BusinessDay 29 Sep 2019

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Why Northern political leaders must defend Osinbajo – Birma …Says, ‘I have more fears than hope for Nigeria @ 59’

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chieftain of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and former education minister in the late Sani Abacha era, Dauda Birma, has called on Northern political leaders to speak up in defence of the Vice President, Yemi Osinbajo, who is said to be having a frosty relationship with his boss, President Muhammadu Buhari, allegedly

masterminded by the cabal in the Aso Rock Villa. Birma, who spoke exclusively with BDSUNDAY from Yola, Adamawa State, said he was not happy at the deafening silence from the Northern political elite while things are going wrong at the Presidency, particularly the alleged cloud gathering against Continues on page 6

L-R: Alex Okosi, EVP & MD, VIMN Africa & BET Int’l; Tasania Parsadh, Channel director, Nickeodeon Africa; Ngozi Nkwoji, portfolio manager, Non-Alcoholic Brands, Nigerian Breweries Plc, and Bada Akintunde-Johnson, country manager, VIMN Africa, at Nickfest with Maltina 2019, in Lagos.

BDSUNDAY BUSINESS DAY

www.businessday.ng www.facebook.com/businessdayng Sunday 29 September 2019

Return of eastern ports:

How MAN, NPA plan to revive Port Harcourt port p. 28

inside Akwaaba 2019: Celebrating 15 years milestone for African tourism development

p. 26

Why I left banking for interior designs – Tanwa Newbold

p.29

Primer on contemporary marriage and family life p.32

@businessDayNG

@Businessdayng

Vol 1, No. 282 N300

Dangote Flour, Cornerstone, ‘Most ?? cardiovascular diseases are caused MTNN top as equities gain by high blood pressure, poor lifestyle’ p.42 N267bn in quarter three p.39 p 41.

@59: Which way Nigeria? We missed the road because of the military - Yakassai

Politics has become a criminal project – Odumakin Restructuring the way out – Guy Ikokwu As divisions, hatred, poverty, misery stalk the land

Chuka Uroko, Innocent Odoh, OBINNA EMELIKE, AMAKA ANAGOR-EWUZIE, INIOBONG IWOK and seyi John Salau

W

hen Nigeria gained independence on October 1,1960, it made appreciable progress under the British-inherited parliamentary Federal Government of 4 regions with Prime Minister, Tafawa Belewa as the head of government. But on January 15, 1966, the military struck and ended the First Republic and introduced a long spell or military rule, which imposed the unitary command structure and the original four regions have today been balkanised into 36 mostly unviable states with 774 local government areas. Although Nigeria returned to the American-style Presidential system of democracy in 1999, a military -oriented constitution appears to have hobbled Nigeria and it is on the basis of this that many are clamouring for the restructuring of the country back to a true federal arrangement. This, according to the proponents will enable the states as constituents unit to develop at their own pace instead of the current situation where the states go cap-in-hand begging for the powerful centre to collect allocations from oil wealth.

This current arrangement is blamed for the alleged laziness by the states and Federal Government leading to lack of diversity in productivity as the nation’s leaders depend almost entirely on crude oil. This lack of vision is perhaps also responsible for massive waste and corruption in the system. Reacting to the current trajecto-

ry of the nation, former Nigerian Ambassador to Switzerland Humphrey Orjiako in his seminal book ‘Nigeria: The Forsaken Road to Nationhood and Development’, captured the political and economic trajectory and a compelling narrative of when and how Nigeria got it wrong and the concomitant crises the nation is confronted with. He also suggested

redemptive steps Nigeria must take to find its way out of the quagmire. “Over-centralisation of power is a cardinal culprit in stymieing Nigeria’s prospects for economic growth and development, as well as an important factor in decelerating her pace of advancement to

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