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  • Updated: March 08, 2021

Kukah Speaks On Why Nigeria’s Governance Problem Hasn’t Been Solved

Kukah Speaks On Why Nigeria’s Governance Problem Hasn’t

The Bishop of the Sokoto Catholic Diocese, Matthew Kukah on Sunday said that the delivery of governance in the country has been stalled due to “accidental leadership” with no proper succession plans.

Kukah who stated this at a virtual session titled “Cast without a plot,” said the men who have ruled the country since independence came to power without being prepared to solve the nation’s challenges.

He said, “Buhari had already said after he tried in 2011 ‘I’m done. I’m no longer interested.’ Yar’Adua had already said ‘I’m done. I want to go back to the classroom.’ Obasanjo was brought from prison to (become president),” he said.

Speaking further while responding to questions from panellists on the issues around governance, leadership, development and security in the country he, however, noted that the unpreparedness of the nation’s past leaders limits their ability to plan and “think about how they might resolve the problems of the country. This is what accounts for corruption in the system.”

He blamed this on the collapse of institutions, the difficulty to thrive outside of government and for meritocracy to thrive without political patronage.

“What passes for governance is digging a hole to fill a hole because you borrow money to win elections and you see that there is a correlation between the spiral of awarding of contracts and the contracts not being finished,” he explained.

READ ALSO: Kukah Has The Right To Criticize Buhari - Northern Elders

Asked if religion was contributing to the challenges in the country, he described religion as a sword, which does what its handler uses it for.

He affirmed that to checkmate this, education is key as it helps to drive a counter-narrative because it ensures independence of thought and healthy debates.

In response to a question posed to him on Nigeria’s diversity which has been dogged by agitation over suspicions of the dominance of some groups over others, Mr Kukah suggested that the government needs to manage the nation’s diversity in order to grow confidence among the citizens.

On Nigeria’s democracy, citing the introduction of sharia to Zamfara, Mr Kukah said attempt at theocracy in some parts of the country has not yielded the desired results.

“What we see (in Zamfara) today, is it what we are proud of? Are we saying what we have in northern Nigeria is what we are happy to say that theocracy is what we are happy to have?”

In the aftermath of the #EndSARS protests that swept across the country last year, he added that it was important that the government began “to take the street seriously.” because that’s where the people reside.

He added that the street is the “most fundamental signpost that we must erect” because “it is on the streets that we speak after the election.”

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