|
In its historical context, the agitation in the delta is rooted in the seizure of land by Taubman Goldie and the British consul in the 19th century. Goldie used fraud, intimidation and military force to obtain treaties from the local chieftains in his bid to establish a British monopoly of the palm oil trade. Leaders such as King Jaja of Opobo and Chief Nana who resisted were defeated and exiled. British colonialism was driven by this sort of commercial expansion which saw Goldies United African Company granted a charter of sovereignty over the entire delta area. This was a prototype of the marriage of commercial and political interests that have defined the fortunes of the African nation-state for over a hundred years. In the subsequent years which saw the various regional mergers that eventually created Nigeria, the ethnic nationalities would rightly maintain that Britain had no right to hand them over to the nascent nation-state having properly no sovereignty over them in the first place. The Sir Henry Willink Commission on Minority Groups acknowledged these fears but rejected independence for the delta communities recommending instead that the Ijaw country be declared a special area. The discovery of oil in Oloibiri changed the destiny of the delta and Nigeria forever. It transformed the country from a mere ex-colony to a high priority enclave; an important trading outpost that had to be preserved for the sake of British interests. This necessitated the engineering of the nascent nations political establishment to promote colonialism by other means. This laid the foundations for a political aristocracy to control the Nigerian state in subsequent years. Crude oil is not simply the mainstay of the Nigerian economy; it is the mainstay of Nigerian politics. The intensity of political competition in the country which often has the accessories of violence and corruption revolves round the pursuit of the presidency which is effectively the position of CEO of Nigeria Inc, a trillion dollar enterprise. The governorship of the 36 states and the chairmanship of the over 700 local government areas are vassal positions that operate in tributary relationship to the powerful central executive. For most of its history Nigeria has been ruled by a patrimonial state which operates a system of patronage sustained by cultic networks of political influence run along parochial lines. The relationship between these cartels and cults is paternalistic with patronage and tribute flowing through various channels to grease the feudalistic machine of internal colonialism. The conflicts between governors and their godfathers reflect the vagaries of this system. In Anambra State and in Oyo State, the governors fought long running battles with their godfathers over control of the state treasuries. These godfathers are no more than robber barons, the local enforcers serving the ruling aristocracy. During the colonial era, the British destroyed the social order of Iboland by creating a new elite class called the warrant chiefs. These chiefs were often recruited from the dregs of the Igbo society, to become enforcers used by the British colonialists to destabilize the democratic culture of the Igbo republican city-states. In the same way, the godfathers of the present dispensation are the modern day warrant chiefs serving the interests of the internal colonialists by subverting the democratic aspirations of their people. Like their precursors, these godfathers are the dregs of the political ferment drawing relevance only from their utility to the ruling aristocracy. The colonialists never bequeathed a real democracy to the Nigeria nation. Many of the pan-Nigerian democratic movements of the thirties and forties were repressed by the British in their bid to control the political destiny of Nigeria. The colonialists left us with an aristocracy disguised as a democracy. It is clear to the discerning observer that since independence, a feudal psychology has driven the operation of the Nigerian state. The juggernauts imperiously bestriding our political terrain do so with an attitude akin to a divine right of kings. Many of the conflicts in the polity arise from a paradigmatic friction between the ethos of democracy and the feudal born to rule ideal. The first principle of feudalism is the ownership and control of land, the most elemental of the factors of production, and thus effectively, the control of wealth. The Land Use Act of 1978, the Petroleum Act (51) of 1969 and the Lands Decree Number 52 of 1991 are only a few of the legal instruments that have been used to disinherit Nigerians. That these laws were enacted by military dictatorships is sufficient ground to question their validity in a democratic dispensation. This arrangement has been religiously preserved by a coalition of civilian and ex-military politicians, traditional rulers and foreign governments and multinational corporations. This unholy alliance explains the sense of alienation of the Delta communities, where the federal government and the multinationals have exploited the land to the detriment of the locals. It also explains the general disconnection between the government and the people, for the Nigerian state is not a spawn of the Nigerian society but of the 19th century marriage of commerce and colonialism. Some apostles and opponents of resource control tend to simplistically reduce the issue to the perceived bottom-line of more money for the south and less for the north. But essentially, resource control is about fiscal federalism and a redistribution of wealth. It isnt difficult to see why the prospects of wealth redistribution trouble the ruling elite. For decades, their control of land and crude-oil revenues has been an emblem of their ownership of Nigeria which they have come to see as a birthright. In order to reinvent this country, politics must be disconnected from oil. This can only be done by pursuing greater devolution of powers, responsibilities and resources away from the centre to the state and local governments. Concurrently there is a need to revise and repeal those anachronistic legal instruments that have been used to disinherit the people. Giving the people greater control over their land will give them greater control over their social destiny. This will lead to a real diversification of the economy and will also help detonate the reprehensible myth that all there is to Nigeria is southern oil and that the north is poor. Apart from the under-utilized tourism potential and solid mineral riches of the region, the north is the food basket of the nation and has the potential to become an agricultural powerhouse that can service the food security needs of sub-Saharan Africa. It is instructive to note that Nigerias pre-oil per capita income was $3000, today it stands at less than $300. Clearly, development can only be driven by the sort of competitive communalism that existed in the first republic when the federating regions controlled their resources. Resource control is as much about the man in Bauchi benefiting from the gold in his backyard as it is about his Ijaw brother benefiting from the oil well in his compound. Resource control is the key to the economic and political redemption of the Nigeria. That key is the resolution of a historic social injustice that has disinherited millions of Nigerians and locked them in the dungeons of poverty in the midst of plenty. The curse of oil can be broken and millions of Nigerians economically empowered but it calls for an unprecedented act of national repentance by our political class. Sadly, Nigerian politicians have never shown any inclination towards the sort of redemptive politics required by the Niger-delta crisis. Self-preservation at any cost is the second principle of feudal systems. This brings us to the future of militancy in the delta. Apart from the bands of criminals now cashing in on the perceived lucrative kidnap industry, there remains a cadre of radicals who understand the truly revolutionary potential of their struggle. Should the political class fail to resolve the festering injustice in the region, then a resort to arms will become necessary, if not inevitable. The oil industry of the delta is both the golden goose and the soft underbelly of Nigerias feudal state. The militants may feel justified in mounting strikes on the industry aimed at completely stopping the flow of oil from the region to lend some impetus and urgency to the question of reinventing the Nigerian federation. There is a biblical parallel to this contemporary drama. Ahab, a despotic king demands Naboths vineyard and upon the latters refusal to sell off his patrimony, has him killed and his land seized. This sets the stage for the prophet Elijah to pronounce divine wrath and judgment upon Ahabs house and government. A few years later, a general named Jehu leads a revolt that obliterates Ahabs government and his lineage thus reshaping the political design of the kingdom. Today, the Nigerian state is playing the role of the feudal despot that has seized an attractive vineyard and slain the owners. The uprising in that region might be the springboard for a Nigerian revolution; a challenge that could submerge our flawed political order and lead to a national renewal and it has been long in coming.

|
Posted by Robot| 02.08.2006 16:24