Adamu Fika and persona of the old-school remarkable bureaucrat – Tribune Online

Posted: November 2, 2023 at 9:46 pm

I had started to write this piece before I became the subject of national news. This tribute is therefore a convenient point to sign-off OP-EDs, which has been a pastime extension of my life mission as a governance cum institutional reformer and scholar. Indeed, Nigerians had by now reconciled to the demise of Alhaji Adamu Fika, Wazirin Fika, former secretary to the Federal Government, and an extraordinary public servant. My reaction to his death, at a good old nonagenarian age of ninety, is to reminisce not only on my perception of his status as a public servant (bolstered by the few association we had), but also on his significance in understanding the trajectory of the Nigerian civil service in its unfolding dynamics and attempts to become a truly reformed value-based professional institution that complements democratic governance in its effective service delivery to Nigerians.

Thus, Alhaji Fika had been there all along, and all through the emergence and historical trajectories of the Nigerian civil service system. In many of my public commentaries, I have celebrated him, alongside those whom I placed in the golden era of public service in Nigeria; the likes of Simeon Adebo, Jerome Udoji, Francesca Emmanuel, Allison Ayida, Phillips Asiodu, Sule Katagum, Grey Longe, Ahmed Joda, and many more. This golden era refers to that period in Nigerias administrative history when the civil service system was eminently set and capable of delivering optimal performance that could transform positively the postcolonial expectations of the Nigerian state.

I identified three fundamental conditions that made that period possible. The first has to do with the availability of a set of individuals, schooled in the value-based institutional parameters of the colonial public service framework and values, who were eager to lay the foundation of an indigenous national development in Nigeria. The second condition references the existence a development-sensitive national dynamic rooted in a proper federal framework consisting of a centre and regional arrangement motivated by inter-regional competitiveness. And the third condition consists in the values-propelled development atmosphere in Nigeria, around the twin imperatives of nation building and economic development.

In my critical assessment, Alhaji Fikas professional persona embodied a lot about the administrative praxis that defined Nigerias administrative emergence at political independence. Both in my encountering him at several juncture in my years as a federal officer and in my interrogation of the public service ethos and dynamics, Alhaji Fika was the direct incarnation of the old-school bureaucratic methodology: the typical no-nonsense and mercurial public officer who knew his onions and stood by the rules. He was the apotheosis of Sir Humphrey Appleby in the popular British political satire sitcom, Yes Minister/ Yes, Prime Minister, which ran from 1980 to 1984 and from 1986 to 1988 on BBC2. In that series, Sir Appleby defends the bureaucracy, its procedures and rules, and the administrative status quo with all his ingenuity as a staunch bureaucrat. He blocks and impedes Hacker, the Minister, at every point even though he is highly deferential and respectful. And he always reminds subordinates who want to side with the Minister that their career progression depends ultimately on their civil service superiors. The series demonstrated the adversarial relationship between the executives and the civil service. On the one hand, Sir Appleby frustrates proposals by the minister through series of clever administrative strategies, while on the other hand, the minister also undermines whatever proposal Sir Appleby supports.

I will leave the reader to be the judge of this, but the Hacker-Appleby adversarial encounters in Yes Minister reminds me of the strained relationship between Chief Olu Falae and Alhaji Adamu Fika during the Babangida regime that eventually led to Fikas forced retirement from service. The Babangida administration had separated the office of the secretary to the federal government (OSGF) and the office of the head of service (OHCSF), what used to be the same since 1960. Olu Falae became the SGF while Fika was made the Head of Service. And that created the series of hostile engagements that brought about unsavory consequences, especially the missed opportunity that could have benefitted the civil service system as well as the Babangida administration. For example, when Babangida, as part of his civil service reform agenda, insisted that ministers should take over the responsibilities of accounting officers from permanent secretaries, Alhaji Fika resisted that move. And his argument was simple: the training of the permanent secretaries ensures that by the time they get to that post they would have internalised the dynamics of keeping Federal Government funds according to the financial regulations. There was also the tension between the head of service and the SGF. Olu Falae, working with Ojetunji Aboyade, Chu Okongwu, Kalu Idika Kalu, and others, had wanted to leverage on the Babangida administrative reforms and his expansive and analytics approach to governance. And he definitely would have loved to collaborate with the head of service especially with the possibility of drawing from the planning and economic policy pool of expertise (where Falae retired) to articulate an existing talent and knowledge management tools in civil service manpower planning and capacity utilisation. Unfortunately, the head of service misinterpreted this as an administrative intrusion that demonstrates the lack of wisdom in bifurcating the two offices. Well, the president must have thought about Fikas resistance as an affront. Of course, Alhaji Fika was well apprised about the old role of the Gowon-era super permanent secretaries and their capacity to speak truth to power. And he was too much of a sound, intelligent, well-trained and solid public servant not to have possessed the audacity to speak up against what he felt to be unpalatable about Babangidas reforms.

These administrative clashes were symptomatic of what has become a fundamental underbelly of what is wrong with the public service in Nigeria since it began reforming. And that is the hostile relationship between the old Weberian administrative methodology and the new managerial revolution. Indeed, the Yes Minister sitcom threw up the very basis on which the 1968 Fulton Report challenged and sought to overcome the Weberian methodology in favor of the new public management and its managerial revolution. Between the Udoji Commission of 1974 and the Dotun Phillips study report of 1984, there were strenuous and well-founded attempts to redirect the Nigerian civil service system away from the I-am-directed administrative model that privileges civil service rules compliance over and above performance and productivity, and the input-process orientation under a generalist framework.

The reform assumptions and recommendations of both the Udoji and the Phillips report were geared towards transforming the system into a flexible, entrepreneurial, effective and efficient institution with the capacity readiness to enhance performance and productivity.

However, and quite unfortunately, that managerial trajectory was, quite systematically, dismantled in 1995 by the Allison Ayida review panel set up by General Sani Abacha. To juxtapose the fate of two failures, the Fulton Report of 1968 suffered the same Sir Appleby-style reaction of rejection that attended the Udoji report, and by implication the Phillips recommendation. Outside of the historical resurgence of the neoliberal consumerist economy and its motivation for public choice theories, institutional economics and the good governance discourse, the new public management (NPM) derived from the global disillusionment with a non-performing bureaucracy that has become not only so much destabilized by its own administrative regulations, but has also, as a result, failed to keep up with democratic governance and the imperative of efficient service delivery to the citizens.

And this managerial revolution is even more urgent in countries like Nigeria where the civil service system is forced to confront all sorts of indices of underdevelopment and authoritarianism. The objective of managerialisma results-based management that focuses on outputs and results rather than only inputs and processesencompasses a range of approaches to the running of the business of government, especially through the adoption and adaptation of private sector practices; with reform emphases on customer service and the centrality of citizens as customers, decentralised service delivery models, outsourcing and human resource function; identification of targets, design of KPIs, their tracking, monitoring, measurement and evaluation based on performance benchmarks, metrics and contracting, etc.

I submit that in spite of the significant roles that Alhaji Fika played in the consolidation of the administrative successes in Nigeria, and the influence he exerted deeply on the civil service system, the figure of the I-am-directed Weberian public servant that could muster the courage to speak truth to power is still key to the bureaucratic culture that still persists in the Nigerian public administrative system. Since the reversals instigated by the Ayida panel review, the system has been floundering between stagnation and reformability and performance visioned by the National Strategy on Public Service Reform (NSPSR) and succeeding reform strategies and actions. The result is that there are so many defining reform changes from 1999 without the efforts to push them through to critical institutional determination. We have, as key examples: the irreducible SERVICOM innovation that has not yielded its fundamental fruits; the multiyear budgeting initiativesMTSS and MTEF, for instance; the M&E and other basic elements of project management that lacks critical managerial bites; an evolving performance management framework of accountability hitched to an ineffective tenure in appointment; an active training investment without evidence of tasks-rooted training needs and post-training impact assessment; wage and incentive structures properly indexed to market relativities and to productivity indices; adversarial industrial relations with scant space for technical-rationalism in collective bargaining; the contributory pensions and national health insurance schemes requiring innovative deepening and consolidation, etc.

As we celebrate the eventful life and professionalism of Alhaji Fika, my erstwhile boss and towering figure of the civil service system in Nigeria, it is again time to use his illustrious lifetime and professional credentials to reflect on where we are in administrative rehabilitation of a system that is key to making democracy works for Nigerians.

YOU SHOULD NOT MISS THESE HEADLINES FROM NIGERIAN TRIBUNE

REVEALED: Lifestyles of Ibadan clerics caught with human head, body parts

When the video of three suspects Ramoni Opeyemi a.k.a Alubarika; Taofeek Olalekan a.k.a Kabelohun and Tayo Akinrinola a.k.a Ifa caught with

Farewell great king, Natasha mourns Ohinoyi of Ebiraland

Senatorial candidate of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Kogi Central, Chief Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, on

Nigerias judiciary stinks, retiring Supreme court justice explodes

ON his last day as Justice of the Supreme Court, Justice Musa Dattijo Muhammad, declared on Friday in Abuja that the Nigerian judiciary is

Big bum-bum: How Female celebrities are fuelling butt enhancement craze

The pursuit of the perfect physique for many Nigerian female celebrities and the surge in

The rumble in Supreme Courts jungle

Is there any connect between law and public opinion or judgments and public opinion? Before Justice Musa Dattijo Muhammads (rtd) valedictory speech at

Fury knocked down but beat Ngannou on split decision

WBC heavyweight world champion Tyson Fury beat former UFC fighter Francis Ngannou on a split decision in...

More here:

Adamu Fika and persona of the old-school remarkable bureaucrat - Tribune Online

Related Posts