Citizenship And The Indigene/Settler
Syndrome
By
George Ehusani
culled from GUARDIAN, July 4, 2005
One of the lingering contradictions
of the Nigerian state is the phenomenon of indigenes and non-indigenes or
natives and settlers among the same people who lay equal claim to Nigerian
citizenship, and who have been engaged in cultural, religious, economic and
political exchanges for over 100 years.
Whereas the so-called settlers or
non-indigenes, are part of the society in every respect, worshipping with,
socialising with, trading with, paying taxes with, and marrying the
so-called indigenes, but when it comes to sharing of resources, including
ownership of land, scholarships, placement of children in colleges and
universities, employment in the civil service, and political appointments,
including appointment as VCs and Rectors of academic institutions (that are
supposed to be purely on merit), the indigene/setter syndrome is thrown up
and the so-called settler often suffers the grave injustice of
discrimination and persecution.
There is the ridiculous practice of
requesting for what is called "citizenship certificate" from the local
government chairman of one's ancestral village to determine which part of
Nigeria one belongs to. Let us take this simple scenario to illustrate this
major contradiction in our screwed up understanding of citizenship in
Nigeria:
A young man whose great grandfather
migrated from Okehi to Lagos in 1920, whose father was born in Lagos, and
who himself was born and raised in Lagos applies for admission into Lagos
State Polytechnic or is seeking appointment with the Lagos State Civil
Service. He is often required to show a citizenship certificate. It is not
enough that he can demonstrate that he lives besides the palace of, or is
even a member of the household of the Oba of Lagos. No. He is required to
look for where Okehi appears in the map of Nigeria, and make a pilgrimage to
the homeland of his forebears and return to Lagos with a document
identifying him as a citizen of Okehi Local Government Area of Kogi State!
Meanwhile, the young man may never
have been there before. His mother might even be a Yoruba woman. He may
speak only English and Yoruba, and not a word of the language of his
ancestors. Yes, as long as he can identify the village where his
great-grandfather migrated from nearly a hundred years ago, he would return
with the citizenship certificate. By this retrogressive practice, the
Nigerian who can migrate to the U.S. or to Canada and become a full citizen
after 10 years or so, with all the rights, obligations and privileges of
every other citizen of that country, the same Nigerian can live for a
hundred years in a part of Nigeria, do business there, pay taxes, build
houses and marry a wife or husband there, and yet even his or her
grandchildren will not be recognised as citizens of that part of the
country.
Many of us remember the injustices,
the pains and the dislocations that attended the creation of states and
local government areas in this country, where many people have had to move,
not because they wanted to, but because they were told they had no place in
the new state, since they now had their own state. The most ruthless
examples of social dislocation as a result of state creation include the
Anambra-Enugu saga after the creation of Enugu State, the Enugu-Ebonyi saga
after the creation of Ebonyi state, the Oyo-Osun saga after the creation of
Osun State and the Ondo-Ekiti saga after the creation of Ekiti State. On
these occasions, so-called non-indigenes were treated so shabbily that you
would think they were illegal aliens!
In recent time however the
indigene/settler syndrome has been brought to public focus after the violent
riots that occurred last year in Plateau and Kano states where thousands of
lives were lost. In both Plateau and Kano, so-called non-indigenes suffered
heavy casualties and lost billions of naira worth of property at the hands
of their neighbours who consider themselves as indigenes. Subsequently,
Governor Turaki of Jigawa flew the kite about who was really an indigene,
and who as a settler.
He drew sensational headlines when
he alleged that many of our past heads of state and other political leaders
were settlers in the states which they now claim - from Yakubu Gowon to
Ibarahim Babangida, and on to Lateef Jakande. We were told that they are all
settlers in the present states which they claim. Thus in recent times
Nigerians have been forced to discuss this vexing matter in the open, but I
have not seen the relevant organs of government the matter with the
seriousness it deserves in order to bring about the necessary constitutional
amendments.
The question is: What does it mean
to be a Nigerian citizen? Can one be a citizen of Nigeria and not be a
citizen of his or her place of domicile? What rights and privileges (and of
course obligations) does a long-time resident of a state or local government
have? After how long in a state does one acquire the right of an indigene?
What obligations does the so-called settler owe the so-called indigene of a
place before he or she is fully assimilated?
I consider this vexing issue a
major part of the contradictions of the Nigerian state that should be blamed
for a lot of the violence we witness today among the Urhobo and Ishekiri (of
Delta State), among the Tiv and Jukun (of Taraba State), among the Ebira and
Bassa (of Nasarawa State), among the Hausa and Kaje (of Kaduna State), and
the Hausa and Biron or Angas (of Plateau State), and among the Hausa and
Igbo (of Kano State). How can this issue be resolved constitutionally and
permanently? What legal instruments can we put in place to ensure that
Nigerians who are resident in any part of the country are treated equally?
The ongoing National Political
Reform Conference would not have much to show for the time and money
expended on the enterprise if it fails to come out with concrete proposals
for the constitutional resolution of this problem. The issue of resource
control that seems to have torn the conference apart is a very important
one, yet if they do not debate and resolve the question of citizenship, I
truly wonder on what basis they would want to discuss the sharing of
resources.
| Fr. Ehusani is
Secretary-General of the Catholic Secretariat of Nigeria
|