Connect with us

Africa

On the Bandwagon of Provincialism, by Kene Obiezu

Published

on

Tinubu

In her seminal work Inheritance, philosopher, historian, and anthropologist Harvey Whitehouse explores what she refers to as” … the evolved biases that have, over thousands of years, been extended by our forebears and helped forge the peculiar world we now inhabit.” She describes these biases as conformism, religiosity, and tribalism.

As the tax reform caravan of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has rolled into the National Assembly seeking to address some of Nigeria’s most pressing taxation issues, some politicians from the North have jumped on the bandwagon of parochialism and provincialism, dragging with them many of the region’s heavyweight. Together, they threaten to turn one of Nigeria’s most important conversations of recent times into a circus. If this circus succeeds, there is no prize for guessing right who the laughingstock would be.

The sweltering nonsense full of nothing on the tax reform bills Is symptomatic of the reasons Nigeria remains where it is today—immovably stuck in the mud of underdevelopment with no hope in sight. In a country that chants unity in diversity only when it is extremely convenient, it is jarring that conversations over pressing national issues and priorities always descend into purulent polemics over Nigeria’s politics of tongue and tribe, and who would be cheated eventually. This suspicion as ruinous as it is harks back to Nigeria’s fractured history and its extremely fragile sense of unity and patriotism.

Recently, the chief culprit in this extremely narrow interpretation of everything has been the North and its cohort of National Assembly members, who have seemingly gone into overdrive since President Bola Ahmed Tinubu was sworn in last year. This lot of Northern politicians and their often limited and lazy interpretation of events and proposals is led, and often comically, by Mohammed Ali Ndume, the senator representing Borno South in the National Assembly.

When the Federal Government decided to move some departments of the Central Bank of Nigeria and Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria(FAAN) to Lagos for administrative convenience and to cut costs, Ndume wailed to the highest heavens over the decision, accusing the president of an attempt to strip the North of such key institutions. In insisting that even if there was any need to relocate agencies of government, states like Kogi and Nasarawa should be considered first, Ndume, a federal legislator, conveniently and alarming ignored other federating units in the country, airing in the process his provincial streak that is such a disaster in a fragile federalism like Nigeria.

Advertisement

Expectedly, Ndume is leading the shrill but embarrassing outcry over the tax reform bills. He has managed to corral other politicians of Northern extraction to his camp, not that they needed much persuasion anyway, with Babagana Zulum, the Borno State Governor joining him in the in their new-found career as political moirologists.

To complete and complement the circus, one of the legion pseudo-political groups who prefer to lick the boots of power and scrap for craps instead of pressing for genuine political reforms has declared a one-day fast to support Zulum and Ndume in Borno.

It is laughably ironic that it is Borno State, a major beneficiary from Nigeria in recent times, and a handful of political jobbers from the state that have made an occupation out of crying wolf over every government decision since the presidency moved from the North to the South. Since the Boko Haram crisis started around 2009,more than two trillion Naira has been spent on humanitarian aid, most of it on Borno State where the terrorist group has wreaked total havoc. The country fully supported the state when floods wreaked havoc there recently. The Vice President, Kassim Shettima, is a former Governor of the state and a loyal son of the North who would have been a chief wailer over Nigerian affairs were it not for his exalted office. It is telling that even his presence in the government has not served in any way to reassure the North, especially his brothers from Borno State, that their interests are well protected in the current administration.
What is happening between the North and the South now that the presidency resides in the South-west may be tit-for-tat wailing as the Southwest before the administration of President Tinubu had some of the loudest wailers in the country. But even during the disaster that the Buhari presidency was, the wailing from the Southwest was not as piercing.

With the way Nigeria’s fragile federalism is structured against them, it is the Southeast that should be wailing non-stop. But the people of the region, as proud as ever, have simply refused to be pitied or pity themselves, showing exemplary dignity as the rest of the country continues to convulse.

Ndume and his ilk should resist the temptation to always flash their provincial cards at every major policy decision in Nigeria simply because the presidency now resides in another part of the country. If Nigeria is to find common cause around anything in the country, then those who represent the country must show more nuance and nous as they approach national issues.

Advertisement

Kene Obiezu,
keneobiezu@gmail.com

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Trending Contents

Topical Issues

Governor Siminalayi Fubara Governor Siminalayi Fubara
Africa17 hours ago

Emerging Facts On The Impeachment Move Against Fubara: Nigerians Were Right All Along -By Isaac Asabor

Governor Fubara’s insistence on fiscal discipline may disrupt entrenched arrangements, but disruption is sometimes the price of reform. Independence is...

FUBARA AND WIKE - AMAEWHULE FUBARA AND WIKE - AMAEWHULE
Politics20 hours ago

It Is High Time Wike And His Acolytes Allowed Fubara To Drink Water And Drop The Cup -By Isaac Asabor

The choice before Rivers political actors is clear. They can respect the mandate freely given by the people; allow the...

quality-nigerian-flag-for-sale-in-lagos quality-nigerian-flag-for-sale-in-lagos
Africa21 hours ago

Nigeria’s Year of Dabush Kabash -By Prince Charles Dickson Ph.D.

While politicians posture, Nigerians are trying to understand a new tax regime, rising costs, shrinking incomes, and policy explanations that...

Africa1 day ago

Singapore’s Leaders Built An Economy; Nigeria’s Keep Building Excuses -By Isaac Asabor

Until Nigerian leaders stop building excuses and start building institutions, the gap between both countries will remain. Singapore’s rise is...

Tinubu and Wike Tinubu and Wike
Africa1 day ago

Nyesom Wike and falling rafters of Rivers -By Festus Adedayo

Nigerian politics has produced a number of queer politicians and their absurd politics. One was Chief S. L. Akintola, the...

Wike Wike
Africa1 day ago

Campaigns Without Elections: How Nigeria’s Politicians Are Breaking The Law In Plain Sight -By Isaac Asabor

Nigeria cannot afford a perpetual campaign cycle. The country is grappling with economic hardship, insecurity, and institutional fatigue. This is...

Abba Dukawa Abba Dukawa
Africa1 day ago

Reciprocity in Conflict: How Covert Attacks Provoke Resistance -By Abba Dukawa

Governor Abba Kabir belongs to every Kanawa and to no one – he's the people's governor, above political affiliation. One...

JAMB and UTME JAMB and UTME
Forgotten Dairies2 days ago

The Role of Technology in Nigeria’s Education System -By Alheri Una

To fully maximize technology in education, government investment is crucial. Public-private partnerships can help provide internet access, digital devices, and...

Egbetokun Egbetokun
Africa2 days ago

Setting The Record Straight On The So-Called “IGP’s Boys” Narrative -By Danjuma Lamido

Nigeria deserves a Police Force that is firm, fair, and accountable, and a media ecosystem that reports responsibly. We must...

Russian-Indian Business Dialogue, December 2025 Russian-Indian Business Dialogue, December 2025
Forgotten Dairies2 days ago

Russia–India Dialogue Provides Platform for Strengthening Bilateral Entrepreneurship -By Kestér Kenn Klomegâh

Participants noted the development of Russia–India cooperation and implementation of joint business projects will continue at major international platforms, including...