"We have a system of government in which we have no hands to define and design and we continue with it, even when we know that it is not working for us," he noted. "Here, we must interrogate performance of democracy in the West where it originated from and with us the inheritors of what we are left with by our colonial powers."
"Once you move from all the people to representatives of the people, you start to encounter troubles and problems," he stressed, adding that "the essence of any system of government is the welfare and well-being of all the people."
"We can look inward and outward to see what in our country, culture, tradition, practice and living over the years that we can learn from, adopt and adapt with practices everywhere for a changed system of government that will service our purpose better and deliver," he remarked.