Resource control debate deadlocked, confab adjourns
Resource control debate deadlocked, confab adjourns
July 9, 2014
Former Chief Justice of Nigeria and chairman of the conference, retired Justice Idris Kutigi
The
inability of the delegates to agree on the percentage of derivation to
be paid to the oil-producing states forced the National Conference to
adjourn before time on Tuesday.
The conferenre adjourned at 12.58pm
instead of the usual 3.30pm that the delegates had agreed to since the
commencement of the Ramadan.
While some of the delegates were
clamouring for the increase in the 13 per cent derivation fund currently
being paid to the zone, others especially those from the North said the
status quo must be maintained.
Senator Ibrahim Ida in his contribution
said the status quo must be maintained as recommended by the committee,
adding that degradation, just like it was being experienced in the Niger
Delta, was also affecting the northern part of the country.
He specially mentioned Plateau State,
which he said also suffered environmental degradation. But he appealed
to the Federal Government to pay its debt to the Niger Delta Development
Commission.
Another delegate from the North, Hassan
Adamu, while supporting the 13 per cent as recommended by the Committee
on Devolution of Power, said the North-East had been completely
devastated.
He asked the confab to come up with a
plan on how to rebuild the North-East, and urged the confab to recommend
seven per cent for the initiative.
“We should be our brothers’ keeper,” he said.
Another delegate, Mr. Abubakar Adamu
from Niger State, said the 13 per cent derivation was good enough,
adding that “until we see how the 13 per cent is being utilised, there
is no need to increase it.”
A delegate, Mr. Sidi Ali, who said there
was no need for the increase, wondered how the leaders of the
oil-producing states had been spending their allocation.
He said an unnamed former governor of Rivers State was the owner of one of the biggest private hospitals in Abuja.
His contribution made a former governor
of the state, Dr. Peter Odili, to raise a point of order, saying he was
the only former governor of Rivers State at the confab.
Besides, he said he was the only medical
doctor among the former governors and that he was not the owner of such
a hospital and challenged Ali to produce his facts.
He threatened to take legal action if he failed to do so.
But the Chairman of the conference,
Justice Idris Kutigi (retd.), said Ali did not mention the name of the
former governor he was talking about and so it might not be Odili.
Also contributing, Mr. Ibrahim Bunu,
said whatever increase being proposed might end up improving those he
referred to as “Ali Baba and his colleagues.”
Another delegate, Chief Ajibola
Ogunshola, said that the Federal Government should not have more than 40
per cent from the Federation Account since more responsibilities had
been transferred to state governments.
He also said that the consumption tax, which he said was being lopped with the Valued Added Tax, ought to be retained by states.
Ogunshola suggested that a minimum of 51 per cent must be retained by the states from the tax.
On derivation, he said it would be better for the country to begin to think of how to survive without oil.
He said, “We have to start getting use
to a world without oil. We are here (in this position) because we have
been addicted to oil for a very long time.
“It will be difficult for us to change,
but we have to change. We need to give more money to the oil producing
states. It is a political decision. And if the people from the zone do
not go home with anything, it will not be good for them.”
He said derivation should be increased
to 21 per cent. He, however, added that such a decision was purely a
political decision and not an economic decision “because delegates from
the South-South must go home with something.”
A delegate from Cross Rivers State, Orok
Duke, who read a poem to the delegates, referred to some delegates who
spoke on Monday as cowards “because they failed to speak the truth.”
Dr. Joe Okei-Odumakin in her
contribution, said it took the blood of Ken Saro Wiwa for attention to
be shifted to the degradation of the Niger Delta and appealed to
delegates to vote for the increase of derivation fund to at least 21 per
cent.
Another delegate, Mr. Yinka Odumakin
from the South-West, attributed the problem of the country to what he
called the attitude of wealth without work.
While reeling out statistics, he said
only Lagos State could afford to pay salaries to its workers through its
Internally Generated Revenue.
Following the trend of the debate, the
leadership of the conference instructed that five transparent ballot
boxes from the Independent National Electoral Commission be brought to
the hall.
The boxes were strategically placed in
front of the delegates, which was an indication that the contentious
issues would be decided by voting.
Before announcing a short break, Kutigi told the delegates not to be intimidated with the ballot boxes.
He said the confab secretariat was just getting ready for “any eventuality, but we hope we will reach consensus on everything.”
Immediately the conference reconvened,
the delegates sang the old National Anthem, which they had recommended
should replace the current one.
Kutigi smiled and also praised the delegates for their maturity and cooperation since the beginning of the conference.
After this, a former Minister of
External Affairs, Senator Ike Nwachukwu, moved a motion, in which he
informed the delegates and the conference leadership that the leadership
of the six zones had been meeting over derivation and that they had
gone very far on some agreements that could be reached.
He urged the delegates to allow them continue deliberations and report back on the consensus reached on Wednesday (today).
“The leadership of the six geo-political
zones had met and agreed to meet again on some of the recommendations,
especially on derivation. Please, could you please allow us to meet and
report back to you tomorrow?”
Mohammed Kumalia seconded the motion and urged delegates to give the zonal leaders till Wednesday to resolve the issues.
Kutigi put the motion into question and was supported by the delegates.
Meanwhile, a former Minister of
Information, Chief Edwin Clark, has promised that leaders of the zone
would meet and resolve the logjam.
Clark said that leaders of the zone
would meet and agree on a position to be adopted when the conference
reconvenes on Wednesday (today).
Already, he said 18 leaders, made up of
three from each of the six-geo political zones had been selected to take
part in the meeting.
Our correspondents gathered that the leaders might agree on between 17 and 21 per cent as derivation fund.
He said, “We are not fighting for money to be shared, we are fighting for the people. No one should come here and oppress us.
“Yet, some of our former governors could have misused the money in the past, but some of them are paying for it.”
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