2019: Niger-Delta States Can Take 100% Of Oil Revenues - Atiku
13:23
The presidential candidate of the
Peoples Democratic Party, Atiku Abubakar, has said he is willing to let
Nigeria’s oil producing states have absolute control of crude oil
revenues from their domains, but added he is reluctant to immediately
implement such policies at this stage of national development.
The
PDP candidate told The Africa Report that federating units once had
considerable control of their resources, unlike the current federal laws
that only allow 13 percent derivation for states in the Niger-Delta,
where Nigeria’s sweet crude is extracted.
Although Mr Abubakar
acknowledged the appropriate sharing formula might be difficult to say
at this point — suggesting it would depend on ‘negotiations’— he
recommended a limited role for the federal government in appropriating
crude revenues.
Nigerian states “can get more because in the
First Republic the regions had 50/50,” Mr Abubakar told The Africa
Report in an interview published Wednesday. “I don’t mind giving even
100% […], but I would tax those states to maintain the federal
government.”
But the former vice president recognised this is “not advisable at this stage of our development.”
“Even
during the First Republic there was this derivation sharing between
revenues and resources, or between the regions and the federal
government. So I think we could have a middle course. It would be unfair
to ask me for specifics; that will depend on negotiations,” he added.
Of
all the presidential candidates for the 2019 election, Mr Abubakar has
emerged the most vocal advocate of restructuring, an ideological
standpoint that canvasses more powers for states at the expense of the
central government.
He believes Nigeria’s subsisting
Constitution, which recommends a federal system but implements a unitary
one, should be urgently reviewed and replaced with a sovereign document
that would engender a more peaceful and economically viable nation.
Oil
revenues still account for over 80 percent of the Nigerian government’s
revenues as of 2017, according to the National Bureau of Statistics,
despite efforts towards economic diversification.
In the face of a
floundering agriculture and services sector, reducing the federal
government’s share of oil revenues to only taxes paid by about nine
oil-producing states could be difficult to achieve soon.
“It
is a good thing that the former vice president said he cannot go ahead
with giving the Niger-Delta total control of oil income right now,”
Busola Odukoya, an economist, told PREMIUM TIMES Thursday morning. “The
only problem here is that it could cause some people in the region to
resume violent agitation for resource control, especially if Mr Abubakar
is elected.”
Ms Odukoya said it would be difficult to predict
any negotiation that would result in allocating up to or more than 50
per cent of crude earnings to the states.
“Apart from the
offshore oil revenues which the government in Abuja can easily control,
the crude lifting within states’ borders in the Niger-Delta cannot be
shared even 50/50 with the centre,” the economist said. “The negative
impact on some states in the northern or central parts of the country
can only be left to imagination.”
“You have to allow decades of
regular economic growth, some of which I have seen the candidates talk
about this year, before you can be thinking of cutting oil revenues from
federal government,” she added.
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