President Jonathan is far from reality by praising his anti-graft
effort at a time no big man has been successfully jailed for
corruption” – Garba Shehu
In
his weekly televised media chat on the television network on Sunday,
President Goodluck Jonathan came out forcefully to explain the efforts
his administration is making to tackle and eliminate corruption in
public life. I have never seen him so prepared for a television
appearance. He smiled a lot.
Contrary to the perception of lethargy that seems to characterize the
war against corruption, the President explained the strategy of his
administration, which he said, includes a stage-by-stage approach to the
biggest challenge facing a developing country like Nigeria.
According to this strategy, President Jonathan explained that his
government focused first on eliminating electoral corruption and
fertilizer distribution scams. He argued that this approach was yielding
results, citing the successful conduct of the Ondo and Edo States’
governorship elections as one of the signs that the war against
electoral corruption was working. The President’s confidence is
bolstered by the fact that both Ondo and Edo are opposition States.
Eliminating corruption in fertilizer distribution is another area of
success cited by the President. One is not, however, sure if many
Nigerians would agree with the President that the strategy he announced
is actually working according to plan. The “success” story announced by
the President may have stemmed from the briefings he received from his
officials and state governments. The story of the so-called “GSM
fertilizer” cannot be the basis of this outlandish claim. GSM fertilizer
is a mere sprinkling of fertilizer distribution to meet the needs of
propaganda by government. To say that other countries are sending their
officials to study how it is done here is the height of deception. Can
corruption be tackled by half measures?
To say that corruption has been eliminated in fertilizer distribution
is a bit too far-fetched. When party men and women handle fertilizer
distribution, the beneficiaries are mainly party loyalists. To receive
two bags as allowed under the “wallet” or GSM scheme, farmers were made
to undergo further screening by party committees. Theoretically, the
fertilizers are supposed to reach farmers without intermediaries.
If, indeed, corruption has been eliminated from fertilizer
distribution, how does one explain the fact that fertilizer allocation
enriches officials of local governments, state governments and party
leaders? But for corruption in the fertilizer distribution system, the
price of fertilizer would not be as high as N5, 000 plus per bag it’s
been sold plus to non-party members. It gets even more exorbitant by the
time it reaches farmers.
The fact is that the corruption in the fertilizer distribution system
is making a few people rich overnight at the expense of the average
farmers who are supposed to be the intended beneficiaries. Nigeria seems
to be like a country that has lost its soul. If pensioners’ funds are
been stolen greedy and corrupt officials, one wonders how fertilizer
distribution system could have escaped the deadly grip of corruption.
Can President Jonathan assess the success of the war against
corruption from the cozy comfort of Aso Rock? When election observers
were describing the 2011 election as orderly, peaceful, free and fair,
it took the audacious intervention of a former U.S. Ambassador to
Nigeria, John Campbell to jolt us from our complacency. He said that
voter queues at polling stations might seem orderly and peaceful, but
the devil lies in the collation centres to which election observers have
no access.
Is it not too early to declare victory against corruption when the
government itself is taking panic measures to reassure a skeptical
international community that the war against corruption has not lost
momentum? The re-arraignment of the former Minister of Works, Dr. Hassan
Lawal, and such other cases in a fit of frenzy in the last two weeks on
fresh charges of corruption is part of the desperate official efforts
to deflect criticism of lethargy on the part of the Jonathan government.
When she visited Nigeria in August 2009 during her first-ever African
tour, U.S. Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, regretted that the war
against corruption “had fallen back.” As expected, rather than being
humble enough to accept honest criticism, Mrs. Clinton came under attack
from government officials, including Senate President David Mark, who
had warned her to mind her own business.
Living in denial and rejecting honest criticisms as needless
interference wouldn’t help Nigeria’s anti-corruption efforts. We cannot
fight corruption by wishful thinking or rhetoric. Contrary to Jonathan’s
strategy of stage-by-stage approach, fighting corruption demands
radical action. It demands courage and iron will to confront corruption.
What our President seemed to have played down is the hydra-headed
nature of corruption and its deadly grip. Can we declare success when
the judiciary, the police, the civil service, the EFCC and the
politicians appear stubbornly corrupt? When corruption sinks its teeth
into the souls of these key public institutions, is it safe to declare
success by stage-by-stage approach or method? Do you scotch a deadly
enemy like corruption or eliminate it totally? If it takes three years
of his war against corruption to declare victory on only two counts in
this litany of corruption, how much time does Mr. President require to
achieve results dealing with the scourge in the NNPC, the Courts, the
Police, the Civil Service and the entire gamut of public life?
In fact, one may even go further to ask whether the forces of
corruption are not stronger than the state. Fighting corruption goes
beyond courtrooms drama when fuel subsidy fraud culprits and corrupt
officials are briefly presented before judges and granted bail. No big
man has been successfully jailed to serve as a deterrent. While ordinary
criminals who steal goats, wrappers and handsets are sent to jail
almost daily, corrupt officials use technicality to escape justice.
The irony and hypocrisy of fighting corruption came to light during
the recent public hearings on constitutional amendments held at zonal
centres across the country during which governors were said to have
opposed the death penalty for corruption. This is a very interesting
revelation in a country that frequently wastes no time in jailing and
hanging ordinary offenders. Are we doomed? Has corruption defeated us?
The late radical A.B.U. lecturer, Dr. Yusuf Bala Usman once predicted
during the rule of former President Obasanjo that if the government
could not fight corruption, the monster would fight it. Is Dr. Bala’s
prediction coming to pass?
- Garba Shehu
via PremiumTimes
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