Lagos state Governor, Babatunde Fashola says appointed federal
ministers can never be in the same class with elected governors in the
country, adding that many ministers have been acting in a way to usurp
the powers of the governors.
Fashola spoke while delivering a
lecture titled ‘The Essence of a Patriot and Federalist’, in
commemoration of the 80th birthday anniversary of Alhaji Femi Okunnu at
the Nigeria Institute of International Affairs, NIIA, Victoria Island,
Lagos, Southwest Nigeria.
The
governor said he was pissed off when many ministers, because they were
at the centre, thought they were equal or have greater power than the
governors in their own state and often sought to take over the
governance of such states from them. “Alhaji Okunnu, when he was a
minister cooperated with his governor. He did not seek to dominate him
because he was a federal minister. This is unlike some of the things we
sadly hear today in some states where ministers levy war against the
governor of the state they represent or against the state itself.
“These
early perspectives are important in order to set things aright, that
there can be only one elected head of a state and that is the governor.
No minister has a higher authority over the affairs of a state in a
democratic structure such as ours based on a federal arrangement because
the governor is not subordinate to the president who is the appointor
of a minister,” he stated.
According to the governor, “we have
heard complaints about the powers that governors of Nigerian states now
wield and this seems to worry some people. I understand some of these
complaints seem to emanate from quarters whose experience was in the
time that governors or military administrators were appointed.”
He
said the current reality was that things had changed and that ministers
must accept it “or if we do not like it, then it is open to us to
change it, so that governors can be appointed instead of being elected.”
On
plans by the federal government to impose consumption tax on the
purchase of petrol at pump price, Fashola vowed that Lagos would resist
it, as it was illegal and unconstitutional.
The governor stated that such levy is a consumption tax that is collectible by the territory in which the fuel is consumed.
He
explained that the state with 592 state roads, 8,402 local government
roads and 25 federal roads bear the burden of heavy tonnage, adding that
it would be proper for such levy to be collected and used to fix the
roads for the benefit of the people.
“Federal Government is
already collecting royalties on extraction of crude oil, taxing the
profits of oil companies at about 30 percent, taking 52.68 percent of
the national revenues and leaving 36 states and 774 local government to
26.72 percent and 20.60 percent respectively.
“We will not lie at
ease and watch a further encroachment. Currently we are in court to have
the issues of centralisation of value added tax, another consumption
tax, decentralised and left to each state according to the appropriate
principles of federalism and derivation. The same applies to the attempt
to encroach the power of states to raise revenues in their territories
from lotteries, hotel licensing and other areas of residual authority of
the state.
“The question to ask is what service the Federal
Government provides for hotels either by water supply, waste management,
healthcare of their staff or the provision of land for hotel business
that gives it the impression that it can tax them,” he said.
“Beyond
the registration of hotel as a company from which the Federal
Government has already collected revenues through corporate Affairs
Commission, what more service does it render to the hotel in the various
state of the Federation,” he added. On the clamour for local government
autonomy, the governor said it is the states that are federating to
form a union and that local governments are not part of the federating
arrangements.
“The simple point I want to make is to state that
the question whether a local government should be autonomous or not, or
what level of autonomy it gets, should be a matter for state law, by the
state that creates them rather than a matter for constitutional grant,”
Governor Fashola added.
Speaking, former Governor of Lagos State,
Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu described Alhaji Femi Okunnu as a true son of
Africa and one who, during the civil, war bravely and facilitated
negotiations between the feuding sides.
Oba of Lagos, Rilwan
Akiolu 1, commended the celebrant for his exemplary life of service to
humanity, the Nigerian nation and to Lagos State, praying that God would
grant him long life and good health to spend many more years on earth.
Former
Head of State, General Yakubu Gowon who chaired the event, said by all
standards, Okunnu has gone a very long way in his life and given his
very best in the service of the nation as the Federal Commissioner for
Works and Housing. He added that in the trying times of the nation, all
the projects and all the development seen around Lagos were done by
Okunnu and the Lagos State Military Governor at that time, Brigadier
General Mobolaji Johnson.
At the event were the celebrant’s wife,
Alhaja Lateefat Okunnu, former Secretary General of the Commonwealth,
Chief Emeka Anyaoku; Olowu of Owu, Oba Dosunmu; business mogul, Chief
Molade Okoya Thomas and several other eminent Nigerians.
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