The secretary of the Eminent Elders Forum, Dr. Akin Fapohunda, has accused some few northern elites of holding Nigeria to ransom for over forty years based on tribalism and selfish interests.
Speaking on Sunday on Arise News while discussing the northern opposition to the tax reform bills proposed by President Bola Tinubu, Fapohunda submitted that the north has taken Nigeria for a ride for too long and it is time to call their bluff.
According to him, the North has forced policies such as federal character and quota system on the southern region while Nigerians from the south have been laid back in making demands.
Fapohuna argued that such policies have favoured the North over the South and only a few elite people in the North are benefitting from the federal policies at the expense of other citizens of the country.
He submitted that it is time for Nigeria to wake up and realize the interests of the South and the North are not in an alliance.
Speaking specifically on the Tax Reform Bills, the Secretary of the Eminent Elders Forum was of the opinion that the proposals can never work because Nigeria is not a unified country and โcannot be unified at allโ by a unitary tax system.
He said, โThe North, at the flip of a switch, are able to shout Northern interest. Southerners are laid back, hoping that oh, we are civilised, we donโt want to talk about tribalism. Tribalism is at play, we are pretentious about this matter. Look, the North has taken us for a ride for too long, theyโve forced federal character on Nigeria over 40 years. They forced quota system on Nigeria over forty years. Have they benefitted from it? Only the tiny clique in the North is holding the whole country to ransom. Itโs enough time for Nigeria to wake up, we are not together, North nor South.
โNow they are talking, the elites, the few elites in the North, as if feeding bottle is about to be removed from their mouth. Thatโs what theyโre doing, theyโre shouting, they have formed a league now โ League of Northern Democrats. The governor of Bauchi was talking, they wonโt be able to pay salaries again, they wonโt be able to do that.
โLook, the North has damaged Nigeria fundamentally with this attitude. Who are the Nigerians who are japaing now? Theyโre Southerners. The South invested in education massively in the 50s and the 60s. The products now have been driven out of Nigeria. Can you find a Fulani man in London or in New York practicing medicine or practicing engineering? Itโs the Yorubas, the Igbos, Southerners that are marginalised. Itโs time to call the bluff of the North, not because we even support what Tinubu is doing, but we have to converse about Nigeria. Nigeria is not โ we are pretentious. Letโs go to the brass tacks. Thatโs why we are calling for regionalisation, the North is separate from the South, thatโs just the truth, unless we are deceiving ourselves.โ
โThis tax matter will not unite Nigerians. If we concede to the North that they get more VAT, for doing what? They got federal character for forty years, what have they done with it? They got quota for forty years, what have they done with it? Theyโre just being spoilt, they donโt want to wake up to the reality that theyโre not doing well, theyโre not performing. And when you compromise, you kill the South. The energy is being sucked out of the South in trying to remedy and carry the North along. We should be tired of carrying them along, in all honesty. Somebody has to call their bluff. Thereโs no alternative to the South calling the bluff of the North,โ he added.
Tinubu Looking In The Wrong Place
Fapohunda urged President Tinubu to focus his energy on other productive issues, arguing that pushing the controversial tax reforms is just a waste of time while other issues remain unattended to.
According to him, tax reform is not the policy that can set Nigeria on the path to greatness.
He said, โThe president is not focusing in the right direction. Just one item, one item alone โ Inheritance Tax. The North has a different perspective on Sharia. The South-West has different customs. The East has different approach. By trying to do a unitary tax system when weโre all having a different flavour of life, is that not a road to nowhere? On that account alone, I will not really agree on what President Tinubu is trying to do. In all honesty, President Tinubu is focused on this tax matter. That is going to be the mantra of his administration.
โLetโs assume that if the tax bill is passed in the next three, four, five months, what next? Mr President is staking his reputation, his political acumen on the tax bill, but there are many issues heโs supposed to have faced that heโs not talking about. Civil service is blighted. Civil servants are just looking to find a means to survive, they are not operating organically with the government, they are not. Orasanye report, President said he will do it within twelve weeks, he has done nothing about it.โ
โIn 2023, the president announced a N500 billion agric project, what has happened to it? He didnโt implement it. Now, we have livestock ministry. I know now they are looking for offices in Abuja. When are we going to get the first cow from the livestock ministry? So, overall, the focus on tax bill is totally not what Nigeria should be looking at now. There are more serious fundamental reforms. Tax bill is not the reform that we want. The country has to be reorganised and let all of us live separately, but as good neighbours. We are different, itโs just a fact. We can gloss over it from here to eternity.โ
Donโt Be Cocksure
OsunDailyNG reports that Fapohunda also advised the President not to be overconfident that if he pushes the tax reform bills through, then every other thing would automatically fall in place.
He advised the President to gauge the feelings of the entire nation and not just stay in Abuja and assume all is going well.
โThe President might use all his authority, all the presidential powers to get it through, and then what? What are the two elements in the tax reform? You are considering no tax to the lowest people, 130 million Nigerians who are destitute, then you want to tax the big companies.
โThe big companies are folding up, they are leaving Nigeria, they cannot afford diesel to run generators. Even the ones they manufactured, no sales, thereโs poor demand. So who will pay the tax? Is it run down companies that will pay the tax? Anybody earning below 70,000, no tax. Okay, so where is the money coming from? And when the money comes, to be spent on what? To be spent on deficit, to be spent on paying back loans that we have taken, that we have exhausted, that we have stolen, is that it?
โWhat are we going to use the tax for? Itโs not tax that we need. Okay, let him get it through, fine, but is that the end of the tunnel? It is not in my opinion. But the president needs to be advised. Itโs now almost two years that heโs been in the saddle. Itโs time to think. His presidential chat that he had, he was so cock sure of everything, but thatโs not the reality at all, heโs not cock sure. This February, it will be two years since he was elected. It is time to just re appraise issues. Heโs hanging in the air, we, on the ground, weโre not feeling what heโs trying to do. He might be well meaning, but heโs not in the right direction at all.โ
โWe cannot be united when weโre not equally yoked. Weโre unequally yoked, we cannot be united at all. But let everybody just live according to his own worldview, then the temperature will come down. But trying to stay in Abuja and put a package together for the whole country โ from the North West to the South East, from the North East to the South West, itโs not going to work,โ Fapohunda said.