REGARDLESS of what the President
Goodluck Jonathan government may say, the United States’ position on the
thriving culture of corruption in Nigeria gives a fair representation
of opinion about the subject, both within and outside the country. While
Jonathan claims that the extent of corruption in the country is
exaggerated, the US government and other concerned individuals are of
the opinion that the monster has not been tackled with the deserved
seriousness.
In the US Department of State 2012
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices released recently, the
country’s Ambassador to Nigeria, Terence McCulley, reportedly told the
Nigerian government to demonstrate more courage and conviction in the
crusade against graft. This, he said, was the only way to “send a clear
signal that the country is indeed committed to good governance, to the
security of its citizens, and to its rightful place as a significant
actor on the global stage.”
Although corruption has always been
perceived as pervasive in the country, corrupt acts have, perhaps, never
attained the height of brazenness and impunity that has been witnessed
in recent times. A probe by the House of Representatives, following a
mass protest that greeted the 2012 New Year’s Day fuel price increase,
exposed a massive fuel subsidy fraud that cost the country a loss of
over N2 trillion. Three other committees were also instituted to probe
the scam. While all the reports exposed extensive fraud and theft of
public funds, nobody has been successfully prosecuted and jailed in
connection with the pilfering, more than a year after. All the
government officials under whose noses the heist was pulled off are
still trotting the landscape unchallenged.
Massive looting of pension funds has
been witnessed on an unprecedented scale. Hardly a day goes by without
newspapers reporting one government official or the other helping
himself or herself to billions of naira belonging to pensioners. The
pension funds theft is even more pathetic because it is happening at a
time when pensioners, out of sheer exhaustion associated with old age,
have been slumping and dying in endless queues, waiting for stipends
that may never come. Yet, Yakubu Yusuf, a confessed pension fund thief,
to whom was traced part of about N23 billion stolen pension funds, was
let off with a slap on the wrist. Not unexpected, the sentence of a
N750,000 fine in a judgement by Abubakar Talba of an Abuja High Court,
sparked off national and international outrage.
Unfortunately, the government’s effort
to end the pension fund theft has also ended in a fiasco. A certain
Abdulrasheed Maina, the Chairman of the Pension Reform Task Team that
was set up to bring sanity to the administration of pension funds, ended
up being enmeshed in allegations of corruption.
Despite priding himself
on recovering over N150 billion of stolen or diverted pension funds, he
was said to have fixed some of the money in the name of his younger
brother that was yielding over N100 million monthly. He was also accused
of using N1 billion to conduct biometric verifications for retirees
both in Nigeria and abroad. Maina was alleged to have fled the country
when the Senate ordered his arrest for shunning its investigation, but
is now walking the streets a free man.
These are just but a few of the brazen
acts of corruption and what looks like official complicity in efforts to
shield the perpetrators. Another good example is the state pardon
granted to the former governor of Bayelsa State, Diepreye
Alamieyeseigha, a fugitive from justice who jumped bail in England,
where he was under arrest for money laundering. The case of Farouk
Lawan, a federal lawmaker who allegedly received $620,000 bribe to
strike out the name of businessman Femi Otedola’s company from the list
of firms implicated in the oil subsidy fraud, only went on trial one
year after, following a threat by Lagos lawyer, Festus Keyamo, to take
over the prosecution from the Attorney-General.
But instead of acknowledging the
existence of rampant corruption, the President, while addressing
Nigerians during his recent visit to South Africa, said, “People’s
perception about corruption in Nigeria is over-amplified than the
corruption that happens in the country.”
In asking Jonathan to crack down on
corruption, McCulley, quite rightly, identified its deleterious effects
on the growth and development of the nation. He said, “Corruption in
Nigeria diverts financial resources from building roads, hospitals,
schools, and otherwise investing in infrastructure that would serve
business, attract foreign investment and create jobs.”
Without a doubt, Nigeria has been in a
state of arrested development over the years as a result of rampant
corruption in high places, which has led to over $500 billion of public
funds being stolen in the past 40 years. At a point, before the
formation of the Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related
Offences Commission and Economic and Financial Crimes Commission,
Nigeria was ranked the most corrupt country in the world, according to
the corruption perception index of the global anti-graft agency,
Transparency International.
It is not enough for the President to
say that his government is fighting corruption; it must be seen to be
doing so. For instance, Jonathan can start by declaring his assets
publicly and also ensuring that all his aides do the same. The two
anti-corruption agencies must be strengthened and allowed the freedom to
do their job unhindered. Those who have so far been implicated in the
oil subsidy fraud, the pension fund stealing and oil thefts, which have
already led to reduction in Nigeria’s daily output, must be brought to
book. Only then will Jonathan be seen to be fighting corruption; only
then will others intent on defrauding the country be discouraged from
doing so.
Click to signup for FREE news updates, latest information and hottest gists everydayAdvertise on NigerianEye.com to reach thousands of our daily users
JONATHAN IS A COMPROMISED FOOL & AS CORRUPT AS THE LOOTERS. DOESN'T CARE.
ReplyDeleteDON'T BOTHER EXPECTING HIM TO DO WHAT IS NECESSARY.
I agree with U.
ReplyDeleteJonathan came into politics in a state that money laundering is the norm. Thus all these corruption were are seeing, the poor guy doesn't see it as corruption, they are just normal things to him. The dude claims to be fighting corruption he still pardons Alams. Under him, some of the largest corruption cases have been brought open and yet, no effective prosecution. No one is in JAIL yet for stealing all those billions and trillions of naira. And what does Mr President have to say? 'Corruption issue is being over exaggerated in Nigeria'. I think we need a lecturer that specializes in corruption studies to teach this guy what serious cases of corruption is. Guess he's waiting for when they siphon the whole national budget for maybe a couple of years and he has no provision for unwarranted foreign trips before he knows how serious d issue it.
ReplyDelete*not like they can steal d whole of Nigeria's budget. Can they? Lols. Anything's possible in Nigeria though.
g_tolu2003@yahoo.com