democracy and the future of the traditional institution
Post on 12-Mar-2016
215 Views
Preview:
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
1 | P a g e
DEMOCRACY AND THE FUTURE OF THE TRADITIONAL
INSTITUTION: THE PERSPECTIVE OF A CONCERNED
MONARCH
PROTOCOLS
I want to thank my very good friend and colleague of many years, HRM N. A
Achebe the Obi of Onitsha, and his highly distinguished Council of Traditional
Rulers for inviting me to share a few thoughts with you on the future of the
traditional institution in Nigeria.
Before I venture into the topic of the day, however, I want to briefly
acknowledge the abiding reciprocity of appreciation and admiration that the
people of the Niger Delta and Indi-Igbo, especially of Onitsha, Oguta,
Arochukwu, Obosi, Awka and their environs have had for each other down the
centuries.
The Igbo man’s capacity and dexterity to improvise have always provided the
2 | P a g e
romance of contrast against the inscrutable adaptability of the ijaws to the
challenging frontier of open seas and endless waterways.
Over time, we became trading partners long before the incursion of the
whiteman, which we resisted in convergence of purpose, to pre-empt
colonialism and the desecration of our institutions, values and traditions.
Ndi-Igbo, especially the so-called waterside Igbos (Onitsha, Oguta, the Aros,
Aboh, Ahaba etc.) not only traded but also inter married with us, producing
many men of renown and valor, representing the best of our two traditions, of
whom the King Jaja dynasty of Opobo and my own past two predecessors (the
Alagoas) of the Mingi dynasty must be counted among the foremost.
With this weight of history on my mind, my first inclination to turn down the
invitation for this address in the end proved futile. And so here I am to take a
shot at a topic I chose myself, knowing its enormous breath and depth, to
which I can hardly claim to be able to do full justice, try as I would.
For reasons of practicality and focus, I have chosen to speak not as an
academic would do, but rather entirely from the perspective of a traditional
father, who is very concerned for the future of our institution within the brand
of democracy that Nigeria has chosen for itself.
3 | P a g e
Timing was the second reason for my choice of topic. Next year will make a
hundred years since Lord Lugard ‘s amalgamation of the Northern and
Southern Protectorates of Nigeria, the celebration of which has already been
officially flagged off. It seemed apposite to me therefore, that the traditional
institution should reflect on its roles past, present and future, even as the
nation takes stock of its political evolution. My own observation of events so
far, is that the political class is not likely to do this for us, if we fail to do it for
ourselves.
Still on timing, we are all aware of the ongoing constitutional amendment
process to which sundary inputs have been made advocating recognition of
our institution. My chosen topic should thus be of general interest at the
present time.
Needless to say too, that 2015 is around the corner and the jostling for political
power has already begun. It seems to me crucial therefore, that we make our
voice heard now before the electoral manifestos of the contending political
parties are finalised. After all, the advocacy of group interest is very much a
corner-stone of the American-type presidential system of government that we
have rightly or wrongly chosen for ourselves.
We may be too late or even be ignored in this electoral cycle, but we cannot be
ignored indefinitely.
4 | P a g e
As I stated earlier, this is one vast ocean of a subject to navigate, but for it to
be both concise and of practical interest, I have chosen to quarter it under the
following sub-heads:
the democratic ideal, generally and specific to Nigeria;
the traditional institution, its roles and evolution from pre-colonial times
to the present;
consequences thus far of the neglect of the traditional institution in
governance and, increasingly also in the civil society at large, and
a few scenarios for the traditional institution as we look to the future.
THE DEMOCRATIC IDEAL
Just about anybody, who has been through secondary school will tell you that
democracy is a system of government of all for all by all ( or at least a
majority). The words in which this ideal is framed, and their romantic appeal
in the modern era, can however be said to be partly an after-glow of the
cataclysm of the French Revolution in the 18th Century and of the American
Civil war in the 19th . Quotes such as Liberty, Equality, Fraternity (French
Revolution) and Government of the People for the People and by the People
5 | P a g e
(Lincoln at Gettysburg), have resonated with successive generations for two
centuries or a little less.
From the origin of its practice in ancient times and from its capture of the
popular imagination from the early 19th century, down to our own modern
political dispensation, the democratic ideal has continued to carry the notion
of being the best possible system of government. Everybody is enamoured
with the notion that they have equal say with everybody else in the way they
are governed. Yet we all know how seriously limited the notion is in actual
practice and the extent to which its promise of equal say by all, has been
perverted by the privileged classes that have operated it down the centuries.
These limitations led the great Churchill to quip that democracy was the
“worst “ system of government, except there weren’t any better.Even more
extreme, was King Charles I of England who said in the early 17th century that
democracy was “ a drolery invented by the French who thought that there
were extra-ordinary possibilities in ordinary human beings”.
Indeed, in our own modern dispensation, democratic governance has become
such an all comers affair in some countries that some of you may well be
inclined to the view of King Charles I.
6 | P a g e
I am sure it has not escaped your notice that some of the most repressive
regimes in the world are actually the ones that call themselves “Democratic”
Republic of this or that.
So, the age old challenge remains to find the right balance between too little
and too much democracy.
From the misty past when the human species first learnt the value of
cooperation, there has been some mechanism or other for collective decision
making. From these primitive models of collective decision making through the
great civilizations of Sumeria, India, Egypt and Greece, there always has been
some form of higher guidance behind the mass participation structures of
governance. This form of higher guidance was invariably a monarchy and or
the nobility in larger or smaller cliques, for which the Spartans coined the
name Oligarchy.
Thus the essence of democracy can be viewed as the balance of power
dynamics between three institutions: the monarchy, Oligarchy, and the
masses(or a mass based institution of governance)
If the King was powerful enough to dispense with the oligarchy and maybe
even the “assembly” we call such government, a monarchy. If, as in Greece
there was only a loose oligarchy (stronger in Sparta than Athens) and a
7 | P a g e
stronger assembly, we call it democracy in the classical Greek sense. In, pre-
imperial Rome, the oligarchy was made up of two tribunes (one for the
Plebeians and the other for the Senate). The Senate itself represented the
“assembly” presided over and often manipulated and dominated by the
“Oligarchy”.
A deep reflection on the evolution of governance structures leads me to the
belief that no society can permanently banish any one of these three
fundamental elements of ordered human society without paying the price. The
ideal to strive for is thus to find the best accomodation between the three.
Accordingly, in those countries where the kingship institution is at least as
ancient and well established, as it is in Nigeria, it would amount to a grave
error of judgement to not seek to involve it for effective governance.
In Rome for example, the last Tarquin king, Tarquinius Superbus was
overthrown in 510BC, they thought for good. Yet in course of time, the Senate
became corrupt, and the Oligarchy of Julius Gaius Caesar and Flavius Pompey
fell out with itself, leading to the emergence of an Emperor who was simply a
king by another name. In our own days we have seen the re-call of king Juan
Carlos in Spain after the Fascists made their exit, leading inexorably to the
8 | P a g e
return of a monarchy. The question is: are we being adequately guided by the
lessons of history? Can Nigeria really do away with the monarchy?
This brings me to the Nigerian experience with democracy. Democracy
by leave of the British Colonial power, may be said to have started in Nigeria
with the Hugh Clifford Constitution of 1922, when the first ever legislative
Council was set up, initially with limited indigene participation.
Traditional rulers still administered large parts of the country under
supervision of the colonial authorities. With time, the participation of Nigerian
elites and politicians increased by stages to the point where an elected
assembly of Nigerians emerged in 1951 under the Macpherson Constitution,
effectively signalling the winding down of traditional authority. However,
thanks to the unique structure of the westminster type of government,
traditional authority in diluted form, survived through the ‘Housees of Chiefs’
instituted in the 1954 Lyttleton Constitution.
With the suspension of the independence constitution, following the 1966
Coup, the military ruled until 1979. Then, in clear rejection of the traditional
institution, the military handed over to HE Alhaji Shehu Shagari a Presidential
Constitution, which had no room for two chambers in the States Legislatures,
and a higher chamber (the Senate) at the Federal level with no seats for
traditional rulers. The 1966 Coup, thus practically concluded the winding down
9 | P a g e
process of traditional authority started in 1951 by the colonial administrators,
who never forgot nor forgave the stiff resistance to colonial incursion by our
illustrious ancestors. The process was all along aided and abetted by our own
politicians, and completed by the military in the 1979 Constitution.
The North has fared a lot better in this regard, because of the in-built
administrative/Judicial(Sharia) structures of Islam, though strictly speaking
Islam itself was foreign to the original indigenous traditions of the North, just
as Christianity was to ours. I simply leave this as an observation as it would be
too much of a digression to explore these differences further.
The smaller, kingdoms and city-states of the coastal and southern forest
belt(excepting Benin and Oyo) have not been so fortunate. With the virtual
proscription of our once potent tribal religious beliefs (e.g. Igwekala Ojukwu
Diobu, Ogidiga, Ekonko, Ekpo etc) by the colonial authorities as retribution for
our stubborn resistance to them, the traditional institution in the south, lost
the core spiritual values and sanctions that could have protected us from
assault by the then emergent political class. As our trado-religions were driven
underground by Christianity, so were we more or less disarmed and no longer
able to enforce traditional authority over former client communities. The latter
took licence and relished the balkanisation of the kingdoms that once held
10 | P a g e
sway over them. Emerging demographic imbalances became a ready excuse
for this balkamisation and unbundling of the natural rulerships of the southern
kingdoms and city-states.
The rout that traditional authority has suffered under the US-type presidential
system, compels me to trace the roots of the sentiments that gave rise to it in
the first place in Nigeria.
Begining with the first generation of politicians in Nigeria, two impulses could
be discerned: one, adversorial the other consensual. The first in time was
Westminster in style and was embraced by our founding fathers who were
well read and understood its foundations in the British and european
phylosophies of John Locke, Emmanuel Kant, Georg Hegel and others.
The second was a consensual impulse, which shunned the Westminster style of
governance in which the Prime Minister , was daily exposed to public debate
and scrutiny. So it was that as the pool of foreign educated first generation-
type leaders ran dry, and the military made their incursion into politics, the
Presidential system gained preference. The Head of State and Government
could choose to stay remote a-la-Abacha and still have all he wants done, using
his immense constitutional powers of reward, coercion, blackmail and
manipulation, all in the name of concensus.
11 | P a g e
Currently, the executive arm of government in many states is actually beyond
censure or any form of accountability. This said, it is clear also that the
Presidential system was prefered by the military with collusion of the political
class for the same reason that the US founding fathers did: a rejection of
monarchy. Sadly, they have and we are, yet to fully acquire the maturity and
the institutions to moderate/check the one-way flow of authority implicit in
the US-style presidential system.
I have dealt at length with the democratic ideal and must now turn my
attention to the indigenous Nigerian ideal.
In the interest of time, I will simply enumerate the main elements of what I
consider to be the Nigerian ideal of old:
Morality as an expression of trado-spiritual values: Before we acquired
foreign legal systems, immorality was inseparable from illegality and was
punishable up to banishment or death. This is in contrast to the
European systems of jurisprudence where all manner of immoralities
abound that are regarded as purely private and are neither justiceable
nor punishable.
Respect and fear for oaths as a binding commitment, breach of which
was believed to bring swift retribution, physical or spiritual.
12 | P a g e
Respect for tradition and its custodians as the basis for group self-
identity. The custodians were the kings, chiefs and elders.
Responsive leadership: There was constant dynamic exchange between
the community leader, his counsellors and the common people, these
three forming an organic whole as captured by the German phylosopher
Johann Fichte(1762) , and our very own Chinua Achebe in ‘Things Fall
Apart’. The heroic ideal, once cherished as the beacon towards which
good leadership aspired, is now all but a thing of the past, replaced by
consolidated mediocrity.
Abhorrence of those who broke the social code or committed
abomination: The community always had its way of dealing with such
people, with the result that social crimes were very rare. Most houses
made do with make-shift doors and windows, not the heavy barricades
we see today, because they were for privacy, not to keep out robbers.
Genuine care for the under-privileged the aged, sick, lame, orphans and
widows. In our present urbanised society, good-neighbourliness has lost
its meaning, replaced by the rat race and dog-eat-dog syndrome.
I have so far traced the roots of democracy in general and its Nigerian home-
grown variety in particular from ancient times, through the ideals of Europe
and the USA. To this I have juxtaposed the Nigerian trado-social ideal to show
13 | P a g e
that our so-called home-grown democracy is a local brew served up with
imported ingredients and not the ingredients that we would genuinely call
home-grown. Is it any wonder that our polity of today is so dysfunctional?
THE TRADITIONAL KINGDOMS: PARADIGMS PAST & PRESENT
Please permit me, ladies and gentlemen to now trace the changing roles of the
traditional institution from pre-colonial times to the present. Before the
incursion of colonial administration, the area which later became Nigeria was a
patchwork of kingdoms of greater or lesser extent, power and cohesion. In the
northern territories of that time, some uniformity in State administration was
introduced by the Jihad of Othman dan Fodio in the mid-nineteenth century,
while the rest of the yet-to-be Nigeria consisted of a mix of empires, kingdoms
and States, that were autonomous but varied in grandeur, size and
organization. The Oyo, Benin, Bornu, Nupe and Zazzau empires and kingdoms
were among the larger ones. In the east, were the city States of Onitsha,
Nembe, Kalabari, Bonny/ Opobo, Arochukwu, Calabar and Oguta.
The above and others have been described in varying degrees of detail by
renowed historians such as Dike, Crowder, Fage, Alagoa, Ikime, Tamuno and so
on. It is sufficient simply to give the key highlights.
14 | P a g e
In size, the bigger empires such as Benin and Kanem-Bornu were at least a
fifth of the present size of nigeria or perhaps the equivalent of one geopolitical
zone.
There was a well structured administrative system in Benin before the arrival
of the Portuguese in the 15th century, when the 15th Oba, Eweka I was on the
stool, following the long reign of the Ogisos. Different departments and
institutions of the traditional government were headed by tittled chiefs under
the king, either reporting directly to him or through a traditional Prime
Minister. A standing army of 20,000 – 30,000, expandable to 80,000 or 100,000
by call-up, existed under a commander who reported to the Oba. Some of the
Obas such as Ewuare, were well travelled beyond present day Nigeria and
maintained ambassadors to the European countries that made first contact,
notably Portugal. The Obas exacted tribute from vasal kings and adjudicated
on matters brought to them from subordinate kingdoms. Internal taxes were
collected and a strict system of ethics was enforced .
Above is the bearest outline of the organisation of a typical Nigerian traditional
empire. With the entry of the colonial powers, all this began to change. The
early british entry into Nigeria was for purpose of trade, initially in competition
with the French and Dutch, after the collapse of the exclusive papal rights
hitherto enjoyed by the Portuguese.
15 | P a g e
The arrowhead was the Liverpool company later displaced by the Royal Niger
Company of Mc Gregor Laird. Just as in South America, the missionaries played
a crucial role in “softening “ up our people, by getting them to abandon the
traditional belief system that had served them so well in war, peace,
jurisprudence and ethics.
The white traders were welcomed at first, as they recognised the organised
power centres and kingdoms, which acted as middlemen between their client
hinterland communities and white traders along the coast and up the major
rivers.
Treaties were signed to protect this trade initially in slaves, and were revised
when the slave trade was abolished in England and palm produce became the
new commodity of trade.
Trouble began when the white traders, driven by greed, started to impose
unfavourable conditions on our people, including a restriction on our access to
the hinterland, insisting on penetrating there themselves. Thereon, the British
traders began to apply force and threachery. King Jaja of Opobo was lured into
a ship and abducted for his astuteness and lack of cooperation. When the
behaviour of the traders became intolerable, King Koko, the 8th Mingi of
Nembe, took the fight to them, and sacked their trading station at Akassa, in a
lightening raid with a well organised fleet of some thirty war canoes.
16 | P a g e
After the various centres of pre-colonial power were subjugated by military
force, treachery, or subterfuge, the ethnicities so conquered were organised
by the British Government into the Southern and Northern Protectorates at
the dawn of the 20th century. At this stage, governance was still through the
various treaty kingdoms headed by rulers amenable to dictation by the
emerging colonial authority. In the case of the 8th Mingi of Nembe, who died
in 1898 after waging the Akassa war of 1895, the British authorities did not
want another strong leader to emerge by the people’s choice, but were
content to deal with the first Alagoa as regent until 1928, when one of the
earlier converts to the Christian faith and a pastor, Rev Anthony O. Ockiya
emerged as the 9th Mingi with their full endorsement.
This was the pattern in many parts of proto-Nigeria until the formal
amalgamation of 1914 and the eventual dismantling of traditional authority
that started in 1922.
CONSEQUENCES OF THE REJECTION OF INDIGENOUS TRADITIONAL IDEALS
I turn now to the consequencies of the delibrate emasculation of the
traditional institution over the years. My generation has the unique advantage
that at independence in 1960, we were still young and romantic enough to
17 | P a g e
believe that the heroic accomplishments of our ancestors, as told by our
elders, could be projected forward to a glorious future, once the whiteman had
packed up and gone. This was not to be, and it is what the present reality lacks
as critical success factor from our ancient traditions that I want to discuss now.
In politics and governance, generally, the traditional institution can play the
following roles:
Provide wise counsel to government
Provide two-way communication between government and the people
in matters of grass-root, health, empowerment, security, enlightenment
and development.
Our institution is one of lifetime tenure. Our advice is thus more
objective and takes into account the long term benefits and potential
consequences. We address sustainability, while the political class, by
their limited term calling, addresses expediency.
We are closer to the pulse of our people, and cannot do anything
contrary to their long term interest, without risking serious
consequencies.
The traditional fathers carry more credibility and trust for the reason
above cited.
18 | P a g e
The traditional institution can mobilize the grassroots for sustainable
self-help programmes.
It has an abiding responsibility for adjudication/intervention in local
disputes and crises, as well as in security.
In morality and ethics, the traditional institution brings to the table
values that are beyond the letter of our laws and constitution. I would
venture further to say that the morality and ethics of our ancient
institution is as far from that encoded in our jurisprudence as the law of
the New Testament is from that of Moses.
In the Mosaic law you could look at a woman and fantasise and not be guilty
of adultery, but in the law of our Lord you are guilty indeed, just as in our
indigenous tradition looking on female nudity is abomination. It is also
abomination to beat one’s parents or even to threaten them physically,
morality being the first consideration, while the modern law on such action
starts from justification as a base.
Many more examples could be cited of a whole range of traditional
abominations and taboos which under our laws are perfectly acceptable. This
enhancement of national values and ethos is what our nation is missing by the
near exclusion of the traditional institution from governance.
19 | P a g e
In matters of security, crime and punishment, our institution has much to offer
that has simply been overtaken by the brand of democracy that we have
adopted and the so-called modern values that go with it. Trial by oracle and
trial by ordeal have been banished in favour of legal trial, where one loses or
wins a case based largely on technicalities, the quality of advocacy and the
integrity of the trial judge. So called oaths are simply a joke now, but in Mosaic
law, crimes such as adultery were settled by oath believed for example, to
make woman swell if she was guilty. The punishment of criminals in ancient
times is in many instances still admissible in Sharia Law, but not in our western
laws. Examples are stoning, dismemberment or decapitation. Even the
traditional custom of parading a criminal in caricature garb is nowadays
considered offensive and repugnant in our laws.
I am in no way advocating a wholesale return to our old ways of establishing
guilt and allotting punishment, barbaric as some of them can be. But to the
African mind that is still subliminally in awe of the past, the adaptation and
refinement of a select range of the ways of our ancestors can be very effective
in the fight against the growing wave of crime, and the seeming powerlessness
of the law to deal with it.
In the maintenance of social stability, the traditional institution
continues to prove again and again its indispensable role. In 2001,
20 | P a g e
when the nation was near to break-up from the proliferation of
various ethnic militia such as OPC, APC, Egbesu, Bakassi and so on, it
was the senior traditional rulers that rose up to the occasion to give
Nigeria another lease of life. In 2011, when the bog-bear of ethnicity
and religion again raised its head over the internal politics of PDP
with regards to zoning and consensus candidacy, and the general
sense of political uncertainty, the South South Monarchs Forum
undertook a physically taxing and risky reach out to a cross section of
the senior monarchs across the nation. Our message was one of
goodwill and hope, moderation mutual tolerance and unity. By God’s
infinite mercy, the country was able to conclude the elections, and
we remain one today, against all the powerful forces of
disintegrattion.
The above may seem long, but is still only a small sample of what the nation
needs to put back in the system to counter its increasing dysfuctionality. There
cannot be a better time than now, given the present high calibre of the
incumbents of senior stools across the nation.
21 | P a g e
OPTIONS FOR THE WAY FORWARD
Fellow traditional fathers, ladies and gentlemen, please permit me to now
conclude with five scenarios or options for the future development of the
traditional institution.
Before dealing with the scenarios, I would like to inform you that a number of
initiatives have been made between 2009 and 2011 to re-gain formal
recognition of the traditional institution as was the case in the 1979
Constitution, or better.
The National Council of Traditional Rulers of Nigeria (NCTRN) led by the Etsu
Nupe, made a submission to the National Assemly in 2010, following which
the South South Monarchs Forum led by myself, also led a delegation to the
House of Representatives on the same issue. Subsequent to these initiatives
and prior to the 2011 Presidential Election, Mr. President(HE Dr. Goodluck
Jonathan), personally promised the NCTRN during a vist to him, that within 6
months of being returned to power, he would send a bill to the NASS on the
issue of constitutional recognition and empowerment.
When the above, failed to materialise, a small working group headed by the
Etsu Nupe and consisting of Gbong Gwom Jos, Eze Akaliro, Oba Alayimore, the
Emir of Kazaure, and myself met and finalised a draft bill to NASS under the
22 | P a g e
sponsorship of Senator Abdulahi Adamu, former Governor of Nassarawa State.
This bill had received second reading before the ongoing collation exercise of
state by state input to the planned amendment of the 1999 constitution.
Needless to say that our legislative approach now faces the risk of being
overtaken by the constitutional amendment process which could take quite a
while to be concluded.
Given this state of uncertainty, it is very important that we look at a few
scenariors of the way forward, just in case.
The scenariors I want to put forward are:
1. Do nothing. Simply continue with the roles we presently play, whether
we are recognised and empowered or not. The danger of this approach,
of course is that nothing stands still in nature, and it is more likely than
not that we will lose ground from the present already unsatisfactory
position.
2. Let government simply abrogate the institution, in which case we cannot
be held accountible for the social consequencies that will follow,
especially at the grassroot level. This may sound too extreme to
contemplate but you may not be surprised that a very well known
Senator and former minister under President Abacha made remarks of
this sort during the 2nd reading of the bill aforementioned.
23 | P a g e
3. Through unrelenting advocacy, develop into a major estate of the realm
over time. This could start at the state level, where the third tier of
government could report officially and directly to the appropriate
monarch, as was the case in the NATIVE AUTHORITY SYSTEM of the
1920’s and 30’s, at least up to the James Robertson Constitution of
1959.
4. Structured institutional convergence, merging the best of our ancient
traditions with the best of western democracy. This will call for major
constitutional reforms that can finally deliver a true “home-grown”
system of government in both content and style, not what merely passes
by that name now. Likelihood of this happening in our life-time or ever?
Possibly Zero!
My fellow traditional fathers, ladies and gentlemen, I do not want to add a
word more, but simply to leave the above for your thoughtful consideration.
Thank you and may God bless you all.
top related