Awolowo wanted federalism –Daughter
The daughter of the late Chief Obafemi
Awolowo, Dr. (Mrs.) Olatokunbo Awolowo-Dosumu, said on Friday that the
late sage was committed to federalism.
Federalism refers to the mixed or
compound mode of government, combining a federal government with
regional governments in a single political system.
In a paper presented by Awolowo-Dosumu
at a one-day colloquium on the “Life and times of late Oba Okunade
Sijuwade, Olubuse II,” organised by the Institute of Cultural Studies,
Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Osun State on July 29, 2016, she
added that the late Ooni was committed to Awolowo’s legacy.
She also said that the objective of the
Yoruba Unity Forum — an umbrella body for all socio-cultural
organisations in the Yoruba nation championed by late Chief (Mrs.)
H.I.D. Awolowo, late Oba Sijuwade, Bishop Bolanle Gbonigi, and others —
was to harmonise and work towards the actualisation of the aspirations
of the Yoruba nation within the larger context of Nigeria, regardless of
partisan political affiliation.
She said, “This objective remains, I
have to say however, work in progress. May I say, at this juncture, that
the attainment of the noble objectives of the Yoruba nation which, by
the way, redound to the best interests of all other nationalities in
Nigeria, will continue to be hampered by our current regrettable lack of
internal cohesion.
“Contrary to seemingly tribalist
connotations, the Yoruba Agenda is not about a set of self-serving
proposals that would benefit only the Yoruba nation, to the detriment of
other nationalities in Nigeria.
“It is, actually, a set of
recommendations that are firmly rooted in the principles of equity,
justice and fair play for all Nigerians and would, ultimately, be in the
best interests of all. It is a prescription for permanent unity and
stability in Nigeria and is a document that is highly recommended for
those who have never read it.
“For the purpose of the theme of this
paper, I will consider just one. I refer to the crucial issue of fiscal
federalism and the consequent need to restructure the Nigerian polity.
This issue, as much as any other, lies at the very core of the legacy of
Chief Obafemi Awolowo
“It is probably best, therefore, to hear
directly from him on this matter. Permit me to reproduce a few of his
thoughts, as follows. On his preference for federalism, he said in 1960,
‘In 1951 when the controversy on the form of Nigeria’s constitution
began, I had already been for more than 18 years a convinced
federalist.’
“Chief Awolowo was clearly an
unrepentant federalist. He was also unrepentantly committed to a
strategy for development that puts people firmly at the centre of the
process.”
Awolowo-Dosumu added that “rather than
remain in denial about our ethnic divergence, geographical separateness
and diversity, different economic visions, divergent resources,
religious differences and, above all, linguistic differences, we would
do much better to acknowledge and embrace them through a truly federal
constitution.”
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