture that those of us in support of restructuring are doing so in order to deny the Northern States who have not yet any proven oil reserves of the ability to survive. This is unfortunate. The new model we propose for Nigeria recognizes that revenue in the world today is promoted by two main sources namely, human capital development leveraging on technology to drive the critical sectors of the economy and agriculture. Ten years ago the top ten companies in the world were the likes of Exxon Mobil, Shell, and Total. Today the top eight companies in the world are represented by technology related companies. They include Apple, Microsoft, Google, Facebook, and Amazon.
The example of Netherlands in Agriculture is also relevant here. The Netherlands is the 18th largest economy in the world. It has a land area of about 33.9,000 square kilometres. Niger State, one of Nigeria’s 37 administrative units has about 74,000 square kilometres. Netherlands has over $100 billion from agricultural exports annually, contributed mainly by vegetables and dairy. Nigeria’s oil revenue has never in any one year reached $100 billion. Northern Nigeria is the most endowed agriculturally in Nigeria. Its tomatoes, carrots, cabbages, cucumbers, tubers, grains, livestock and dairy feed the majority of Nigerians in spite of its huge reserve of unexploited export potentials. In a restructured Nigeria, Northern Nigeria with the right agricultural policies will be the richest part of Nigeria.
Our analysis here must be viewed from the background that datelines have been fixed by OECD countries and China for the cessation of production of automobiles and machines dependent on fossil oil. This development and the new technology for production of shale oil in the United States has made world dependence on Nigeria’s crude oil a rapidly declining phenomenon.
This brings me to the question of what form Nigeria will assume under a restructured arrangement and how this restructuring can be brought about. Two basic models have been canvassed for restructuring in Nigeria. A conservative model aimed at maintaining the status quo has been proposed to mean simply a shedding of some of the exclusive powers of the federal government like issuing of mining licences, permission for constructing of federal roads and shedding of regulatory powers over investments in critical sectors of the economy like power. This model merely scratches the surface of the problem. It avoids fundamental devolution of powers.
The second model calls for a fundamental devolution of powers to the States as federating units and a lean Federal Government with exclusive powers for external defence, customs, immigration, foreign relations and a Federal legislature and judiciary to make and interpret laws in these exclusive areas.
President General of Igbo socio-cultural organisation, Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Chief John Nnia Nwodo (Jnr)
This second model proposes states at the federating units with two different approaches. The first approach simply wants the states as the federating units and a federal government with limited powers. It wants the states to control a percentage of revenue accruing from their areas and contribute an agreed percentage of such revenue to the federal government.
The second approach proposes the states as the federating units with a region at each of the six geopolitical units whose constitution will be agreed to and adopted by the states in the geopolitical region. The regions will have the powers to merge existing states or create new ones. There will be regional and state legislatures and judiciary dealing with making and interpreting laws made in the respective political entities. This approach proposes a revenue sharing formulae of 15% to the Federal Government, 35% to the State Government and 50% to the State Governments.

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Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by Eastfield1: 11:29am On Sep 29, 2017
To achieve a national consensus on this subject requires a national discussion. Regrettably, the ruling party, APC which promised restructuring in its manifesto after two years and four months in office is still appointing a committee to define what sort of restructuring it wants for Nigeria. To make matters worse, none of the other political parties have come up with any clear-cut route for achieving a consensus on this matter.
The National Assembly itself is a reflection of the deep ethnic divisions in the country and the Northern majority conferred on it by the military makes it highly unacceptable to Southern Nigeria. Recent resolutions made by it on devolution of powers have not helped the situation. Happily, the Senate President has promised a revisit of the subject matter.
In the recent past, self-determination groups have sprung up in Nigeria. The self-determination groups include IPOB, MASSOB, YELICOM, Arewa Youths, Niger Delta Republic and Republic of the Middle Belt.
Of all these groups IPOB and Boko Haram have been designated as terrorist organisations by the federal government. This development in relation to IPOB is unfortunate. Boko Haram is an armed organisation, which has attacked and occupied Nigerian territory hoisted its flag and appointed local authority governments.
It has abducted and abused Nigerian w – -omen, kidnapped and imprisoned many and killed over two hundred thousand people. It is still involved in guerrilla warfare against Nigeria yet the Federal government is negotiating with them. No member of Boko Haram captured by the military is under trial. Members of this Federal government are on record for condemning the previous government for brutal murder of Boko Haram members and condemning the retired Chief of Army Staff for zealous prosecution of the anti-terror campaign. Members of the sect who confess to a change of mind have been received along with their abducted female partners in the Presidency and rehabilitated.
The declaration of IPOB as a terrorist organisation is in my view hurried, unfair, and not in conformity with the intendment of the law. Whereas I am not completely in agreement with some of the methods of IPOB like its inappropriate and divisive broadcast, the uncontested evidence given by the Attorney General of the Federation in an interlocutory action claiming that IPOB attempted and/or actually snatched guns from law enforcement agents are, if proven, merely criminal offences. They do not constitute enough evidence to meet international law definitions of a terrorist organisation. Happily, the United States Embassy in Nigeria only three days ago shared this conclusion and asserted that the United States Government does not recognise IPOB as a terrorist organisation. This same unarmed IPOB that is being stigmatised by the Nigerian government had its members murdered in Asaba, Nkpor, Aba and Port Harcourt simply for having public demonstrations without the federal government ordering a judicial inquiry. Instead, after I called for one and Amnesty International provided evidence that 150 of them were killed, the Chief of Army Staff set up an inquiry composed of serving and retired army officers thus abandoning the rules of natural justice which prescribes that you cannot be a judge in your own court.
The Igbos in Nigeria feel the treatment of IPOB as unfair, discriminatory and overhanded. They see the move as an attempt to encourage a profiling of Igbos in the international security arena.
We know of other self-determination groups in Nigeria that are armed and have destroyed government and private sector installations and wells that government prefers to negotiate with rather than label them as terrorist organisations.
Fulani Herdsmen otherwise called the Fulani militants have ravaged farms in Middlebelt, South West, and South Eastern Nigeria killing several farmers in the process. In January 2016 they killed 500 farmers and their families in Agatu in Benue state. In Enugu state, they murdered more than 100 farmers in Ukpabi Nimbo in April 2016. Photographs depicting them with automatic rifles trend in the entire world media, yet not one of them is facing criminal charges, nor is Operation Python Dance being conducted in the areas where they ravage and kill and the Federal government describes them as criminals and not a terrorist organisation notwithstanding their classification by the Global Terrorist Index as the fourth deadliest terrorist group in the world (see British Independent Newspaper, 18th November 2015). The London Guardian Newspaper of 12th July 2016 indicated that Fulani herdsmen killed one thousand people in 2014.
Let me seize this opportunity to once more thank the Royal Institute of International Affairs for inviting me as President General of Ohanaeze Ndigbo to speak here today. In Nigeria, Ndigbo whose social cultured organisation I lead are, notwithstanding their historical experiences in Nigeria, the most loyal ethnic group to the concept of one Nigeria. We are the largest ethnic group other than the indigenous group in any part of Nigeria. We invest and contribute to the economic and social life of the committees wherever we live. We are proudly Christians but very accommodating of our brothers of other religious persuasions. We are grossly marginalised and still treated by the Federal government as second-class citizens. No Igboman, for instance, heads any security arm of the Nigerian Armed Forces. Our area is the most heavily policed as if there was a deliberate policy to intimidate us and hold us down.
Our endurance has been stretched beyond Hooke’s gauge for elastic limit. The deployment of the Nigerian Army under the guise of Operation Python dance to the South East was unconstitutional under S. 271 of the 1999 Constitution.
Deployment of the army is only allowed in circumstances of insurrection, terrorism and external aggression not in killing of priests, or fighting kidnapping. And in those circumstances where they can be deployed, leave of the Senate must be sought. This brazen impunity in dealing with matters, which concern the South East, is provocative.
The Arewa Youths Council by issuing a quit notice for Igbos to leave Northern Nigeria and declaring a Federal Republic of Nigeria without Igboland had committed serious infractions of the law. First by declaring a new Republic of Nigeria, which excises the South East unilaterally, they were committing treason. By issuing a proclamation for Nigerians to leave any part of Nigeria forcibly they were infringing the fundamental rights of innocent Nigerians, as guaranteed by the Constitution to live and do business anywhere. By commencing an inventory of Igbo property in Nigeria for seizure by October 1st, 2017, they were attempting conversion. By proclaiming a mop-up action of those who did not comply with their order by October 1st, they were, without doubt, inciting genocide. Yet in spite of all these orders to arrest them by the Kaduna State Government and the Inspector General of Police were not enforced nor were they prevented from holding court with Governors and leading elders from the North.
The only hope for change in Nigeria today is the rising call for restructuring pioneered by the Southern leadership forum, supported lately by ex Vice-President Atiku Abubakar, former President Ibrahim Babangida and leaders of the Middle belt including Dan Suleiman and Prof. Jerry Gana.
Our expectation is that now that our President is fully recovered and back to work, he will address the situation by constituting a nationwide conversation of all ethnic nationalities to look into the 2014 National Conference report and the trending views on this subject matter so as to come up with a consensus proposal that the national and state assemblies will be persuaded to adopt.
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To continue to neglect a resolution of this impasse will spell doom for our dear country.
Our argument is further reinforced by a two-year extensive study by the UNDP titled, JOURNEY TO EXTREMISM released in September 2017 which indicated that exposure to state abuse and marginalisation not religious ideology are better predictors of radicalisation.
It also indicates that those living on the periphery of their country with less access to education and health services are more vulnerable to be recruited into violent extremist groups. In Nigeria, millions of unemployed graduates from universities waiting for up to 10 years without gainful employment are restive, agitated and veritable cannon fodders for escalating restiveness.
In conclusion, I hope that the Royal Institute of International Affairs, the British Government and British interests associated with Nigeria will continue to offer useful advice to our polity that will lead to an early resolution of our situation.
I thank you for your kind attention
http://guardian.ng/politics/restructuring-nigeria-decentralisation-for-national-cohesion/?F

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Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by Eastfield1: 11:38am On Sep 29, 2017
Seun. Mynd44 lalasticlala NL has not don't Justice to Ohanaeze Leader's Speech at Cattham House. pls attend to it

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Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by EmeeNaka: 12:31pm On Sep 29, 2017
There is no doubt Nigeria deserve restructuring. Everybody will benefit from it.

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Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by Develpeast: 12:48pm On Sep 29, 2017
Mr Nnia Nwodo should as a matter of fact stop lecturing people who have stop thinking and let us think for ourselves. If restructuring is we trying to generate funds from within ourselves and drive our local economy to a record high, then we should as matter of fact start the restructuring without the federal government.

These people will not restructure until it is to their own advantage. We do not need these people to restructure, we need to start restructuring some aspects of our lives and wait for them to restructure the less important aspects of governance.

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Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by Develpeast: 12:52pm On Sep 29, 2017
The yorubas have the odua group which is doing the needful in attracting foreign investment into southwest, hate them or love them, they are not waiting till the hausas accept restructuring before they start doing anything. Ohaneze Ndigbo is the laziest group of all geopolitical groups, they call for different meetings and conferences without any tangible change in the economy of the east and to a large extent igboland.

Having meetings in chatham house and other houses doesnt change the fact that the eastern economy is not getting better, until we stop pointing fingers outside and look inside before we can have any tangible development.

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Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by Develpeast: 12:57pm On Sep 29, 2017
With the east standing as the commercial epicentre for more than 60 million nigerians living in it and around it. We do not have any excuse not to leverage on the advantage and make use of these numbers. If other people are using the positivity of a particular situation to create wealth, we igbos do not have any tangible reasons to wail, wait and cry until anything is done for us.

The ibaka seaport is there and ready for consumption, none of these people are looking for ways to "kolobi" it, but we will wait until northerners have taken their shares in monopolizing it and we start wailing of how the northerners are using the resources of the south to enrich the north. For goodness sake, the ibaka seaport is not more than 25 minutes from aba with a good road network which is same as tincan port to lekki. We should as matter of fact "kolobi" the seaport as our own share of the national treasures so as to reduce the weight we keep giving the lagos government.

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Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by Develpeast: 1:01pm On Sep 29, 2017
What we igbos should be doing is push for a PPP project on the ibaka seaport. Fund it and use it. Drive the economy of akwa ibom because it is the next best thing to happen and the only people who should dominate the economy should be the igbos.

We do not have any reason to be stupid. Igboland is surrounded with states that collects the highest amount of revenue from the government. Creating a commercial hub with more than 5million "foot soldiers" businessmen will drive the economy of the east. We do not need a new country to drive this. Bring the attention to the east and every body will love to spend their monies there.

We should as a matter of urgency stop alienating ourselves from the golds and diamonds those around us want to throw away, we can give them a destination they have been looking for.

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Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by Develpeast: 1:11pm On Sep 29, 2017
The Nigerian system is grossly flawed, we do not have any serious sector in this country. All we need do is take three sectors and be serious about it and we become the focal point of the country. The igbos have a comparative advantage in commerce, automobiles and technology, arts and craft, we also have untapped potentials in the health industry and tourism. Why not create the next best thing in the whole africa. We should stop acting like everyone else if we want to be better. If we invest massively in these sectors, we will not be in the same level as we are today.

Igbos need to stop waiting for Nigeria and start working the talk. We complain everyday with no actions. We keep funding things we should have diverted our monies into and create a bigger economy so that the region will have a face in the world. The kurds developed a face, the catalonians have developed a face but the igbos in the east have not developed a face in the world. If we can tell the world we can sustain an economy, then anything we are agitating for will have a face value in the world. We need to stop talking and start doing something about our economic situation.

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Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by Nwogeh: 2:33pm On Sep 29, 2017
I just love this man so much without measure. Keep it up as God is with you.

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Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by IgboticGirl(f): 3:26pm On Sep 29, 2017
This is my man

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Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by realhumanity: 5:54pm On Sep 29, 2017
These people are very good in dishing out theories. Why not develop a real economic plan and snub the federal govt. We are too soft in the east that we tend to run to faraway countries to either hold rallies or seminars.

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Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by istandfortruth: 5:24am On Sep 30, 2017
Firstly i must say that i'm very I'm proud of the Ohanaeze leadership. The east needs to speak out loud and clear using every upportunity because the government of today desperately wants the east to die in silence and the only way out is to speak out loud and clear.

@ Lalasticlala: How can one say they love Nigeria and still say no to restructuring? Think
Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by nabiz(m): 5:56am On Sep 30, 2017
Develpeast:
What we igbos should be doing is push for a PPP project on the ibaka seaport. Fund it and use it. Drive the economy of akwa ibom because it is the next best thing to happen and the only people who should dominate the economy should be the igbos.

We do not have any reason to be stupid. Igboland is surrounded with states that collects the highest amount of revenue from the government. Creating a commercial hub with more than 5million "foot soldiers" businessmen will drive the economy of the east. We do not need a new country to drive this. Bring the attention to the east and every body will love to spend their monies there.

We should as a matter of urgency stop alienating ourselves from the golds and diamonds those around us want to throw away, we can give them a destination they have been looking for.
bros in not about what Igbo can do but all about the term and condition in getting the approval from the federal government. And again after the project, the federal government will give you 13% of the procced instead of you givn them they will be the one to give u. It is is discouraging and kills motives
Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by Develpeast: 7:22am On Sep 30, 2017
nabiz:
bros in not about what Igbo can do but all about the term and condition in getting the approval from the federal government. And again after the project, the federal government will give you 13% of the procced instead of you givn them they will be the one to give u. It is is discouraging and kills motives

The federal government will not give us 13% of the proceed, but they might just want to land heavy taxes on us. The federal government wanted to build the seaport on PPP project before they stopped building totally. We must as a matter of fact not stop doing something because we are afraid the federal government will render our efforts useless. We not doing anything is rendering our economy in the east useless too. If we want to get these things done, we can find a way round it and it will benefit us. There is always a common ground for anything and most importantly, there is always a backyard route to it.
Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by Develpeast: 7:25am On Sep 30, 2017
istandfortruth:
Firstly i must say that i'm very I'm proud of the Ohanaeze leadership. The east needs to speak out loud and clear using every upportunity because the government of today desperately wants the east to die in silence and the only way out is to speak out loud and clear.

@ Lalasticlala: How can one say they love Nigeria and still say no to restructuring? Think

If we wait for restructuring before we start doing something, then we as good as them and our youths will continue to go into violent activities and agitations. I know these northerners, they will never cede to restructuring that will make their hands tied. Until we start doing our thing ourselves, then we are as good as other tribes.

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Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by princemillla(m): 7:30am On Sep 30, 2017
nabiz:
bros in not about what Igbo can do but all about the term and condition in getting the approval from the federal government. And again after the project, the federal government will give you 13% of the procced instead of you givn them they will be the one to give u. It is is discouraging and kills motives

I love ur simple definition - states work so hard to generate revenue, send everything to Abuja. Abuja send token back to the state to appreciate their efforts. Thus kind system of government.was seen in olden days Korean movies.
No wonder fg becomes so lazy in many things, lacks implementation. Many allocated projects being abandoned. This kind thing dey tire person. Just got a clear picture why election in Nigeria is a fire for fire, post contested for is a salary based and not per personal. Interest to serve the people.


Restructuring is the way forward abeg
Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by honourhim: 9:04am On Sep 30, 2017
realhumanity:
These people are very good in dishing out theories. Why not develop a real economic plan and snub the federal govt. We are too soft in the east that we tend to run to faraway countries to either hold rallies or seminars.

Exactly my point.
Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by Develpeast: 9:05am On Sep 30, 2017
No one is going to give you 13% if you create industrial layouts.

No one will give you 13% if you rebrand and upgrade onitsha market the mall for africa because you have the capacity.

No one will give you 13% if you build inter-state rails using amaechi to facilitate the project.

No one will give you 13% if you build and operate ibaka seaport and just pay tax to the government.

No one will give you 13% if you expand roads going to industrial layout, central business units, and other important places in the region.

No one will give you 13% if you build water corporations that will supply clean and potable water in the region.

No one will give you 13% if you invest in agriculture and make a difference like netherland and israel.

No one will give you 13% if you build steel factory that will cater for the industrialisation of the region.

I can go on and on. Until we place ourselves in the spotlight, organisations and multinationals will drive past our region and go to other regions to invest. The only major industry in the east is either sabmiller and nigeria breweries. Everyone is afraid without seeing any violence. You are only good with drinking beer and not good with good industries.

If we keep waiting for Nigeria, I am sorry, restructuring will not help us when the time comes.

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Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by Develpeast: 9:09am On Sep 30, 2017
All we do is talk and talk but no one is talking of how we can start generating funds to drive economic development and expansion. If you stop collecting free money from the federal government, how do you plan to generate money for industrialisation. Do you know that when the time comes for restructuring, states will start their own era of nepotism and man-know-manism. Our brothers working in different firms and companies in other regions will have lose some of their jobs for them to cater for their own people. They will start policies to protect their indigenes and their businesses.

Start generating your funds now because starting will surely be difficult.
Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by Develpeast: 9:18am On Sep 30, 2017
Let us know the economic plan and lets know that this is what is keeping us from achieving it. Where is the eastern region going to? What is the mission of our leaders? What do you know is the igbo grand plan? Where is the destination? I am seriously at a loss here. Why are all of you silent? Do you know where anambra is going or imo is going? Do we have any form of economic integration?

Ebonyi cannot feed itself, neither do imo and enugu generate substantial funds. A whole year, the highest amount of money we can realise in the whole of southeast is not more than 60billion naira. A region with almost 40 million people or more. Is this not a shame? We keep screaming restructuring. Which question are you asking? Where are we going to generate funds to take care of myriads of people that might want to return during regionalism?

We should stop arguing in all these threads and start generating ideas. I can push all these information to the right people. The next world igbo conference, we can actually say our minds. Lets stop sitting as people tied to a tree for slaughter and behave like a majority that we are.
Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by Kemperor: 9:24am On Sep 30, 2017
the foolishness of buhari knows no bond...

The Igbo people will always remember this massacre...

A tum is coming when the table will turn and the northerners will reap what they sowed...

Ohaneze spoke well and I like it how this admiration has shown the world how clueless and ruthless they are..

Nigerians should learn from history and never appoint a tyrant to rule again... That is one of d reasons History is a degree course in the university...

This government preaches hate and division by their actions...

Can't wait for 2019...
Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by nabiz(m): 9:33am On Sep 30, 2017
Develpeast:
No one is going to give you 13% if you create industrial layouts.

No one will give you 13% if you rebrand and upgrade onitsha market the mall for africa because you have the capacity.

No one will give you 13% if you build inter-state rails using amaechi to facilitate the project.

No one will give you 13% if you build and operate ibaka seaport and just pay tax to the government.

No one will give you 13% if you expand roads going to industrial layout, central business units, and other important places in the region.

No one will give you 13% if you build water corporations that will supply clean and potable water in the region.

No one will give you 13% if you invest in agriculture and make a difference like netherland and israel.

No one will give you 13% if you build steel factory that will cater for the industrialisation of the region.

I can go on and on. Until we place ourselves in the spotlight, organisations and multinationals will drive past our region and go to other regions to invest. The only major industry in the east is either sabmiller and nigeria breweries. Everyone is afraid without seeing any violence. You are only good with drinking beer and not good with good industries.

If we keep waiting for Nigeria, I am sorry, restructuring will not help us when the time comes.
even if u like build heaven just single harsh economic policy from federal government will render all those infrastructure useless.
Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by Develpeast: 9:36am On Sep 30, 2017
nabiz:
even if u like build heaven just single harsh economic policy from federal government will render all those infrastructure useless.

What is the economic policy that will render whatever i have highlighted above useless?
Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by scofieldsimba(m): 9:44am On Sep 30, 2017
Let's go back to 1963 constitution.
Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by Develpeast: 9:57am On Sep 30, 2017
We have great states that will help our external economies of scale if we get our acts right. Let us play a little, we have states like edo, delta, rivers, cross river, bayelsa, akwa ibom, benue, kogi and plateau states which are closer to the east than other economic zones.

Let us now look at their IGR and their allocations for 2016

Edo state - IGR -23billion, FA - 57billion

Delta 44billion, FA - 126BILLION

RIVERS 85billion, FA - 134billion

C/river 14billion, FA - 56billion

Bayelsa 8billion, FA - 99billion

A/ibom 23billion, FA- 150billion

Benue 9billion, FA - 69billion

Kogi 9billion, FA - 63billion

Plateau 9billion, FA - 57billion

We have over 224 billion internally generated revenue from these states and 811billion as federal allocations from these states. Most of these monies were spent on projects and salaries while I do not put into consideration the corruption therein, if we key into these monies flying in these states and we can make them spend atleast 20 - 30% of it in the eastern region, then we can say that we have added over 200 billion naira into the region. I am not putting into consideration the influx of businesses that will come into the region if we put our acts right.

Do we need restructuring to steal these monies through solving their needs and giving them an option than going to lagos? We can be the better option for these and if we do not key into these opportunities, other people will.

Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by obinna4Jesus(m): 10:51am On Sep 30, 2017
Wow! What a great speech by John Nnia Nwodo. He chromicled the etiology of our primordial faultlines of nationhood. I can not agree more. True federalism is restructuring and restructuring is true federalism. We have played the ostrich for a long time as it concerns the issue of restructuring our present system of governance. In the words of senator Ike Ekweremadu, what we have today is '' feeding bottle federalism'' which is an outright shadow of true federalism. The federal government wields so much power and this has not helped our quest to have a virile nation. The federating units always go cap in hand to the centre. Some of our leaders are hard of hearing and they have refused to heed to the demands of the large portion of the populace that want our structure as presently constituted to be tweaked. The degree of schism that pervades our nation today should be addressed before it spills out of control. I repeat , federalism is restructuring and restructuring is federalism. Buy the truth and sell it not.
Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by Naijiant: 11:39am On Sep 30, 2017
Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by realhumanity: 12:14pm On Sep 30, 2017
Naijiant:
The half-baked speech is dissected here: https://www.naijiant.com/videos/ohanaezes-john-nnia-nwodo-airs-half-baked-restructuring-recipe-chatham-house/

If your intention is to rile up the people against this man then you should advertise your article to the northerners because we are not buying it

2 Likes

Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by istandfortruth: 2:55pm On Sep 30, 2017
Develpeast:


If we wait for restructuring before we start doing something, then we as good as them and our youths will continue to go into violent activities and agitations. I know these northerners, they will never cede to restructuring that will make their hands tied. Until we start doing our thing ourselves, then we are as good as other tribes.

True that. I completely agree we can't wait for restructuring. However, we can use a two pronged approach to address the challenges of the east. On one hand we continually speak up and demand for our rights, a restoration of our dignity as citizens. On the other hand, we address the economic issues bedevilling the east by developing a plan for the entire region and get the necessary buy-in from all interest groups (youth groups, politicians, igbos in diaspora and other regions with common interests).

This must be done whilst we also address the issues of integrity and character in our dealings, there's no way to establish long term trust with integrest groups without directly confronting these. In today's world integrity is literally money (its as good as cash).
Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by Develpeast: 7:17am On Oct 01, 2017
istandfortruth:


True that. I completely agree we can't wait for restructuring. However, we can use a two pronged approach to address the challenges of the east. On one hand we continually speak up and demand for our rights, a restoration of our dignity as citizens. On the other hand, we address the economic issues bedevilling the east by developing a plan for the entire region and get the necessary buy-in from all interest groups (youth groups, politicians, igbos in diaspora and other regions with common interests).

This must be done whilst we also address the issues of integrity and character in our dealings, there's no way to establish long term trust with integrest groups without directly confronting these. In today's world integrity is literally money (its as good as cash).

You have captured the thought succinctly without anything left behind. We solve our economic woes without waiting for these people while on the other hand we raise our voices on restructuring or anything we will love to push for. The plan that we have to wait for the government (northerners) to cede their advantage is like waiting for sand to die.

We can generate as high as 2trillion naira yearly if we engage the right methodology and no one will be shortchanged or better-still feel used. We need to start acting because no one will develop igboland or make it economically viable if we do not take actions ourselves now.
Re: Restructuring Nigeria: Full Speech Of Ohaneze Leader Nnia Nwodo At Cattham House by cckris: 8:02am On Oct 02, 2017
Even Igboland is over-due for an Igbo Nation Conference, to evaluate themselves and define the way forward

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