Supreme Court ruling granting financial autonomy to LGs defective – Ibori

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Former Delta State Governor, Chief James Ibori, has described the Supreme Court ruling, which gave financial autonomy to the 774 local government councils in Nigeria, as defective.

Ibori, who made the declaration in a post on his X handle, said the decision could be seen as a ban on state autonomy.

The ruling, according to him, could be seen as an erosion of state autonomy. As he said, states are meant to have significant control over their internal affairs, including the administration of local governments, in a federal system.

He said the federal government has no right to interfere with the administration of local governments under any guise whatsoever.

According to him, there are only two tiers of government in a federal system of government. He expressed hope that the judgement delivered will be reviewed at the earliest possible time. As he said, it stands the concept of federalism on its head.

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According to him: “If the ruling is saying governors cannot tamper, touch, or fiddle with the joint accounts, that’s fine because they shouldn’t be doing that in the first place, but asking the federal government to pay local governments allocations to the accounts of the local government directly is utter madness.

“I am opposed to fiddling with the allocations to the Joint LG Accounts at the state level but that in itself does not call for this death knell to the clear provisions of Section 162 of the Constitution. The implications of the ruling are far-reaching and the issues that readily come to mind are:

“The Supreme Court has dealt a severe setback to the principle of federalism as defined by Section 162(3) of the 1999 Constitution (as amended).

“The section expressly provides thus: “Any amount standing to the credit of the federation account shall be distributed among the federal and state governments and the local government councils in each state on such terms and in such manner as may be prescribed by the National Assembly.

“Sections 6 provide further clarity on the subject matter; each state shall maintain a special account to be called “State Joint Local Government Account,” into which shall be paid all allocations to the local government councils of the state from the federation account and from the government of the state.”

He said the Supreme Court’s ruling appears to contradict the explicit provisions of Section 162 of the 1999 Constitution, raising questions about judicial interpretation and whether the court has overstepped its bounds in reinterpreting clear constitutional language.

Ibori said further that the ruling has potentially shifted the balance of power between the federal government and states. By allowing federal intervention in local government finances, it arguably centralises more power at the federal level, contrary to the principles of federalism.

He also said that the ruling may impact the financial independence of states and local governments. If the federal government can directly intervene in local government finances, it could potentially use this as a tool for political leverage.

He opined that this decision could set a precedent for further federal interventions in areas traditionally reserved for state governance, potentially leading to a more centralised system of government over time.

“That local government must be “democratically elected” goes without saying. Yes, I agree; that’s the position of the Constitution but withholding their allocation is not the way to go. It’s wrong.

“In the coming days, we will begin to fully understand the implications of the Supreme Court decision. An assault on the Constitution is not the answer to fiddling with the Joint LG Account.

“Like the Hon. Justice Oputa of blessed memory once said in describing the Supreme Court, “we are not final because we are infallible, but we are infallible only because we are final”,” he said.

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