Tag: compromised

  • A compromised foundation

    We are witnessing tragic manifestations of compromised foundations. Religion and ethnicity are this nation’s master fault lines. They determine what leaders see and do despite hypocritical denials. With a handful of exceptions, leaders live and breathe sectarianism and sectionalism. As for the exceptions, they only exhibit surface-deep pan-Nigerian credentials.

    Theirs is even more sordid than the commitment of sectarians and sectionalists to some entity beyond themselves. These are absolute egoists using the forum of politics for personal gains. Therefore, they will align with anyone across religious and ethnic divides, provided something is in it for them. But where there is no common commitment to an ideology that transcends self-interest, a virulent competition of self-interests ensues without the possibility of reconciliation.

    With a mixture of sectarianism, sectionalism, and egoism as the materials upon which the nation was founded, the inevitable conflict in their interaction leads ineluctably to a breach of the foundation, and ultimate weakening of the edifice. Absent necessary repair at the most basic level, the nation will continue to slouch toward structural collapse. But because the tendencies that are tethered to sectarian, sectional, and egoistic interests are each fighting for domination so they can impose on others, they are unconcerned about the looming destruction of the whole.

    Consider this illustration. The battle for economic survival on the one hand, and the preservation of a way of life on the other hand, need not conflict because one does not harm the other. For an Okeogun farmer, tilling the ground is both a means of economic survival and a way of life. He could move from hoe and cutlass subsistence farming to tractor and fertilizer commercial farming. He could go into partnership with friends and family members in cooperative association for production and/or marketing purposes.

    Through such ventures, they could bring more land into production by buying from others. With this, the two objectives of economic survival and preservation of a way of life are advanced. Government may help in various ways: extensions services, including education about best practices, improved seedlings and fertilizer at affordable cost, coordination of cooperative societies, farm settlements and agricultural research institutes.

    Notice here that no one is an unwilling partner in the furtherance of our farmer’s interest and he has not encroached on the interest of others. With his original subsistence farm, and his advancement to commercial farming, he has refrained from harming the interest of others.

    Now compare another economic venture and its potentials for furthering interest and avoiding conflict with the interest of others. The herdsman also has an interest in economic survival and preservation of a way of life. He starts with a few heads of cattle. He lives in a settlement on the edge of town and he moves his cattle around the area for pasture and water. In the evenings, he returns to his settlement. Provided he restrains his cattle from encroaching on farmland and thus jeopardizing the farmer’s interest in economic survival and preservation of his own way of life, there is no conflict.

    That has been the case in the interaction between farmers and herdsmen in Okeogun from the 1940s to the turn of the century. Suddenly, farmlands were deliberately invaded by cattle. In dry season, bushes around farmlands were set on fire so fresh pasture can sprout as soon as the first rains fell. The  frequency of these breaches in interaction with conflicts in the interests of both parties for economic survival and cultural preservation cannot but lead to serious conflicts. How could these be handled?

    Just like farmers, the interest of herdsmen in economic survival and cultural preservation could be handled with strategic political-economic thinking. As the herdsman acquires more cattle warranting the need for greater access to pasture, he needs more land under his control. For better economy of scale, he could enter into partnership with other herdsmen to form cooperative herdsmen association to purchase land and ranch their cattle.

    As with farmers, government could provide extension services, including training in breeding techniques, supply of new breeds, and production of feed at subsidized prices. Thus, a way of life is being preserved and the economic interest of the herdsman is being promoted. Besides, these objectives are being realized for both groups without the threat of a perennial conflict. Why has this potentially effective solution not being canvassed?

    The sectarians, sectionalists, and egoists have all been busy with the politics of domination to the detriment of harmonious accommodation. And as they advance their self-interests, the foundation is further compromised and the edifice threatened.

    The disease of sectarianism, sectionalism, and egoism has also afflicted the political party, and here, the pursuit of self-interest self-contradictorily jeopardizes itself. This affected the fortunes of People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in the last general elections when many of its leadership decamped as nPDP.

    To be sure, having ruled the nation for sixteen years, PDP was already experiencing the onset of diminishing returns and the electorate was ready for change. APC rode on the disenchantment of the people. But there is no denying the help it received from nPDP.

    Politics is a game of numbers and it is interest that motivates politicians. But, like the rest of us, politicians have differing ideas of what their interests are and the best way to pursue them. For a few, the fundamental interest is the pursuit of the common good, the outcome of which they expect to promote their own self-interest too. Such a group will dedicatedly develop an agenda of national cohesion which mobilizes the entire population for progress.

    Others see their interest in the promotion of sectional and sectarian agenda for which they become local champions. As their minions look up to them for protection and promotion, the larger task of national advancement is truncated.

    For others yet, it is what they can materially acquire at the shortest possible time that matters to them. Eyi teye je leye n gbe fo. The philosophy of immediate gratification is not the monopoly of any one group or party. It has become the symbol of political affiliation and no leader can claim to be immune. What this does, however, is limit the potentials for national advancement as individuals and groups, without an enduring allegiance to the common good, jump from one ship to another in search of a larger catch from the political ocean. nPDP has just vividly illustrated this tendency.

    Consider the fact that four years after its decamping from PDP to APC, this group still self-identifies as nPDP. This self-identification suggests a failure of group synergy with APC, thus ensuring a destructive factionalization. This is in spite of the positions of critical importance that some of its members occupy in the various branches of government, including the National Assembly.

    Two points need to be noted here. First, as hinted earlier, nPDP is just the latest manifestation of a tendency that is ingrained in our system, which focuses on the fairness of distribution rather than the task of production. We are least concerned with the production of the proverbial national cake, only with its distribution, with everyone jostling for the most share.

    Second, this sharing mindset jeopardizes the common interest in the stability of the system, which further threatens the foundation, and with it, the entire structure. With the case of farmers that I started with, assume that a group of cooperative farmers only indulge in sharing whatever they make with no saving or reinvesting. Their venture cannot prosper and they’ll soon hit the rock of debt and bankruptcy. The same fate awaits a nation of only sharers and no producers.

    On the other hand, however, the reality of our predilection for sharing is that those who feel left out have good reasons to complain and to take whatever action they deem necessary for them to not lose out in the political activity of possessive individualism. We are guilty of hypocrisy if we fail to call out other groups, including legacy parties, such CPC and ANPP, which use the political power at their disposal at the federal and state levels, to look after the interests of “loyalists” to the chagrin of others.

     

  • Is anti-corruption war compromised?

    I belong to everybody and I belong to nobody” —President Muhammadu Buhari

    It was May 29, 2015 when that speech was made by the then newly inaugurated President Muhammadu Buhari. That punchy line resonated across the country, from the vast landscape of the north to the forest region of the south. The long awaited nemesis of the chronically corrupt and unrepentant enemies of good governance has arrived. It shall no longer be business as usual. The optimism on the part of the citizens was infectious.

    From a backdrop of a beaten and battered economy, widespread insecurity and a massively looted treasury, President Buhari served to the citizenry a three-pronged dosage as antidote, namely- Anti-corruption war, security and economic rejuvenation.

    It is common knowledge that the most potent weapon in the kitty of Buhari was the famed iron cast integrity earned over the years in the course of his service to fatherland. To clean the Augean stable of 16 years of filth left behind by the former administrations of the retreating PDP, he had committed himself to taking on corruption in every area where it reared its ugly head and there was no doubt on the part of Nigerians and other watchers that this difficult battle was capable of being won given the antecedents of its exponent.

    The zeal and seeming determination with which the onslaught against graft commenced gave hope that, indeed, the nation was undergoing a rebirth; that a new Nigeria, free of malfeasance, was here.

    But recent developments have given Nigerians and, indeed, international observers cause for serious concern. Is this war on course? Is the battle arsenal being evenly deployed to all troubled spots? Are some toes getting too big and too sacred to be stepped upon? More and more frightful questions continue to run through the minds of many. And rightly so, their doubts have not been unfounded.

    As this is being written, the media landscape is saturated with, perhaps, the most scandalous and most embarrassing story that promises to deliver the biggest blow to the anti-corruption drive of this government. It is the story of the former chairman of the Presidential Task Force on Pension Reforms Task Team, Abdulrasheed Maina who the EFCC had declared wanted for monumental fraud, but was helped back to the country and reinstated to the public service with promotion.

    Only recently, the federal government approved the appointment of a 14-member board to boost the arsenal of one of the duo of the country’s anti-corruption specialized agencies, Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission, ICPC. On that list of anti-corruption warriors was Maimuna Aliyu. She would have made her way through but for the prompt intervention of the fourth estate of the realm, the press and other concerned Nigerians who took it upon themselves to keep watch over our fragile democracy.

    In reaching a conclusion on such sensitive appointments, one must have thought that proper background security checks would have been carried out to ensure a high level of uprightness in character and reputation of those in whom we would be placing our collective aspirations in routing the disaster that corruption and all its vice have bedeviled us with.

    But as it was later made known, bringing Maimuna Aliyu’s name for such a position was a grave error that shouldn’t have happened in the first place, given that there was an ensuing topnotch investigation into alleged corrupt activities by Maimuna by agencies of the federal government, the Nigerian Police and the EFCC.

    Littering the media landscape were series of incriminating documents on how Aliyu, an ex-banker, allegedly used her position to confer corrupt advantages upon herself, appropriating to herself property valued at over N1billion.  The ICPC Board appointment misstep is just one of the series of unfolding events that are daily rubbishing the gains of the anti-corruption campaign and depleting the credibility this government initially enjoyed at the onset of the battle.

    Take the recent open altercation between the Minister of State, Petroleum, Dr Ibe Kachikwu and the Group Managing Director of NNPC, Dr Maikanti Baru. Pointedly, Kachikwu accused Baru, among others, of awarding contracts totalling $24 billion without due process and without recourse to the board of the corporation. The contracts include: the crude term contracts valued at over $10billion, the Direct Sale Direct Purchase, DSDP contracts valued at $5 billion, the AKK Pipeline Contract valued at $3 billion, various financing allocation funding contracts with the Joint Venture oil Companies to the tune of $3 billion.

    Baru’s defence was that the said contracts went through due processes and was approved by the President.

    After all sides have stated their cases and all dirty linen washed in the open, one major take away was that impunity and corruption are still firmly entrenched in the nation’s oil sector and that some sacred cows can still get away with any malfeasance even without the proverbial slap on the wrist. How does this help the war against graft? How does this help to build confidence and engender trust in the government’s much touted determination to fight corruption to a standstill?

    All these questions are being raised even while the grass-cutting contract scandal which led to the suspension of the Secretary to the Federal Government, SGF, Babachir Lawal and the riddle surrounding the discovery of millions of dollars at a location in Lagos are yet to be laid to rest. Following the decision of the president to set up a high powered committee to look into these two unsettling developments and come up with all the facts, and subsequent submission of the report to the President since August 20, Nigerians had largely awaited a presidential pronouncement on them. The silence from the seat of power since then has remained very deafening.

    Does this not amount to a major setback for the war against graft? Does this not take a big chunk out of the credibility rating of this government regarding its avowed desire to stamp out corruption?

    Concerned citizens were still analyzing the disturbing turn of events and taking stock of the reverses the anti-graft battle has recorded when the Maina bombshell dropped. Now, this is a major devastating and damaging blow on whatever may have been left of the anti-graft campaign.

    Abdulrasheed Maina, the former pensions Czar who was accused of fleecing retired people of billions of naira and fled the country to escape arrest and trial, was, under the watch of a corruption fighting government, smuggled back into the country and not only reinstated but given double promotion, a reward (?) for the agony and deprivation he threw hundreds of tired and retired senior citizens of this country into.

    Although President Buhari intervened and ordered his sack and investigation of how this happened, the fact that it happened at all, under the watch of a regime that parades itself as anti-corruption warriors, has left a permanent dent and irreparable damage to the campaign. Can this government still reverse the losses already suffered and rev the anti-corruption battle back to life?  The answer lies in the womb of time.

     

    • Osi wrote in from Ajaokuta, Kogi State.
  • Peterside accuses INEC of being compromised

    Peterside accuses INEC of being compromised

    The governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Rivers State during the 2015 election, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, has accused the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in the state of being compromised by Governor Nyesom Wike during Saturday’s legislative rerun in Etche and Omuma local government areas.

    He said the Rivers governor manhandled INEC officials and forced them to do his bidding, in an effort to prove that his factionalised Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was a popular party in the Niger Delta state.

    Peterside yesterday in an interview with reporters in Port Harcourt regreted the way the electoral commission went about announcing results from elections, which INEC earlier declared inconclusive.

    He declared that the electoral commission violated its rules and guidelines, leading to the declaration of PDP’s candidates: Chief Jerome Eke and Mr. Tony Ejiogu as winner of the House of Representatives’ Etche/Omuma federal constituency and Etche constituency 2 in the Rivers House of Assembly seats respectively.

    The APC chieftain said: “The results clearly do not reflect what transpired during the elections of yesterday ( Saturday), even though they added to the discredited results of earlier elections of March 19 and December 10 last year.

    “Wike arrived INEC office at about 12:35 a.m. on Sunday and attempted to force the returning officer to announce results which the official had earlier declared inconclusive, as elections did not take place in majority of the polling booths. The returning officer insisted that announcing results the way they were would amount to discrediting substantial number of voters, who were denied opportunity to vote by thugs and hoodlums.”

    Peterside, who is also the Director-General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), also expressed surprise on how INEC allow itself to be compromised by the Rivers governor,  who he said had a long history of bribing electoral officials.

    He said: “Only recently, INEC officials who served in the state during last December 10 rerun elections were indicted by police for receiving several millions of naira to influence results.

    “Wike was seen with INEC officials computing results of the election. How did the governor get there? Is the governor a returning officer? Is he an INEC official or a security agent?

    “How could Wike be standing with INEC officials, where results were being computed? Under which law is a governor permitted to be present where results were being computed for legislative elections in a local government that is clearly not his? I am sure Rivers people are watching this.”

  • ‘PDP has compromised Judiciary on Akwa Ibom election’

    ‘PDP has compromised Judiciary on Akwa Ibom election’

    The National Vice Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) (Southsouth), Prince Hilliard Eta, yesterday said  the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has compromised the Judiciary on Akwa Ibom State governorship election litigation.

    He said the verdicts of the tribunal and the Appeal Court contradicted reports of foreign observers on the election, adding that it smacked of foul play.

    The APC chieftain urged the judges to defend democracy and the rule of law.

    He said the situation gave the impression that justice was for the highest bidder.

    Eta spoke on phone with our correspondent on the ruling of the tribunals and the Appeal Court, following the litigation that arose from the governorship and National Assembly elections.

    He said: “The Judiciary has compromised seriously on the Akwa Ibom governorship polls. After the election, the international community, the foreign observers from the United States and the European Union (EU) gave a damning verdict on the elections in Rivers and Akwa Ibom states. People were expecting the elections to be cancelled…”

  • NHIS now compromised, say pharmacists

    NHIS now compromised, say pharmacists

    The Association of Community Pharmacist of Nigeria (ACPN) is urging the Federal Government to make the National Health Insurance Scheme accord respect to all professional bodies in the sector.

    Its president, Dr Alkali Albert Kelong called on NHIS to direct the health management organisations (HMOs) to pay other professionals after verifying their claims on services they have rendered.

    Kelong, who spoke in Lagos, lamented that only doctors presently handle the distribution of money given by the NHIS for  distribution to other professionals within the health chain, adding that this negates the provision of the scheme, and as such, it is discriminatory and unacceptable.

    “Things can work here the same way they work in saner climes but we always bring sentiments into this thing. We are advocating for maintenance in status quo; that all professional within the healthcare delivery system must be adequately catered for in the NHIS. It is when you have respective professionals carrying out their responsibility that you have a better outcome in therapy. One person cannot claim to know everything. In the end, it is the patience that eventually pays for it,” Kelong added.

    Kelong advocated a more enforced regulation to bring sanity into the healthcare system.

    He said the NHIS law is clear on how professionals within the healthcare system should be adequately catered for but the scenario has since changed.

    “We want the insurance scheme to give to Caesar what is Caesar’s. You cannot be a judge in your own case, “said Kelong.

    He said: “Prescription comes out of hospitals to pharmacists. But in Nigeria we want a one stop shop where somebody sits and gets all the profit. That is why you see us crying because we want prescriptions to come from us.

    “Go to some of the West African countries, their regulations is more effective than ours. Ironically, we have all the resources and personnel so we won’t normally have had anybody going for treatment abroad. But in a situation where things are not being done rightly under the pretext of Nigerian situation is not acceptable.”