Tag: corruption

  • Re: trilogy about controversy on Buhari’s war against corruption

    Re: trilogy about controversy on Buhari’s war against corruption

    As I promised last week, I am dedicating this week’s column to the reactions to my trilogy of sorts on the controversy stirred by the attacks on President Muhammadu Buhari’s declared war on corruption, notably the attacks from Bishop Mathew Hassan Kukah and Professor Ben Nwabueze.

    The first piece of August 19, which was the prelude to the subject, elicited 24 texts. The second of August 26 about Bishop Kukah elicited 84 texts and four emails. The third last week about Prof. Nwabueze elicited 31 texts and three emails.

    Here’s my selection of the reactions.

    On the prelude

    Sir,

    For once you wrote an article, which is unbiased. The war against corruption by President Muhammadu Buhari (PMB) must go on, irrespective of who is involved. Forget about Prof. Nwabueze and his likes. Our PMB has our support. +2348033204747.

    Sir,

    You are an ethnic and a religious jingoist, in addition to being an attention seeker and a fool. +2348065296641.

    Sir,

    Corruption is a cancer that is eating up the soul of our country, and any fight against it should be encouraged. But let this fight be holistic, starting from 1999 to date. Any Hausa, Igbo or Yoruba thief should face the full weight of the law. We want an all inclusive war.

    Patrick,

    Abuja. +2347010393213.

    Sir,

    Prof. Ben Nwabueze was a minister of education under President Ibrahim Babangida, not Gen. Sani Abacha. He served as minister, while Malam Bello Dogondaji (Santurakin Sakkwato) was his minister of state.

    Nurudeen Tambaya, +2348034507641.

     

    On Kukah

    Sir,

    I don’t blame you, you are a Muslim. Look at you talking about an anointed man of God. But one thing is certain; if there was no Jonathan as president, there would not have been civilian Buhari president. Jonathan is the father of a new Nigeria, period.

    Jose Mou, Aba.  +2348165288291.

    Sir,

    Your piece made interesting reading. I want to observe, however, that contrary to expressing views in the media, Father Hassan Kukah still stands tall as an advocate of truth and a true friend of former Presidents Obasanjo and Goodluck. By his calling as a priest he will never support the perpetration of corruption in the polity, let alone attack Buhari’s anti-corruption drive as insinuated by many.

    Malbang, J.B. +2348061520950.

    Sir,

    Re -Attacks on Buhari’s war on corruption – The case of Kukah. I wish to state categorically that the war on corruption is a collective war by the majority of Nigerians. As far as we are concerned, whoever is against this war is an enemy of the masses, be you a Pastor, Bishop, an Imam, Emir, Oba, Obi, whatever. Nobody will deceive us with ethnic, religious or political colouration. As for me, I have stopped reading some newspapers or listening to some radio or TV stations that have shamelessly sold out to these corrupt politicians and rogues. They should be warned that no evil should happen to Buhari. We are solidly behind him and God Almighty will see him through in Jesus’ name.

    Jimi Omeiza Moses,

    Eruwen Road, Ikorodu, Lagos.

    +2348058589458.

    Sir,

    I commend your insightful piece on Bishop Kukah in The Nation today. But you messed it up with your paragraph 13 in which you said ‘my hunch is that he has tried to defend them essentially because they are fellow Christians…’ And yet you admitted that corruption knows no tribe or religion. When will Nigerians think outside religion and ethnicity?

    Ozolua,

    Lagos. +2348023058761.

    Sir,

    This is the best you’ve written. When JONA was stealing with illiterate gusto, KUKAH never envisaged PDP’s ouster. Now that DANIEL BUHARI has come to judgment, let all the toadies in religious garb take cover of silence or self-exile.

    Sam, Ibadan. +2348066174320.

    Sir,

    This is what happens when one leaves his duty post. The Bishop should have concentrated on his assignment to catholicise the seat of the Sokoto Caliphate. I am not sure his masters in the Vatican will be too happy about the controversy he has generated by those selfish and biased comments that have, by now, conclusively been read by most Nigerians to be meant to distract the efforts of our elected President to deliver on his WIDELY ACCEPTED campaign promise: fight against corruption.

    I would advise the Bishop to leave Abuja and return to base to do best what he is paid for. The NCP has outlived its usefulness (if ever it was). He may not know, but the mere presence of the priest-contractor, Oritsejafor, in the team completely killed whatever little credibility the team had.

    Engr. Mailadi Yusuf Abba

    mailadiyusuf@yahoo.com

    +2348030730757.

    Sir,

    You’ve diligently skinned this wolf in canonical mask. Please do the same with that bigot in academic robe. +2348054300625.

    Sir,

    Your hunch was wrong. It’s not because of their faith, but because the Bishop has lost the uncommon courage. Does his Bible teach that people should steal?

    Victor (Akure) +2348034647763.

    Sir,

    I don’t think you were able to find Bishop Kukah “guilty” of any wrong doing. Just go through your article and see the futile attempt to nail the bishop.  +2348033217721.

    Sir,

    President Buhari is not against any tribe or religion. He is addressing the most pressing problem of Nigeria – corruption.

    Dr. Mann Tolofari, Port Harcourt. +2348038749534.

    Sir,

    So your interest is to use the pages of newspapers to insult the clergy. Why is it that you don’t have respect for men of God?

    Ekene, +2347031221600.

     

    Sir,

    We all know that Mohammed Haruna is a fanatic. He should leave Kukah alone to exercise his democratic right. +2347066583610.

    Sir,

    Thanks for the magnificent piece on the Bishop. The man, like any flesh, has lost focus. He is now dancing naked in the public square. The Desmond Tutu of Nigeria (my wrong perception of him) has become the Oritsejafor of Nigeria. May God help our beloved country and the president. +2348033205272.

    Sir,

    Good article as always. However, I remember Bishop Kukah defended PMB when Nigerians wanted to lynch him on his misrepresented statement that Muslims should not vote for other religions. Which camaraderie was that?

    Musa, Keffi. +2348033202992.

    Sir,

    I read your article of August 26 with great relish. The so-called National Peace Committee is preaching peace without justice. The members have become busybodies and interlopers.

    Olu Ajayi,  Abeokuta. +2348051514428.

    Sir,

    I read your piece on Bishop Hassan Kukah and I whole heartedly agree with your take on the Bishop’s outrageous and unforgivable utterances. You neglected to mention though that he actually said that President Buhari should remember that he would one day leave office and might therefore face the same probes by his successor. I think that thinly veiled threat/blackmail was, for me, so irresponsible and truly unconscionable.

    In conclusion, our feelings on this matter diverge only in your position that the NPC should not be disbanded.  President Buhari does not need these distracting visits and unnecessary vexations to the spirit; his hands are full. Let the Peace Committee, if they insist on existing, look elsewhere, where there is conflict. Let them visit the Northeast, fish out genuinely aggrieved youths and negotiate peace, etc.

    Mrs Kechi Adogu.

    kechi.adogu@gmail.com On Nwabueze

    Sir,

    This is a masterpiece. I must confess that this is the best piece I have ever read from you in the last five years, the worst being the one you wrote on Dikko Inde, lately the Comptroller-General of Customs last year, ignorantly praising him.

    Nasiru Manga

    nasmang@gmail.com

    Sir,

    How much are you being paid and by whom to insult personalities that you cannot be a match to even if given 1000 years on this planet earth? Mind you the fight against corruption is a Nigerian project, so don’t look at it as your personal project or PMB’s. Enough is enough of your insults on our elders and leaders.

    Goodman Dan,

    Taraba State.

    +2348128062112.

    Sir,

    Thanks for making many Nigerians aware of the diabolical role of Prof Nwabueze during those trying years of 1966 and 1993 respectively. The great scholar is at present clutching his “boarding pass” to enter the plane to the Great Beyond. He should therefore start toeing the few remaining paths of nationalism still open to him.

    Amb. L. T. Bade-Afuye.

    +2347013324163.

    Sir,

    I was very outraged by the position of Ben Nwabueze; it lacked scholarship. These are the people sponsoring Radio Biafra.

    Ahmed Isa,

    Agbor.

    +2348035120188.

    Sir,

    I think Nwabueze is only afraid that with the unity of the North, the votes of the Southeast have become inconsequential in determining who becomes the president of this country. He lost his professorship long time ago. He now analyses issues like a motor park tout.

    +2348030948991.

  • Nigeria’ll win corruption battle, says Kumuyi

    Nigeria’ll win corruption battle, says Kumuyi

    The General Superintendent of Deeper Christian Life Ministry (DCLM), Pastor William F. Kumuyi, yesterday, said the fight against corruption will be won sooner than later.

    He said despite the economic challenges, there is hope for Nigeria.

    He spoke with reporters at the kick-off of the City-wide Crusade organised by Deeper Life in conjunction with Christian Association of

    Nigeria (CAN) and Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigerian (PFN).

    The event, which witnessed a multitude of worshippers, took place at the Police College premises in Ikeja.

    Kumuyi, in a message entitled: “The wonders of supernatural change”, said God has the power to change all negative circumstances.

    He said: “My prayer for the country is that the Supernatural change that God had brought to individuals will be brought to our country.

    “As the fight against corruption is ongoing, we need the wisdom of God and His support. My prayer is that God will assist the government to pull through until we get to the end of the tunnel in Jesus name. The change has started already.

    “?I want to encourage Nigerians to have hope.  We should look up to God that He is able to turn things around. It may not take place this very minute, but God is going to do wonders in our country and things are going to turn around for the better.”

    In his sermon, Kumuyi assured the audience that no matter the challenges they may face, and which may appear to defy solution, there is real hope.

    According to him, the greatest problem of man was sin and those who are bound by chain unrighteousness urgently need to seek God’s forgiveness.

    “The Lord does not condemn sinners but saves them. Sinners must boldly take a step by confessing their sins. It is futile to think that it is impossible to live a righteous life. God is capable of saving sinners no matter the level of sin they have committed.

    “Every work of Satan in your life must be reversed. Bad luck has come to an end. Sorrow and reproach have come to an end. This is a time for supernatural change. You must leave all your sins behind. God has declared that this day salvation has come into your life. God will not reject you,” he stressed.

    Kumuyi added: “Salvation has come to you today. Don’t think God is going to reject you because you went to a shrine. A glorious and gracious cleansing is coming to you. You will be so clean that angel will look at you and marvel.”

    One of the participants at the crusade, Ms Marvellous Archibong, testified how she regained her sight last night at the crusade having been blind since she was born 18 years ago.

    Another woman testified that she was suffering from cancer but that her lump disappeared after Kumuyi prayed.

     

     

     

  • Buhari would have picked Gani to lead anti-corruption war’

    President Muhammadu Buhari’s respect for the late Chief Gani Fawehinmi would have persuaded him to appoint the legal luminary to champion the current administration’s anti-corruption fight, a former chairman of Amuwo Odofin Local Government Area, Mr. Ayodele Adewale, has told The Nation.

    Mr. Adewale, who spoke last Wednesday at the Freedom Square, Ojota, Lagos, during the sixth year anniversary rally in honour of Chief Fawehinmi, said before his death, the fiery social critic endorsed President Buhari’s election bid because he saw a clear determination to fight corruption.

    “President Buhari on his part saw Gani as a prudent, honest and visionary leader. Buhari would probably have chosen Gani to head his anti-corruption fight rather than Sagay,” he said.

    Professor Itse Sagay, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), distinguished Professor of Law and human rights activist, was appointed three weeks ago by President Buhari to head a Presidential Advisory Committee against Corruption. The body is to advise the country’s leader and his administration on the anti-graft war and the implementation of reform in Nigeria’s criminal justice system.

    “Nevertheless,” Comrade Adewale continued, “Gani would be happy with President Buhari’s corruption fight.”

    Mr. Adewale, an All Progressive Congress (APC) chieftain, was one of the speakers at the rally organised by the Gani Fawehinmi Memorial Organisation (GOFAMORG) as part of activities to celebrate the ideals of the human rights lawyer.

    Other speakers at the event included civil rights campaigners such as Ayodele Akele, GOFAMORG Chairman; Dr. Joe Odumakin, the president of Women Arise for Change Initiative and Campaign for Democracy; Venerable Folorunsho Oginni and Goodluck Obi, the deputy chairman of the National Conscience Party in the Southeast.

    Comrade Akele urged President Buhari to begin to lay the foundation towards fulfilling his campaign promises.

     

     

     

     

     

     

    On the administration’s anti-corruption fight, he said recent allegations that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) had not come clean on monies recovered from corrupt politicians, was enough to send the commission’s leaders packing.

    “EFCC Chairman Ibrahim Lamorde should be suspended until he’s cleared of all the allegations,” he added.

    The rally which began under the Ikeja Bridge in Lagos, ended at the Freedom Square, Ojota. It was the second in a three-day, four-legged series of events in memory of Chief Fawehinmi which culminated in a public lecture and a night of tributes in Akure, the Ondo State capital.

     

  • ‘How Fed Govt should fight corruption’

    Senate Leader Ali Ndume has urged the Federal Government to introduce preventive measures against corruption instead of waiting for individuals to steal before prosecuting them.

    Ndume, who addressed reporters yesterday in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital, noted that the measure would curb corruption.

    He said: “The fight against corruption in Nigeria is a big war; it is going to be tougher than that of the Boko Haram insurgency war.

    “Government must begin to initiate preventive measures against corruption, instead of waiting for people to steal public wealth before taking action.” Ndume represents Borno South Senatorial District in the National Assembly.

    The senator suggested that part of the measures should include mechanism for questioning individuals or public officers with sudden massive wealth.

    He said: “What I am saying is that the government must make deliberate effort to ensure that even those who stole do not find a hiding place in the society.”

    Ndume said the authorities should raise alarm once an individual is suspected to have ill-gotten wealth.

    “For example, once you see a new flashy building coming up in an area, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) or the Independent Corrupt Practice and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) should quickly find out who the owner of the building is, then invite him to say where he got the money to start the project.

    “If this mechanism is on ground, people will think twice before they even steal public money,” Ndume said.

    The senator said Nigerians celebrate public officers who have stolen government money rather than question their source of wealth.

    He said: “How can I, for example, begin to buy big houses just because I became a Senate Leader, when I used to live in my three-bedroom apartment in Apo (Abuja) since 2003?

    “Just because I have become the Senate Leader, I will start buying houses in Maitama and Asokoro in Abuja, and Nigerians will be hailing me and declaring that my time has come.

    “If nobody comes to question me, that will be really sad.”

    He urged Nigerians to key into the anti-corruption crusade of President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration by asking questions, especially if public servants become rich overnight.

     

     

     

  • Screening only judges for corruption trials not enough

    SIR: The recent decision by President Buhari setting up a committee headed by Prof Sagay to screen Judges who will handle trials of corruption related cases across the states is a welcome development. It accords with the spirit and letters behind the enactment by the 7th National Assembly session of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act, 2015 which was signed into law on 13th day of May, 2015 by President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, GCFR.

    Like the purpose for which the Act was enacted, part of President Buhari’s principal motive for setting up the Sagay body is to identify incorruptible judges across the nation, to ensure that the system of administration of criminal justice touching corruption trials in Nigeria promotes efficient proper management and speedy trials of corruption cases in the system. It is also to protect society from the influences of those already infested with the corruption virus.

    As laudable as this idea may be, it appears the president must have left out two very crucial steps that he should address promptly before corruption cases get to the trial level for the incorruptible Judges to handle.

    No matter how incorruptible a judge is, what determines his sense of justice, firmness and indeed incorruptibility to pass a firm judgment against the corrupt public officers depends largely on the effectiveness and investigation done by the anti-corruption agencies. It is also dependent on the competence, commitment and honesty of the prosecuting lawyers.

    It is settled law in our criminal Jurisprudence that a judge can only convict or set a suspect free solely on the basis of the quality of evidence produced before him by the prosecution. The incorruptible judge cannot under any guise manufacture evidence or descend to the arena of the trial or conflict if he is to remain detached and independent.

    Therefore, the president must instruct the anti-corruption agencies to firm up their commitments by involving crack investigation operatives to conduct proper investigations before forwarding the investigated cases to prosecutors who also must be experienced lawyers.

    It has to be emphasised that the anti-graft agencies in recent times lost cases due to lack of prior handling as remarked by the courts and these must be promptly addressed. The politicians accused of corruption will try to create soft landing for themselves by penetrating investigators and or prosecutors with much looted money in their hands. Otherwise we should be ready to see those suspected of stealing billions set free by the courts.

     

    • Chief Utum Eteng
  • Ex-minister: Asset declaration ‘ll curb corruption

    Aformer Minister of  State for Finance, Remi Babalola, has said public declaration of assets by public officers will assist President Muhammadu Buhari in his anti-graft war.

    He urged ministers, permanent secretaries, directors-general, and heads of ministries, department and agencies (MDAs) to toe the transparent path of the president and his vice that have publicly declared their assets.

    He also canvassed the forfeiture of 10 per cent of undeclared assets to whistle-blowers, if successfully prosecuted, arguing that this is the only way to curb the alarming rate of corruption in the country.

    He spoke in a paper titled: Achieving the Nigeria of our dream: The responsibility of professional accountants, in Abuja.

    An activist and lawyer,  Chima Ubani, hailed the decision of the president and the vice president to publicly declare their assets, adding that Nigerians are now more convinced that the anti-corruption mantra of president Buhari is real.  He noted that it will discourage corruption in governance, make for transparency in governance, attract foreign direct investment and free funds for infrastructure development which the nation is in dire need of.

    Ubani, who spoke in Lagos, said he had been in the vanguard of campaigning for the declaration of assets by public officers say anybody found to have corruptly enriched himself should be tried by a competent court and jailed if found guilty. He however, observed the need to make the courts more responsive in handling corruption cases to discourage corruption.

    While calling for concerted action by the civil society organisations, professional groups, judiciary, media, labour unions and student unions against corruption, the former minister called attention to the dearth of transparency in the oil sector, especially the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

     

    He regretted that the body has been reduced to importation of refined petroleum products and payment of subsidies to bogus oil marketers, wondering why it is difficult for it to excel like its contemporaries in Brazil, Petrolbras and Malaysia, Petronas.  On how to deal with corruption in NNPC he advised that it should be  compelled to publish its audited accounts and quarterly statements like all listed companies on the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE).

    “Our culture of impunity is the bane of the entrenched corruption in our society. The value destruction and corruption undermine any economic development or social change we may aspire for our nation. Mismanagement and misallocation of resources, coupled with an unprecedented level of corruption have been at their highest in the history of our nation in the last six years. Performance or success in public space was measured by the conversion rate of public funds into private accounts”.

    On the recent Federal Government’s bailout for the states, Babalola said notwithstanding the importance of the gesture it may impose a moral hazard on the states to continue with financial recklessness leading to financial insolvency. It should have been done in line with Section 41 of the Fiscal Responsibility Act, he added. He stressed that the nation should have learnt from the Greece example by treating each state as a separate entity with peculiar conditionalities in addition to involving the relevant professional bodies as advisers.

    He called for more financial prudence and disclosure by professional accountants, while urging professional accountants to be discipline, knowledge, ethics and integrity in their practice at all times.

  • Corruption: a Daniel has come to judgement

    It is said that only fools rush in where angels will normally be afraid to tread. Trampling and unusual haste actually is the forte of fools; the unserious minded and those who do not have the grit and the needed deep understanding of the situation to engage it successfully.

    The dynamics of corruption in Nigeria is such that it has exhibited very complex and multifaceted dimensions. It has become the established order and thus occupies the driving seat in our governing processes and institutions. Currently, it is the master of our national life and our nuances and body language unfortunately revolve around its dictates and precepts as its traditions have taken almost 45 years of our nearly 55 years of existence as an independent nation.

    Anyone therefore seriously thinking about engaging it talk less of blunting its sharp edges must first of all sit down and understudy its peculiar dynamics and specificities, then, it must craft a general strategy that must be holistic, wide and inclusive and finally assemble the needed resources especially the human resources that are very crucial to executing the designed and accepted strategy. This will definitely take time.

    As we already know, it is estimated that since 1999, corruption alone has rubbished the nearly $1trillion only Oil and Gas revenue that accrued to this nation. This sum excludes revenue from other equally huge sources including internally generated revenue both at the federal and at the state levels. The overall picture of the revenue profile is huge but when viewed against the backdrop of yearly appropriation and the budget effectiveness, the gap noticed is mind boggling. This gap manifesting as the various manifestations of underdevelopment-diseases, poverty, deprivation, poor infrastructure etc bears the monument of the pervasiveness of the corruption in the nation.

    When one then considers the depth of this monster, it becomes immediately understandable that for any serious government that is desirous of denting this evil and stopping this monster in its tracks, it must do a thorough internal job first before ever declaring a battle with it. This is the only way it can win and this is the only sign that the leadership is indeed serious about dealing with corruption. That is why we are sure that the federal government is taken the right step and is serious in its quests to wrest the nation from the stranglehold of corruption. If we are in the shoes of those thriving in corruption, we would see this calmness as a dangerous signal. We should not forget the fabled calm before the storm. It would be a serious warning that something is about to explode. Mario Puzo in the Godfather is of the opinion that the best way to deal with your enemy is to bring him closer to you. Corruption and those driving it are the enemies of this nation so the President has strategically drawn some of its drivers closer allowing them to be lulled into sleep so that when the blow descends, it will be most effective.

    We have decided to comment on this issue because some Nigerians are rather in a haste to get the anti-corruption war going visibly in the glare of the public. This is understandable given the fact that the victory of the present APC-led government at the centre under the leadership of President Muhammadu Buhari was the clear expression of the total distaste and disgust with which Nigerians have come to view corruption and has seen it as being at the core of the numerous manifestations of underdevelopment in the country. That historical victory is therefore an urgent cry by Nigerians for something to be done about corruption before it destroys the nation.

    Our belief is that it is the understanding of this demand and the unquestioning and unwavering commitment to this battle that has forced the President to carefully take his time to embark on all needful processes that will ensure that his government succeeds on this singular mission. This is what some people have misinterpreted as being too slow. Our dear President is simply being cautious and dotting all the Is and crossing the Ts.

    Nigerians should therefore see this as a good omen and a sign that this battle against corruption will be rigorously pursued and determinedly overcome.  We understand the haste having all experienced all these years the excruciating difficulties and deprivation which were corruption induced but if we do not have patience now, we shall be like the proverbial tortoise that had spent years in a toilet pit but when help finally came and they were about to bring him out that day, he became impatient and shouted that his rescuers should do quick and bring him out that the stench from the pit had become unbearable.

    A Daniel has come to judgment and all that is needed is for all of us to exercise patience and be vigilant so that the political jobbers whose interest it is to scuttle this effort will not succeed. It is important that we be reminded that most of the work being done now ought not to be in the public domain and should not be trumpeted to avoid compromising it and making it less effective when they are rolled out. This is the gestation period and the work is hidden and internal and should be understood as such.

    Knowing the criticality of this period, we have to encourage the federal government to take its time and do a very good work. Adequate planning ensures greater chances of success than when we are in a hurry to execute a project. Failure to plan they say is planning to fail. We must take it one steady and sure step at a time as they also say “slow and steady wins the race” The time of planting is always a difficult time but when the harvest comes, joy comes. Let us wait patiently for the harvest.

    The only way we can destroy corruption in Nigeria is to weigh and sift all our strategies before attacking it headlong before we miss it. Nigerians should protect the mandate which they have given to the President from the hands of those who wants the anti-corruption drive to fail. Buhari’s mandate is not just the Presidency but the promise of delivering Nigerians from the evil clutches of corruption. We must therefore not allow those trying to stampede the president into taking hasty steps which will guarantee a distortion and weakening of the battle to succeed.

    Our duty is to remain vigilant and remove every psychological impediments and propaganda being waged by this most corrupt segment of the Nigerian society and their hirelings who have resorted to waging media wars against the presidency. The falsehood behind the statement that the President is too slow can then be easily seen as a cover for these persons to thwart our collective and genuine drive to rid this nation of corruption. The authorship of the “go slow” allegation can only but easily be attributed to those driven by evil and the unholy desire to see corruption not stamped out of our body polity.

    The setting up of the Itse Sagay Committee is therefore one of those signs that the Presidency is almost concluding its plans and template for the execution of this battle and deliver on this promise to the citizenry. We commend the president and assure him that he has shown serious leadership thus far in this battle against corruption and should not allow anything to distract him from this onerous responsibility.

    This President is committed to this battle and Nigerians should support him and interrogate those who are shouting that he is “Going slowly”. What we want is victory against corruption and not unnecessary hurry that would help the corrupt cover up their tracks. Layer by layer, grid by grid, stealth by stealth shall we win against corruption!

    • Olumuyiwa Wahab Jimoh is the Deputy Majority Leader of the Lagos state House of Assembly.
  • Justice, beliefs and corruption

    The  news  that an American  Court  Clerk  who  has refused to marry gay couples  according to the new US law  that  gay  couples  can now marry has  raised  the issue  of morality, justice  and beliefs in the world we live in today.  At  a time  when  ISIS  is  beheading people and advocating a borderless caliphate globally one  cannot but  tremble at the  way religion  and  modern culture are  moving  in the direction  of a clash of civilisations and values.

    In   consonance  with  this   concern two  problems in Nigeria and the  European  Union –[ EU] an the   proposed  solutions to them engage  our attention and analysis today. The  first  is the very  interesting solution for    fighting  corruption  reportedly  prescribed  by the former  Catholic  Archbishop of Lagos Cardinal Olubunmi  Okogie in which he said that once looters  have admitted their crime they should not  be tried publicly as  both lawyers  and judges  will  have a field day in taking their  share  of the loot one way  or the other. The  second event  was  the decision of the EU    to accept  to take 200000 migrants instead  of sending them back  to their  nations  from which they have   fled  to seek refuge in Europe.

    These  four events namely the refusal  to marry gay couples  by the Court Clerk; ISIS  bloody  and  murderous pursuit of a global, borderless caliphate; Cardinal  Okogie’s interesting panacea  for fighting corruption in  Nigeria and the EU’s  mercy  on fleeing migrants  from the Middle  East  throw  up  serious  concerns  and issues on justice , beliefs  and corruption not only  in Nigeria but globally  and that is our focus  today.

    Starting with the American Court Clerk who refused to marry gay couples  her excuse was that the  US Supreme  Court judgement allowing gay couples to marry clashes  with her beliefs  as a born again Christian. Ostensibly in  refusing  to marry gay couples  she has broken the law albeit a new one but a law  applauded by no less a person  than the US President  Barak  Obama who sees the passing of the new law on gay marriage as a major  accomplishment  of his presidency. To  the rest  of the world however especially  Christians and Muslims in Africa , the gay  marriage issue and the US Supreme Court decision  places a huge question mark on human  morality as perceived  by  the US. It  puts  God’s own country as the Americans are wont  to call their  nation on the same pedestal as a part  of India where it was reported this week that elders  have decided that a woman who  married below  her  caste  must  be gang raped  as punishment. This  is as bizarre to Africans whether Christian or Muslim as the jailing of a Court Clerk  in the US for  refusing to marry  gay couples because  of her belief in a US where  there is freedom  of  religion. This  is therefore  a definite case  of  a clash between  the law , morality  and religion and I   am  sure  that we have  not heard  the last word on this  case. I expect the Clerk to appeal  the sentence  all the way to the US Supreme Court for that august court to decide on whether religious freedom is on a lower or higher pedestal than gay rights or marriage. Definitely  the civilized world  outside the US whose motto  is In God  we  trust is watching the evolution and direction  of  US civilization over the jailing of   a court  official who refused to marry gay couples because  of her beliefs.

    There  is no need to comment  on ISIS borderless caliphate at length because  its notion and execution are against  all  human values  and culture given the way it  has been beheading human beings on satellite TV in recent times . Obviously ISIS and  its Nigerian counterpart   Boko  Haram have to be defeated and  annihilated in any part  of the world  where they carry  out their nefarious activities  for global peace  and harmony  to overcome the horror  and contemplation of the killing fields of their  proposed, borderless  caliphates.

    We  go  next to Cardinal  Okogie’s  original  prescription to  collect  looted  funds  from our  powerful  treasury  looters. According to the proffered  solution which I will  call the Okogie Solution  to corruption there is no  need  for publicity  or  prosecution once   the crook  has admitted his crime and is ready to return the loot. This is because part  of the loot  may  be frittered away in lawyers  fees and cuddling of dubious  judges who  the lawyers will lure  to give favorable judgements or frivolous adjournments  that will  make justice expensive in terms of time and state expenditure  to recover the stolen funds. I agree  to a large extent to this recipe which is distinctly Nigerian in its creativity.  I  however disagree  with the lack  of publicity option in the Okogie  Solution. This  is because publicity for  looting will  create the desired  stigma for  looters and that in itself will  be a punishment for looters as well as a deterrent for  present and aspiring  looters at  large.  Anyway  I do not think the Okogie prescription will  be popular  with lawyers and I wonder  what the reaction of the Nigerian  Bar  Association will  be to it as well as  that of National  Judicial  Institute.

    Lastly there is need to commend the  EU for accepting to take on the migrants from the Middle  East  who  have besieged  Europe  while fleeing the  war  in  Syria. It  is easy  to blame EU  governments and even  the US  for not doing enough to dislodge Syria’s  President  Assad  and to accuse the EU  of  mass sovereign compunction  over the matter.  But  the stark  fact is that the  refugees  are not wanted  by some EU nations and the Prime  Minister of  Hungary  stated that  bluntly  by asking   them on satellite TV not to come to Europe  but  to stay in Turkey  which  he said is a safe  nation. One  can also agree  with  some  analysts who  say that the EU’s  aging population needs the immigrants  who  are mainly  young people and would be economically productive in the short  and long run.  But  then the immigrants  are mostly Muslims and the fear of Islamic  militancy rearing its head once the refugees have been accommodated and integrated is a real and nagging  security  concern for  the EU nations.

    For  now   however the EU  has shown the  Christian  virtue or simply a religious  act  of mercy which  clearly shows  that Europe is Christian  although its stride toward gay marriages in even Catholic nations like Ireland  seem  to belie its respect  for Christian  values. It  was a good spectacle  seeing EU leaders  showing concern and increasing their budgetary  allocation to take care of the fleeing migrants who wanted England and Germany by all means and at grave dangers to their lives and families . It  showed  that the world has become  an interdependent, community  of  humanity and rights  and values  must  show humanity and respect for each  others way  of life to avert the looming clash  of civilization over issues  like gay  rights  and marriages.

  • Fight corruption in construction industry’

    Members of the Southwest chapter of the National Association of Quantity Surveying Students (NAQSS) have urged President Muhammadu Buhari to fight graft in the construction industry.

    They made the call at the end of the association’s congress at The Polytechnic, Ibadan (IBADAN POLY).

    In a statement signed by their President, Eniola Ayodele, and other officers of the association, the students hailed the Nigerian Institute of Quantity Surveyors (NIQS) for its effort to protect the ethical standards in industry.

    The statement reads: “It is imperative that quantity surveyors are engaged to monitor implementation of contracts from the procurement stage to the completion stage in the ministries and agencies if the government must fight corruption in building industry. This is why we call on President Muhammadu Buhari to engage building professionals in the fight against corruption in the construction industry.”

    The students urged quantity surveyors to stem the rate of building collapse in the country, lamenting that lives were being lost through the incidents. The association said it was concerned about the state of infrastructure and cases of abandoned projects.

    The students expressed displeasure on what they called poor standard in  quantity surveying teaching in higher institutions, saying students must be equipped with practical knowledge and research.

    The statement added: “We call for review of curriculum used in teaching quantity surveying in higher institution. Teaching must focus on building manpower for construction industry using innovation and modern, tools that will enhance prestige of the profession. It is important quantity surveying students are given the opportunity to engage and compete favourably with their counterparts worldwide. We, therefore, demand change of syllabus and access to grants to aid research works that will benefit students and lecturers.”

  • Attacks on Buhari’s war against corruption – The case of Nwabueze

    Attacks on Buhari’s war against corruption – The case of Nwabueze

    Last week’s piece on Bishop Mathew Hassan Kukah’s objections to President Muhammadu Buhari’s declared war on corruption during Dr. Goodluck Jonathan’s presidency, has elicited by far the largest number of reactions to this column so far this year – 84 texts and three emails in all. Out of the 84 texts, only three vehemently disagreed with my criticism of the bishop. Another six or so shared my view, but disagreed with my hunch that religion had much to do with the bishop’s position. The rest were critical of him with no caveats.

    I think the number of the readers’ reactions alone suggests that most Nigerians, regardless of religion or tribe, consider the fight against corruption the country’s topmost priority. If my guess is right, Professor Ben Nwabueze must then belong to a minority who think otherwise. For the professor, religion, specifically Islam, and not corruption, poses the greatest threat to Nigeria’s peace and progress.

    In an over 3,300-word interview in The PUNCH of August 9 he said so categorically. Asked by the newspaper if he agreed with the widespread public opinion that corruption posed the biggest challenge the country faces, he said no. Corruption, he said, was only “the second biggest.”

    The first, he said, “is the crisis arising from the religious divide. That is the first and the most terrible. After that comes corruption. All other things are subsidiaries.”

    Our Constitution, he said, contained two contradictory ideologies, one favoured by Christianity and the other by Islam. The ideology preferred by Christianity, he said, is democracy, whereas that preferred by Islam which is based on Sharia or Islamic Law “favours theocracy and other forms of dictatorial rule.”

    The conflict between these two ideologies, he said, has landed the country in the middle of a big crisis which, he said in effect, Buhari is incapable of resolving in favour of democracy because he is an agent of Islamic theocracy.

    “He,” the professor said, “has many restraints; he has many constraints. He is not a free agent. Whatever may be his personal characteristics, he is not a free agent. HE WAS CHOSEN AS THE APC’S (ALL PROGRESSIVES CONGRESS’) PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE AT THE PRIMARY FOR A PURPOSE; TO TRY TO IMPLEMENT AN AGENDA. I WON’T GO ANY FURTHER. His ability, his capacity to fight corruption decisively is constrained and restrained by some factors, mostly religious.” (Emphasis mine).

    As a professor, especially of law and, for that matter, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Nwabueze should know better than reach a verdict based on conjecture rather than facts. Clearly, however, his barely disguised conclusion that Buhari was elected the presidential candidate of APC to impose an Islamic theocracy on Nigeria is without any basis in fact.

    No doubt religion is important to Nigerians as a means of identity. A survey in the country ahead of the April 21, 2007 presidential elections by the American Pew Research Centre titled “Nigeria’s Presidential Election: The Christian-Muslim Divide” suggested that the vast majority of its people regarded religion as more important for their identity than their nationality, ethnicity and continent.  Among Christians the percentage was 76 for religion as against nine for nationality, six for ethnicity and eight for the continent. For Muslims the percentages were 91, five, zero and three.

    The same survey, however, showed that both groups favoured democracy over any other form of government. Among Christians the percentage of those who said free and fair elections with a choice of at least two political parties were “somewhat or very important” was 86 as against 13 who said it was “not too or not at all important.” The percentages for Muslims were 93 and four.

    It’s been eight years and two presidential elections since Pew’s survey. However, given the enthusiasm with which Nigerians have participated in those elections, it is very clear that they have not changed their minds about their preference for democracy whatever their religion.

    That enthusiasm alone must make one wonder on what basis our learned professor reached his verdict that Nigeria faces a greater danger from our religious differences than from corruption.

    In his interview, Nwabueze at first says he would not spell out the powers constraining Buhari from fighting corruption and propelling him to impose Islamic theocracy on Nigeria. “I won’t,” he said, “go any further” in naming Buhari’s puppeteers.

    Over halfway through the interview, however, he went ahead all the same to name two. The first, he says, is “the invisible government of Nigeria” whose existence is known to only a few. The other, he says, is “a group of die-hard Islamists determined to impose Islamic (Sharia) system of government on Nigeria.”

    The first group, he claimed, is led by former military president, General Ibrahim Babangida and former head of state, General Abdulsalami Abubakar. The group, he added, has been strengthened by former president, Olusegun Obasanjo, who has since left the erstwhile ruling Peoples Democratic Party.

    He named no names in his group of “die-hard Islamists,” but elsewhere in the interview he did say Boko Haram was a manifestation of the group as the local wing of global jihadists.

    Conspiracy theories come at dozens a kobo. However, the professor’s theories of an “invisible government” led by Babangida dictating policies and programmes to President Buhari, and of the leadership of Boko Haram sect as yet another godfather of Buhari, must rank as one of the cheapest form of demagoguery. Certainly it ranks as the most laughable because it is no more than an attempt by an otherwise brilliant scholar to elevate beer-parlour gossip to the level of serious scholarship.

    Actually it is worse than laughable because even in beer parlours it would be hard to find anyone who does not know that there has really never been any love lost between Buhari and Babangida since the latter overthrew the former as head of state in August 1985 in a bloodless palace coup. In any case, if the professor’s invisible government truly existed and Babangida was its patriarch, how come he couldn’t even fulfil his proverbial wish to step back in to power since the return of democracy in 1999?

    As for General Abdulsalami being a chieftain of Nwabueze’s invisible government, anyone who has followed the man’s military career would testify to the fact that a more apolitical person is hard to find. And only the most credulous person would believe the professor’s claim that Obasanjo, with his huge ego, would play second fiddle to anyone in any group in this country.

    In his over 3,000-word, two-part essay published by The Guardian last month which he claimed to be the position of Igbo Leaders of Thought – I have my doubts about his claim because associations of people don’t go announcing their positions through longish essays – he said the group objected to Buhari limiting his probe of corruption to Jonathan’s presidency alone because that would be selective and cannot put an end to the vice.

    The professor is obviously right to say that fighting corruption under Jonathan alone is selective. However, he is wrong to argue that the fight will succeed only if it includes corruption under Jonathan’s predecessors all the way back to 1985 under Babangida.

    His assumption here is obvious; it is possible to eliminate corruption. That assumption is patently false. As long as there is human society there will be corruption. What is important, however, is to have a system that makes corruption difficult and also punishes the corrupt whenever he is found out. In Nigeria’s history, no administration has made it so easy to steal with so much impunity as Jonathan’s. Such was the impunity that he could not even rely on his men – and women – not to steal the money meant for his election victory, an impunity which resulted in an incumbent losing an election at the national level for the first time in the history of this country.

    Because it is not possible to end corruption, the fight against it must never fall into the danger of allowing perfection to be the enemy of the good. Fighting all corrupt cases simultaneously is perfect but even our professor cannot deny that starting with the most obvious case is a good start. Nor can he deny that Jonathan’s presidency holds the gold medal in the race for self-aggrandisement because, as he himself said in The PUNCH interview in question, corruption today has assumed “buccaneering” proportions.

    At 84, Professor Nwabueze should be concerned about his legacies. Some of the most notable ones among these are hardly what his children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren can be proud of. Among these is the Unification Decree of 1966 which he was a principal author of and which eventually led to our civil war. Another one he masterminded was the decree which established the Interim National Government under Chief Ernest Shonekan in 1993 which, in turn, paved the way for the venal dictatorship of General Sani Abacha.

    In between the two decrees he became – and continues to be – a leading advocate of Nigeria as a federation of ethnic nationalities, a most reactionary idea you can think of in a world that has since become a global village and where the wealthiest countries are melting pots of diverse creeds and cultures instead of patchworks of their constituent parts.

    Let it not, in addition, be said of him that here was a man who used his brilliance to try and scuttle the first attempt by any administration in this country to seriously fight corruption.

    Note

    I am sorry I am unable to reproduce the reactions to the last two pieces today as I promised last week due to space constraint. Next week, God willing, I’ll devote the entire column to some of the reactions.