THE
GOVERNMENT OF NIGERIA.
Nigeria is a
Federal Republic with a Presidential system of government in which there is an
Executive, a Legislature and a Judiciary, where each acts as a check and
balance on the powers of the other two arms.
The country is governed in accordance with
the provisions of a constitution, which affirms that Nigeria is one indivisible
and indissoluble sovereign state, whose constituent units are bound together by
a federal arrangement. The constitution further provides for the operation of
three tiers of government occurring at the Federal, State and Local levels.
The Executive is made up of the Presidency
and the executive council of the federation.
The
Legislature combines a bicameral system which comprises the upper and lower chambers
of the Senate and House of Representatives respectively. The Senate is headed
by the Senate President, while the House of Representatives is headed by the
Speaker of the House. These two chambers make up a unit called THE NATIONAL
ASSEMBLY. The House of Representatives has 360 members who are elected for four
years in a single seat constituency. The Senate on the other hand, has 109
members, of which 108 members are elected for a four year term in three seat
constituencies, and 1 from the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).
The Judiciary is made up of the Supreme
Court, which is the highest court of the land; the Court of Appeal; High courts;
Magistrate courts; Customary and Sharia courts. Basically, there are four
systems of law in Nigeria, namely;
· English law,
derived from the colonial rulership
· Common law
· Customary
law, derived from indigenous traditional norms and practices.
· Sharia law
mostly practiced in the northern part of the country.
The Supreme court is presided over by the
Chief Justice of Nigeria, and thirteen other Justices appointed by the
President of Nigeria, based on the recommendations of the National Judicial
Council, subject to approval of the Senate.
Before the advent of the Presidential system
of government in Nigeria, the military government came into play at different
times, where one was toppled over by the other through military coups. The
military government of Nigeria is divided into two:
On 15th January, 1966, a group of
majors, led by Major Chukwuma Nzeogwu, over threw the current Prime Minister,
Alhaji Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa in a coup d’etat. In this Junta, Major
General Aguiyi Ironsi was made the Head of the Federal Military Government of Nigeria.
He was in power for only six months, and was murdered in a coup which brought
in General Yakubu Gowon as his successor. The latter held power between 1966
and 1975, and was also overthrown in a bloodless coup by a group of soldiers
who wanted the civilian system of government; and as such, General Murtala
Mohammed succeeded him. Murtala was assassinated in a coup in 1976, after being
in power for a year and General Olusegun Obasanjo succeeded him, and remained
in power for three years until 1979 when he handed power to Alhaji Shehu
Shagari, who began the second republic.
However, Shehu Shagari was overthrown in a
bloodless coup in 1983, and General Mohammadu Buhari, who was appointed
chairman of the Supreme Military Council of Nigeria, succeeded him. General
Buhari remained in power for two years until 1985, when General Ibrahim
Badamosi Babangida overthrew him. Babangida appointed himself the President of
the Armed Forces Ruling Council of Nigeria, and ruled Nigeria until 1993. In
the same year, a democratic election was conducted of which M.K.O. Abiola was
the president-elect, but General Babangida over to the interim Head of State,
Mr. Ernest Shonekan, who remained in power for two months, after which he was
overthrown by General Sanni Abacha, who appointed himself as the chairman of
the Provisional Ruling Council of Nigeria. After General Abacha’s death in
1998, Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar took over and ruled until 1999 when a
democratic election was conducted, bringing Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo(rtd) again
into power, as President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. Obasanjo ruled
from 1999 through 2007 for two terms of four years each, and later passed it to
Umaru Musa Yar’adua, who was democratically elected as President of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria, and ruled Nigeria until his death in 2010.
Presently, Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan is the
President and Commander-in –chief of the Armed forces of the Federal Republic
of Nigeria, after a free and fair election conducted in 2011.