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Photo: http://apgopohannahbrown.blogspot.ca/ |
Since
SPLM-in-Opposition declared their preference for constitutional Federal System
in South Sudan, there’s been a lot of heated debate by South Sudanese in the government,
in the opposition, in the media and on the street. Understandably,
the discussion pits those who support it against those who don’t support it.
While I don’t have any problem
with the Federal System per se, I
don’t believe it’s going to solve any of our problems now and in the future.
It’s true that we need a complete overhaul of our political governance and
social systems in South Sudan; however, we need to understand that for any
systemic transparency to work, the leadership’s attitude, the citizen-citizen
relations and the general understanding of power structure, have to change. As
long as the leadership’s attitude and its perception of power and the country
remain the same, it doesn’t matter what system we institute in South Sudan,
we’ll always remain in a mess.
Unless we have both a good
system and good people in leadership, things will remain the same: bad. A good
system and a bad leadership or a good leadership and a bad system are all the
same: bad!
We need to understand also
that a Federal System will not auto-create. The constitutional provisions that
will create and inform it will still need the cooperation of all the
stakeholders in the country. It wouldn’t
be a mere importation of foreign Federal Systems such as the one in Nigeria,
Ethiopia, Canada, USA or any other federated governance system in the world.
There has to be internal, idiosyncratic realities to be put into account.
Since power in South Sudan is
concentrated in the hand of one man, the opposition see the Federal System as
another way to clip the presidential powers.
However, I personally don’t
think a Federal System is what we need now. All we need is a well-informed,
broad-based and structured decentralization of power. What we have now is actually
a form of a Federal System (even if it’s not constitutionally stated as such) as
we have state parliaments and governments. It’s therefore important that state
governments be given greater and functional autonomy.
This means that ministries
such as Education, Agriculture, and law enforcement sectors should be given to
the states. Besides, there should be no presidential and national government’s
interference in running the affairs of the states; such as the removal of the
governors by the president or the president being consulted by the governor on
the appointment of state ministers.
State constitutions should
have constitutional clauses or provisions on how to remove or replace the
governors. Since governors are elected officials, they need to be removed in
the same democratic manner by the state parliament as stipulated in the state
constitution. And more importantly, there has to be a very well-regulated
economic leeway for the states to create their own functional economic systems,
internally and externally; nationally and internationally.