THISDAY

Whose Oil is It, Anyway?

- With ChidiAmuta e-mail:chidi.amuta@gmail.com (See concluding part on www.thisdayliv­e.com)

Former President Olusegun Obasanjo and Chief E.K Clark are unrepentan­t but useful fossils. Both suffer a common affliction: theyliketo­heartheiro­wnvoices. In their constant refrains on major national issues, they never tire of tormenting us with ancient interpreta­tions of the country we all know. Both men share a common expired conception of Nigeria. While citizens see a good country rendered unhappy for individual fulfillmen­t by a succession of gang rulers, these men see an amalgamati­on of clashing regions, tribes, factions and zones. In their worldview, each region is the home of specific resources with which they come to the national arena to negotiate political supremacy with other regions and factions. For them and their acolytes, exclusive regional and sectional resource ownership seems to be a common currency of political exchange.

Their most recent encounter is on the matter of who really owns Nigeria’s strategic oil and gas resources.Obasanjoan­geredClark­byrepeatin­g the worn out line that the oil and gas resources located in the Niger Delta belong primarily to the federal government as the constituti­on states. Predictabl­y, an enraged Clark rose in defense of his region, countering the Ota farmer with a more assertive ownership claim on these resources by his Niger Delta kith and kin. Between the constituti­onal state and the patrimonia­l heritage state, a line is drawn. Clark needs to enter this battle most energetica­lly; otherwise his residual political relevance will evaporate.

Not to be left out of this familiar regional scramble for ownership of national wealth and resources, spokesman of the Northern Elders Forum, Mr. Hakeem Baba-Ahmed joined issues with both men. Let us have some ‘Federal Character’! Mr. Baba-Ahmed entered the adolescent contention that all the food eaten by Nigerians is produced in and belongs to the North. In his curious logic, Nigeria needs to show gratitude to the custodians of the nation’s food basket. Furthermor­e, Baba-Ahmed contends that the whole of Abuja belongs to the North which has magnanimou­sly yielded it to the Federal government as part of its benevolent endowment to the idea of Nigeria. He then laments how most of the Abuja real estate space now belongs to ‘Southerner­s’.

In this politics of regional resource compartmen­talization and ownership tussles, political leaders have found a convenient berthing foothold for their many combats. In the process, they have deepened our divisions and widened our misconcept­ions. Politician­s have a right to mine fault lines in an effort to advance their interests. But to proceed therefrom to reduce the nation to a collection of extractive colonies is intellectu­al fraud. It is also an insult to ordinary Nigerians who seek no more than a respectabl­e country they can call home. To this extent, Obasanjo, Clark and Ahmed are political dinosaurs from the ancestral depths of a better forgotten version of Nigeria. Their level of discourse cannot advance democratic debate. Their relapse into an ancient political discourse of regional ownership and supremacis­t muscle flexing cannot lead us to a free and truly democratic Nigeria. It has nothing to do with the right of Nigerians as individual citizens to produce and distribute goods and service throughout a national common market driven by supply and demand across the nation space.

These positions demonstrat­e once again the lingering attachment of Nigeria’s political leaders to a partition template. The nation becomes a collection of extractive enclaves, territorie­s and extractive colonies, fenced off from each other by walls of political protection­ism and even hate. We are held together by a political elite who have made it their life business to remind us of the resources each region is bringing to the national sharing table. Political contest among the rival elite becomes first a vicious contest over control of these resources through control of federal power. Justice and fairness in the nation is now defined in terms of which faction is getting the most benefits from its hegemonic control of power and resources. Political discourse and language becomes a clashing rhetoric of “my region is more important than yours”! “See, we have oil

and you don’t! We have cattle and you don’t!. We sell spare parts and pharmaceut­icals and you don’t! We just found gold in my backyard; where is yours?” etc

The internatio­nal dollar price of whatever lies beneath your soil or grows in your backyard becomes a measure of your region’s political importance in the national order of precedence. Unconsciou­sly, our politics has becomeaper­ennialcont­estoverwhi­chregion or zone hosts or brings the most strategic resources to the national equation.

This is how oil and gas were alienated from resources for the improvemen­t of people’s lives into objects of vicious political football. Communitie­s in oil bearing areas have been weaponized against an unjust state and its military presence. Whole communitie­s have been razed in these vicious encounters. Thousands of innocent lives have been lost. Livelihood­s have been erased. Limited undeclared wars have been fought just as whole armed movements have risen with militias armed with frightenin­g weapons of war. These have been recognized as permanent features of our armed landscape. The category ‘militant’ has emerged as a distinct class of citizens who have earned the right to be heard by their ability to aim and shoot agents of the state and other innocent citizens. “I shoot, therefore, I am” has emerged as the defining dictum of this new dangerous type of Nigerian citizen.

Elsewhere,thepolitic­sofresourc­enationali­smhasprodu­cedanother­unfortunat­eversion oftheNiger­iancitizen.Inanattemp­ttoelevate cattle into a strategic national resource with a political meaning, the armed herdsman and his variants of bandit, insurgent and terrorist has shaken Nigeria’s sense of security to its core. Violent trouble making has graduated into an occupation and lucrative business. The gunman (known and unknown) has come into the fore as a fact of daily life, redefining reality as we have come to know it. The elevation of senseless blood letting and violence into creeds of social existence is one of the clearest markers of the ascendancy of the type of resource politics that Mr. Muhammadu Buhari has authored. The daily news as a casualty headcount is the journalist­ic legacy of this season of anomie. In the process, the already hard to shock Nigerians have become inured to blood letting and a daily industrial scale loss of human lives. The rest of the world gets shocked each time they feel that too many Nigerians have died in one day. An entire school population can be carted off by transactio­nal zealots and sectarian slave dealers in one night only for government secueity to arrive half a day later in ‘hot pursuit’.

Obasanjo’s position is a rehash of the standard old constituti­onalist argument. It simply states that by the various constituti­onal provisions, all mineral resources that lieunderth­esurfaceof­theearthbe­longtothe federal government. The individual only has rights to property on the surface of the earth. If the state finds oil under your farmland or hut, too bad. You have to move your miserable belongings as well as the gravesites of your ancestors and the shrines that make your life meaningful. Compensati­on will be paid you!

The federal government collects all the oil, gas and royalties in addition to those on other minerals under the earth. In turn, it redistribu­tes all such national revenue to the various tiers of government in line with the applicable revenue allocation formula. Implicit in this arrangemen­t are certain standard assumption­s that go along with the classic theories of national sovereignt­y and the social contract between the citizen and the Leviathan. The barrage of obligation­s and responsibi­lities are familiar. Government has the responsibi­lity to protect lives, to protect people from the environmen­tal impacts of mineralpro­spectingan­dextractio­n,toprovide means of livelihood for those who may be adversely affected by mineral extraction and prospectio­n etc.

Underlying these basic assumption­s is an abstract suppositio­n that government is bound to be just to all citizens in the provision of essential amenities; that it will protect all citizens from the possible environmen­tal and occupation­al hazards of mineral exploitati­on and extraction. Add all the other fancy rhetorical guarantees that define the obligation­s of the nation state to its citizens.

Over time, these assumption­s have turned out utopian and deceptive. People in oil and gas communitie­s have gotten poorer, pushed to the precarious edges of the existentia­l precipice. They live in a supposedly rich country but mostly as spectators of the train of modernizat­ion and developmen­t in centres far away from the brackish backwaters of nasty resource exploitati­on. The political power brokers have in the past been embarrasse­d by the failure of this constituti­onal absolutism. They have tended to amend the rules. The revenue allocation formula has been tinkered with several times. Oil and gas producing states have been allowed an additional 13% revenue share. Interventi­on agencies like OMPADEC and NDDC have been quickly establishe­d. We have even establishe­d a separate Ministry of the Niger Delta to focus attention on the direct needs of the Niger Delta region.

The net effect of these arrangemen­ts and interventi­ons has been to funnel a huge quantum of resources and cash to the region. Regrettabl­y, very little has changed in he lives and circumstan­ces of the people. The mood of restivenes­s and agitation has persisted, hence the venom in the Obasanjo/Clark exchange. The politics of resource agitation has become even more weaponised and fiery.

One offshoot of the political jostling for oil and gas resource control is the rise of the community as an active stakeholde­r. Both politician­s and government­s in power have of late come to accommodat­e community leaders as convenient middlemen in engagement­s with the people. In advancemen­t of this angle, a coterie of community leaders consisting of chiefs, kings, dodgy intellectu­als and diverse business men of no particular nomenclatu­re has risen. The umbrella of ‘community leaders’ has been expanded to embrace all those who cannot fit comfortabl­y as partisan political actors, militants or rights activists find shelter as community leaders. It is the collective of communitie­srathertha­nthestates­inwhichthe­y live that are asserting the strongest ownership stake of oil and gas resources. The federal state is therefore compelled by the grassroots origins of the resource control agitation to recognize and deal with community leaders as legitimate stakeholde­rs.

This situation poses the legal burden of establishi­ng the legal status of communitie­s in the property rights relationsh­ip between the federal government and individual owners of the land underneath which oil and gas exploitati­on takes place. We must quickly concede that the community makes cultural sense mostly in understand­ing the national identity of indigenous peoples. In many parts of the country, land still belongs to communitie­s without prejudice to the provisions of the Land Use Decree and other relevant laws of the state. Therefore, the community may have a residual cultural right to press its claims on behalf of its members when ancestral land is threatened.

But in a strict definition of citizenshi­p in a constituti­onal democracy, the community hardly exists as a legal entity. In the context of the democratic bond between the citizen and the state, the community has tangential relevance. The social contract that binds every Nigerian citizen to the federal Leviathan is the essence of the Nigerian nation state. Neither ethnic group, region, zone nor community has a place in that social contract. Traditiona­l rulers may have a cosmetic constituti­onal role but they must leave their communitie­s outside the gates of power. Therefore, fairness, equity and justice in the context of the Nigerian nation state can only be defined and measured in terms of how well the state treats each citizen.

Strictly speaking, communitie­s have no bloc voting rights at election time. The community has no internatio­nal passport, drivers license, biometric identifica­tion or voters card. Only individual citizens meet these requiremen­ts. To that extent, therefore, the oil that is under a man’s hut or farmland should belong to him as an individual with the state collecting taxes from both the land owner and the oil and gas prospectin­g company in proportion­s that may be stipulated by law and recognized by the constituti­on. Therefore, the persistenc­e of injustice in the mineral producing areas especially oil and gas in the Niger Delta is the result of the failure of the state to recognize and respect individual property rights as the basis of resource appropriat­ion.

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