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The 1999 Constitution created emperors as Presidents, Governors – Sen. Seriake Dickson

According to Senator Seriake Dickson, the 1999 Constitution created emperors as president and governors because the drafters of the document omitted accountability in terms of the use of power by public office holders.
The lawmaker, who has been in the red chamber since 2020, was a guest on Inside Sources with Laolu Akande, a socio-political programme which was aired on Channels Television on Friday.
When Asked why some governors have been obstructing financial autonomy for local governments, the ex-Bayelsa governor said, “If you look at the framework of our constitution, the biggest emperor that the Nigerian Constitution has created is the President, that’s the biggest emperor but there are also 36 and now 37 (a Minister of the FCT).
Dickson, representing Bayelsa West in the National Assembly also said, “there are 37 emperors because of the insufficient mechanism for accountability built into the constitution which is what we must address. Accountability in terms of the use of power.”
Dickson therefore noted that the insufficient mechanism for accountability by leaders must be addressed in the 1999 Constitution.
Dickson, who was Bayelsa State Governor from February 2012 to February 2020, said he never tampered with local government funds as governor for eight years.
“For eight years as governor, I never tampered with one naira of local government fund. I was rather giving them a percentage of the Internally Generated Revenue (IGR), to support them, but I am told that there are state governors who literally commandeer all their local government allocations and even giving them piece of paper to sign,” he said.
Dickson added, ”as a governor, I have to introduced transparency law which gave me legal obligation to announce what was coming to the State and how it was spent every month.
”That same law directed the local government chairmen to do the same in their local governments. And I said the punishment for not doing that consecutively amounts to gross misconduct.”
He however advised President Bola Tinubu to convoke a National Dialogue where some topical issues affecting the growth and development of the country could be addressed.
‘‘President Bola Tinubu Should convoke National Dialogue. There have been calls for Nigeria to birth a new constitution with many elder statesmen and socio-political groups like the Afenifere, Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Pan Niger Delta Forum, the Middle Belt Form, amongst others demanding a sovereign national conference for the various ethnic nationalities in the country to discuss and agree on the terms of peaceful co-existence and governance including the subjects of state police, fiscal federalism, restructuring, amongst others, ” said.
Dickson recalled that in February, the House of Representatives set up a constitution review committee to address contentious issues and revamp the document handed over to the civilian government by the military in 1999.
Dickson, who is a member of a similar committee in the Senate, expressed his desire for the country to have “a comprehensive review of the constitution”.
“The underbelly of the constitutional inadequacies has come to the fore that those who are even opposing state police for example are now some of those who are now on their own advocating for it, which is very good.
“The National Assembly (I am also a member of the Constitutional Review Committee), we have not been far-reaching enough; it’s always been piecemeal because of the difficulty of building consensus over the years about building consensus, ” he added.
The lawmaker opined that President Bola Tinubu should convoke a national dialogue to address major existential issues in the country.
“I think we should have a robust national dialogue. It would be nice if the President convokes it, but it is more than mounting a convocation of another jamboree, it’s about selecting a team and consulting on areas of broad national consensus like state police or even the judiciary, ” said.
The ex-governor also threw his weight behind the growing call for Nigeria to return from the presidential system to parliamentary government.
“I believe that a nation that is as plural as we are, as diverse as we are, and culturally, religiously, and socially diverse as we are, the system of government that best suits our purpose should have been the Westminster Parliamentary System,” he asserted.
The lawmaker said the current Nigeria does not measure to the goals and aspirations of the founding fathers of the country at independence over six decades ago hence the need to return to the original ideals of the past heroes.
He lamented that the Nigerian elite, unknown to themselves, are collectively committing mass political suicide as their service to the country has not been based on shared values and ideals for Nigeria’s development but selfish interests.
He said the lack of quality investment in education over the years affected and produced the kind of current crop of leaders in Nigeria. “A nation that has not invest heavily in education will be dreaming too high to get quality leadership,” the lawmaker posited.