Dumping Presidential System  Won’t Solve Nigeria’s Problems – Balewa

Date:

Dr Abdul-Jhalil Tafawa Balewa, a former PDP presidential aspirant says adoption of parliamentary system of government is not the  answer to the nation’s current socio-political and economic challenges.

Tafawa-Balewa expressed the view in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria, NAN, on Sunday in Lagos.

The politician was reacting to calls  for a  shift from the current presidential system of government to the parliamentary system of government, to solve the country’s challenges.

NAN reports that Nigeria practised  the parliamentary system of government, modelled after the British Westminster system, from 1960 to 1966.

The late Sir Abubakar Balewa was the Prime Minister during the period, while Dr Nnamdi Azikwe served as the ceremonial head of state.

“No (adoption of parliamentary system), but I think democracy has to be modified in Nigeria to be able to represent us.

“To introduce something somewhat new, something radically different  will be too costly for us, and it won’t make much sense at this time”, Tafawa-Balewa said.

Instead, he said the country should be urgently restructured to allow for devolution of power from the centre to the federating zones.

The politician said this would make the zones to develop along their comparative advantage, adding it would make most of the country’s challenges disappear.

“Honestly, I feel that each zone can specialise in particular ideas.

“To develop the different zones for what their specialties are will make Nigeria a much better country, I believe”, he said

According to him, South-West can concentrate on the service industry, South East on marine industry, manufacturing  and commerce.

He said that the South-South could stay with just the petroleum manufacturing derivatives ,while the North could concentrate on agriculture.

“If we are able to invest properly in those areas, Nigeria will be better. The standard of living will be better.

“We need to be able to do innovation on all those things to be able to keep up with the rest of the world,” he said.

The politician stated he was not advocating a confederacy, but a “zonal specialisation system” with a centre to be responsible for only the military, the foreign service, maintenance of national integrity, representation at the United Nations and other bodies”.

Decrying the cost of governance, Tafawa-Balewa said that the National Assembly had been over-bloated and over-strained.

“I don’t think that we actually need that (bloated NASS). Maybe, we need very few representatives from the different systems that can now join the federal, a much slimmed-down federal body.

“I think it is over-bloated, especially in a country where the average citizen earns less than a dollar a day, and food is so expensive, and just staying alive is so expensive”, he said.

Tafawa-Balewa said that a new constitution for the country would simplify a lot of things for the nation and promote a better relationship between the zones and the federal government.

He added, “If we have a new, different type of federation-a Nigerian type of federation where there is equal opportunity for each zone to develop at their own pace, I think we will all be better”.

Share post:

Subscribe

spot_img

Popular

More like this
Related

Taliban Arrest 14 in Northern Afghanistan for Music and Singing

Authorities in northern Afghanistan have arrested 14 individuals for...

OSUN 2026: ‘Right Agitations Don’t Split Political Party, Wrong Decisions Do’

By Dr. Tunde Faleye Politics, as defined by Harold Lasswell,...

See List Of Countries Indebted To IMF, As Nigeria Clears Loan

International Monetary Fund IMF, has removed Nigeria from its...

ECOWAS Court Dismisses Mensah’s Claim Against Ghana 

ECOWAS Court of Justice sitting in Osborne, Lagos State,...