The first quote was the remark of
President Goodluck Jonathan at the just concluded World Economic Forum
in Davos, Switzerland, while making his contribution to a televised
debate titled, “Africa’s Next Billion.”
The President has completely erased any
iota of doubt that he has a thorough grasp of critical issues like the
prevalent endemic corruption now crippling governance in the country
that demands his urgent attention as President of Nigeria and frontline
leader on the continent. One would expect that thorough research should
be done by his fawning aides before he speaks at such a forum. A
statement like that is the least expected from the President of one of
the most corrupt countries in the world. Jonathan would have been dead
right if he had said every problem confronting Nigeria and indeed Africa
is the result of corruption. Any argument in the contrary is like
saying there are evils not traceable to the devil. Apparently, Jonathan
has displayed too much incompetence in handling corruption in Nigeria
and several of his other responsibilities as President and remarks like
the one in Davos, buttresses this point. It is most unfortunate that our
President has a “kindergarten” understanding of graft and its
concomitant effects. He seizes every speaking opportunity to make
excuses why he cannot fight corruption. Such prevarication will not help
the anti-graft war, if indeed there is anything like that they only
serve the purpose of encouraging more corruption.
His comments are coming at a time that
allegations of corruption against officials of his administration are
mounting. The Oduahgate is still fresh in our memory. With his latest
misstatement making national headlines, he reminds us of the fifth
presidential media chat of September 29, 2013, where he said that
Nigeria’s corruption was merely a perception which is grossly
exaggerated.
As a member of the intellectual
community, he ought to know better and not mistake effects for causes.
Corruption diverts capital from legitimate purposes to making
wrongheaded policy decisions which deprive the country of a pool of
funds.
The President has developed a penchant
for singing a different tune from realities on the ground, the same way
he has insisted that electricity has improved in spite of citizen
reports to the contrary. Deflecting international attention from sleaze
is the least expected at a time the country needed a consistent and
dogged fight against this monster. The level of corruption in the
country demands serious political will to combat, not occasional
rhetorical statements like the promise to fight the scourge in his New
Year message.
The present administration has
embarrassingly failed to realise that the root cause of the present wave
of terrorism ravaging the North-East is the result of decades of
corruption and impunity of perpetrators coupled with the failure of
successive governments to provide quality, affordable education to
Nigerian children. Graft goes beyond misappropriation of public funds.
How Boko Haram insurgency that affects a few local governments can be
rated above a hydra-headed monster that has eaten deep into the entire
Nigerian fabric cutting across all sectors of the economy and all levels
of government, stifling development, can only be understood by the
President.
The Islamic insurgency that the
President cited as a major challenge to his government has its
foundations in corruption. Government of isolation or exclusion which
breeds injustice and disaffection is corruption. The country might be
having a tough time combating the insurgency of Boko Haram, it does not
in any way imply insecurity has overtaken graft. Government malfeasance
is the result of dilapidated infrastructure such as roads, health care,
collapsed educational system and poor electricity.
Worse still, the failure of our security
operatives to effectively deal with the insurgency is also attributable
to graft. Billions are voted every year for purchase of combat weapons,
training and re-training of security personnel but they somehow end up
in private pockets. For example, a former Inspector-General of Police is
still standing trial for diverting police funds.
Whenever the President makes such
statements, it shows he is disconnected from the over 100 million
Nigerians who live in abject poverty, the same class of people he
belonged before he veered into politics. He sadly lives in self-denial
of the realities on the ground. Terrorism is no doubt a major problem,
even globally, but fighting the root causes and other issues that
promote the culture of violence requires a holistic approach.
Some of the probes that show an evident
lack of political will to decisively deal with the menace of corruption
include: The KPMG report that indicted the Nigeria National Petroleum
Corporation for corrupt practices; the Nigerian Extractive Industries
Transparency Initiative audit report exposing 10 years of corruption in
the upstream and downstream sectors of the oil and gas industry; the
probe of the Pension Fund Management by the Senate Joint Committee on
Public Service and Establishment, State and Local Government
Administration; the Security and Exchange Commission probe that exposed
alarming revelations of corruption in the capital market; the probe of
the oil subsidy regime by the Ad hoc-committee of the House of
Representatives; the non-prosecution of those indicted in the
Halliburton LNG bribery scandal, the recent Stella Oduah BMW scandal and
the unsatisfactory explanation the NNPC has given for the $10.8bn of
crude oil earning the Central Bank of Nigeria declared missing. The list
is almost inexhaustive.
It is safe to say every problem we have
in Nigeria today has its roots in corruption. We would be living in a
fool’s paradise if we expected a President that has been encouraging
official corruption to see anything bad in it let alone as a problem for
Nigeria. This will amount to shooting himself in the foot.
Rather than roll up his sleeves and
concentrate on fixing Nigeria by fighting corruption frontally, Jonathan
has, instead, resorted to wishing the problem away by selling a warped
ideology and diverting attention to insecurity. If this is the thinking
of the Presidency, and the line of reasoning that this administration
wants to toe, then I am sorry, we are doomed! I wish them Good luck.
Jonathan should as a matter of urgency,
combat the prevalent endemic corruption now crippling governance (at all
levels) and stunting the economy of the country.
Judicial officers blame the absurd
rulings on corruption cases on the outdated provisions of our
antediluvian law – like plea bargains, which allow wealthy Nigerians to
get laughable sentences for gargantuan corruption. This law needs
amendment, else criminality and corruption will continue to flourish. It
is why corruption has become a raging monster in this administration.
Regrettably, there are no serious efforts to review these laws. Justice
delayed is another variant of graft. Add that to looting, political
desperation, nepotism, impunity, electoral fraud, perjury and you get a
snippet of what corruption is.
There is no better time to step up the
fight and stem the tide of sleaze than now. Year 2014, to Nigerians, is
not just another year, but the end of a century of national existence
and the beginning of another. When the centenary celebration proper
begins, it should be time for sober reflection on how far we have come.
One of the numerous national questions that will continue to reverberate
in our minds will be: How did we find ourselves in this abyss of
monumental corruption?
The first quote was the remark of
President Goodluck Jonathan at the just concluded World Economic Forum
in Davos, Switzerland, while making his contribution to a televised
debate titled, “Africa’s Next Billion.”
The President has completely erased any
iota of doubt that he has a thorough grasp of critical issues like the
prevalent endemic corruption now crippling governance in the country
that demands his urgent attention as President of Nigeria and frontline
leader on the continent. One would expect that thorough research should
be done by his fawning aides before he speaks at such a forum. A
statement like that is the least expected from the President of one of
the most corrupt countries in the world. Jonathan would have been dead
right if he had said every problem confronting Nigeria and indeed Africa
is the result of corruption. Any argument in the contrary is like
saying there are evils not traceable to the devil. Apparently, Jonathan
has displayed too much incompetence in handling corruption in Nigeria
and several of his other responsibilities as President and remarks like
the one in Davos, buttresses this point. It is most unfortunate that our
President has a “kindergarten” understanding of graft and its
concomitant effects. He seizes every speaking opportunity to make
excuses why he cannot fight corruption. Such prevarication will not help
the anti-graft war, if indeed there is anything like that they only
serve the purpose of encouraging more corruption.
His comments are coming at a time that
allegations of corruption against officials of his administration are
mounting. The Oduahgate is still fresh in our memory. With his latest
misstatement making national headlines, he reminds us of the fifth
presidential media chat of September 29, 2013, where he said that
Nigeria’s corruption was merely a perception which is grossly
exaggerated.
As a member of the intellectual
community, he ought to know better and not mistake effects for causes.
Corruption diverts capital from legitimate purposes to making
wrongheaded policy decisions which deprive the country of a pool of
funds.
The President has developed a penchant
for singing a different tune from realities on the ground, the same way
he has insisted that electricity has improved in spite of citizen
reports to the contrary. Deflecting international attention from sleaze
is the least expected at a time the country needed a consistent and
dogged fight against this monster. The level of corruption in the
country demands serious political will to combat, not occasional
rhetorical statements like the promise to fight the scourge in his New
Year message.
The present administration has
embarrassingly failed to realise that the root cause of the present wave
of terrorism ravaging the North-East is the result of decades of
corruption and impunity of perpetrators coupled with the failure of
successive governments to provide quality, affordable education to
Nigerian children. Graft goes beyond misappropriation of public funds.
How Boko Haram insurgency that affects a few local governments can be
rated above a hydra-headed monster that has eaten deep into the entire
Nigerian fabric cutting across all sectors of the economy and all levels
of government, stifling development, can only be understood by the
President.
The Islamic insurgency that the
President cited as a major challenge to his government has its
foundations in corruption. Government of isolation or exclusion which
breeds injustice and disaffection is corruption. The country might be
having a tough time combating the insurgency of Boko Haram, it does not
in any way imply insecurity has overtaken graft. Government malfeasance
is the result of dilapidated infrastructure such as roads, health care,
collapsed educational system and poor electricity.
Worse still, the failure of our security
operatives to effectively deal with the insurgency is also attributable
to graft. Billions are voted every year for purchase of combat weapons,
training and re-training of security personnel but they somehow end up
in private pockets. For example, a former Inspector-General of Police is
still standing trial for diverting police funds.
Whenever the President makes such
statements, it shows he is disconnected from the over 100 million
Nigerians who live in abject poverty, the same class of people he
belonged before he veered into politics. He sadly lives in self-denial
of the realities on the ground. Terrorism is no doubt a major problem,
even globally, but fighting the root causes and other issues that
promote the culture of violence requires a holistic approach.
Some of the probes that show an evident
lack of political will to decisively deal with the menace of corruption
include: The KPMG report that indicted the Nigeria National Petroleum
Corporation for corrupt practices; the Nigerian Extractive Industries
Transparency Initiative audit report exposing 10 years of corruption in
the upstream and downstream sectors of the oil and gas industry; the
probe of the Pension Fund Management by the Senate Joint Committee on
Public Service and Establishment, State and Local Government
Administration; the Security and Exchange Commission probe that exposed
alarming revelations of corruption in the capital market; the probe of
the oil subsidy regime by the Ad hoc-committee of the House of
Representatives; the non-prosecution of those indicted in the
Halliburton LNG bribery scandal, the recent Stella Oduah BMW scandal and
the unsatisfactory explanation the NNPC has given for the $10.8bn of
crude oil earning the Central Bank of Nigeria declared missing. The list
is almost inexhaustive.
It is safe to say every problem we have
in Nigeria today has its roots in corruption. We would be living in a
fool’s paradise if we expected a President that has been encouraging
official corruption to see anything bad in it let alone as a problem for
Nigeria. This will amount to shooting himself in the foot.
Rather than roll up his sleeves and
concentrate on fixing Nigeria by fighting corruption frontally, Jonathan
has, instead, resorted to wishing the problem away by selling a warped
ideology and diverting attention to insecurity. If this is the thinking
of the Presidency, and the line of reasoning that this administration
wants to toe, then I am sorry, we are doomed! I wish them Good luck.
Jonathan should as a matter of urgency,
combat the prevalent endemic corruption now crippling governance (at all
levels) and stunting the economy of the country.
Judicial officers blame the absurd
rulings on corruption cases on the outdated provisions of our
antediluvian law – like plea bargains, which allow wealthy Nigerians to
get laughable sentences for gargantuan corruption. This law needs
amendment, else criminality and corruption will continue to flourish. It
is why corruption has become a raging monster in this administration.
Regrettably, there are no serious efforts to review these laws. Justice
delayed is another variant of graft. Add that to looting, political
desperation, nepotism, impunity, electoral fraud, perjury and you get a
snippet of what corruption is.
There is no better time to step up the
fight and stem the tide of sleaze than now. Year 2014, to Nigerians, is
not just another year, but the end of a century of national existence
and the beginning of another. When the centenary celebration proper
begins, it should be time for sober reflection on how far we have come.
One of the numerous national questions that will continue to reverberate
in our minds will be: How did we find ourselves in this abyss of
monumental corruption?
The first quote was the remark of
President Goodluck Jonathan at the just concluded World Economic Forum
in Davos, Switzerland, while making his contribution to a televised
debate titled, “Africa’s Next Billion.”
The President has completely erased any
iota of doubt that he has a thorough grasp of critical issues like the
prevalent endemic corruption now crippling governance in the country
that demands his urgent attention as President of Nigeria and frontline
leader on the continent. One would expect that thorough research should
be done by his fawning aides before he speaks at such a forum. A
statement like that is the least expected from the President of one of
the most corrupt countries in the world. Jonathan would have been dead
right if he had said every problem confronting Nigeria and indeed Africa
is the result of corruption. Any argument in the contrary is like
saying there are evils not traceable to the devil. Apparently, Jonathan
has displayed too much incompetence in handling corruption in Nigeria
and several of his other responsibilities as President and remarks like
the one in Davos, buttresses this point. It is most unfortunate that our
President has a “kindergarten” understanding of graft and its
concomitant effects. He seizes every speaking opportunity to make
excuses why he cannot fight corruption. Such prevarication will not help
the anti-graft war, if indeed there is anything like that they only
serve the purpose of encouraging more corruption.
His comments are coming at a time that
allegations of corruption against officials of his administration are
mounting. The Oduahgate is still fresh in our memory. With his latest
misstatement making national headlines, he reminds us of the fifth
presidential media chat of September 29, 2013, where he said that
Nigeria’s corruption was merely a perception which is grossly
exaggerated.
As a member of the intellectual
community, he ought to know better and not mistake effects for causes.
Corruption diverts capital from legitimate purposes to making
wrongheaded policy decisions which deprive the country of a pool of
funds.
The President has developed a penchant
for singing a different tune from realities on the ground, the same way
he has insisted that electricity has improved in spite of citizen
reports to the contrary. Deflecting international attention from sleaze
is the least expected at a time the country needed a consistent and
dogged fight against this monster. The level of corruption in the
country demands serious political will to combat, not occasional
rhetorical statements like the promise to fight the scourge in his New
Year message.
The present administration has
embarrassingly failed to realise that the root cause of the present wave
of terrorism ravaging the North-East is the result of decades of
corruption and impunity of perpetrators coupled with the failure of
successive governments to provide quality, affordable education to
Nigerian children. Graft goes beyond misappropriation of public funds.
How Boko Haram insurgency that affects a few local governments can be
rated above a hydra-headed monster that has eaten deep into the entire
Nigerian fabric cutting across all sectors of the economy and all levels
of government, stifling development, can only be understood by the
President.
The Islamic insurgency that the
President cited as a major challenge to his government has its
foundations in corruption. Government of isolation or exclusion which
breeds injustice and disaffection is corruption. The country might be
having a tough time combating the insurgency of Boko Haram, it does not
in any way imply insecurity has overtaken graft. Government malfeasance
is the result of dilapidated infrastructure such as roads, health care,
collapsed educational system and poor electricity.
Worse still, the failure of our security
operatives to effectively deal with the insurgency is also attributable
to graft. Billions are voted every year for purchase of combat weapons,
training and re-training of security personnel but they somehow end up
in private pockets. For example, a former Inspector-General of Police is
still standing trial for diverting police funds.
Whenever the President makes such
statements, it shows he is disconnected from the over 100 million
Nigerians who live in abject poverty, the same class of people he
belonged before he veered into politics. He sadly lives in self-denial
of the realities on the ground. Terrorism is no doubt a major problem,
even globally, but fighting the root causes and other issues that
promote the culture of violence requires a holistic approach.
Some of the probes that show an evident
lack of political will to decisively deal with the menace of corruption
include: The KPMG report that indicted the Nigeria National Petroleum
Corporation for corrupt practices; the Nigerian Extractive Industries
Transparency Initiative audit report exposing 10 years of corruption in
the upstream and downstream sectors of the oil and gas industry; the
probe of the Pension Fund Management by the Senate Joint Committee on
Public Service and Establishment, State and Local Government
Administration; the Security and Exchange Commission probe that exposed
alarming revelations of corruption in the capital market; the probe of
the oil subsidy regime by the Ad hoc-committee of the House of
Representatives; the non-prosecution of those indicted in the
Halliburton LNG bribery scandal, the recent Stella Oduah BMW scandal and
the unsatisfactory explanation the NNPC has given for the $10.8bn of
crude oil earning the Central Bank of Nigeria declared missing. The list
is almost inexhaustive.
It is safe to say every problem we have
in Nigeria today has its roots in corruption. We would be living in a
fool’s paradise if we expected a President that has been encouraging
official corruption to see anything bad in it let alone as a problem for
Nigeria. This will amount to shooting himself in the foot.
Rather than roll up his sleeves and
concentrate on fixing Nigeria by fighting corruption frontally, Jonathan
has, instead, resorted to wishing the problem away by selling a warped
ideology and diverting attention to insecurity. If this is the thinking
of the Presidency, and the line of reasoning that this administration
wants to toe, then I am sorry, we are doomed! I wish them Good luck.
Jonathan should as a matter of urgency,
combat the prevalent endemic corruption now crippling governance (at all
levels) and stunting the economy of the country.
Judicial officers blame the absurd
rulings on corruption cases on the outdated provisions of our
antediluvian law – like plea bargains, which allow wealthy Nigerians to
get laughable sentences for gargantuan corruption. This law needs
amendment, else criminality and corruption will continue to flourish. It
is why corruption has become a raging monster in this administration.
Regrettably, there are no serious efforts to review these laws. Justice
delayed is another variant of graft. Add that to looting, political
desperation, nepotism, impunity, electoral fraud, perjury and you get a
snippet of what corruption is.
There is no better time to step up the
fight and stem the tide of sleaze than now. Year 2014, to Nigerians, is
not just another year, but the end of a century of national existence
and the beginning of another. When the centenary celebration proper
begins, it should be time for sober reflection on how far we have come.
One of the numerous national questions that will continue to reverberate
in our minds will be: How did we find ourselves in this abyss of
monumental corruption?
No comments:
Post a Comment