As Buhari Fights Corruption Without a Strategy, By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu
…President Buhari’s much-advertised fight against corruption is officially in disarray. The real problem is that, clearly incapable of fighting the ailment, the administration has chosen to fight its symptoms with the wrong prescriptions. Corruption of the Nigerian hue is a crime against a common patrimony in search of a people or of the shared values to underpin nationhood.
President Buhari’s much-advertised fight against corruption has degenerated into a demolition derby. As happened with many previous efforts to fight corruption in Nigeria, different outposts of power and influence in the president’s coterie appear determined to use anti-corruption as a cover to settle intra-palace scores.
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), headed by an acting chairman, is pursuing the prosecution of the president of the Senate before the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT). While those proceedings pend, the Senate, whose president is accused of corruption by the EFCC, has declined confirmation of the acting chairman of the EFCC citing a report by the State Security Service (SSS), which accuses the nominee of abuse of power and of human rights. These allegations of human rights abuse against the EFCC’s acting chairman are made without any hint of irony by an SSS that has earned a dismal reputation for respecting only court orders that it likes or in favour of only those it approves of. Meanwhile, the judiciary, many of whose senior-most officers have become objects of ridicule at the instance of the EFCC and the SSS, must somehow bring itself to arbitrate with a straight face the winners and losers in this squalid mess.
To some, this report card is evidence that there are no sacred cows in this “fight” against corruption. It is indeed easy to mistake injury for progress when the goals are unclear and a strategy is non-existent. There surely is a fight but it is increasingly difficult to sustain the idea that it is President Buhari’s fight or indeed a fight for the interest of Nigerians.
To be sure, this is not the first time an administration will be up-ended by those supposed to implement its proclaimed commitment to fighting corruption. In 1970, General Yakubu Gowon declared that he would “eradicate corruption” from Nigeria within six years. It was an impossible mission proclaimed with the starry-eyed certitude of a 35 year old intoxicated with power unmitigated by experience. Four years later, Godwin Daboh, instigated, it was suspected, by then Governor of Benue-Plateau State, Joseph Gomwalk, published an affidavit listing sundry allegations of corruption against Gowon’s Communications Minister, Joseph Tarka. Gowon’s indecisiveness turbo-charged the allegations. By the time Tarka was eventually forced to resign, Gowon’s commitment to fighting corruption looked terminally hypocritical. Less than one year later, Murtala Mohammed intervened to put the Gowon regime out of its misery.
President Buhari is no stranger to proclaiming anti-corruption wars. His earlier incarnation as Nigeria’s Head of State in 1984-85 is remembered for his War Against Indiscipline (WAI). Then, as now, the effort was defined essentially by its preoccupation with the arrest, detention or imprisonment of mostly high level public officers accused or suspected of involvement in corrupt enrichment. In the pursuit of that objective, due process was regarded as an inconvenient obstacle, largely to be disregarded. Then, however, he had the cover of military rule. As civilian president, he is naked before politicians and process and the sight is not pretty.
With a mind-set that appears to confuse drama with output, much of the anti-corruption campaign of the administration has lacked a clear diagnosis, coherent principles or an over-arching strategy. Every step is judged on a whim. When the State Security Service (SSS) went after some senior judges at the beginning of October 2016, many were ecstatic. Now that the Senate has relied on a report purportedly issued by the same SSS to decline confirmation of the administration’s nominee to head the EFCC, the same voices that saw virtue in the SSS now see vice in the decision of the Senate.
In the absence of a shared sense of ownership of the Nigerian nation-space, most of those with the opportunity set upon what should be our common patrimony. What we call corruption is in fact competitive asset stripping of the country.
The effort to develop an anti-corruption strategy within the administration has itself been stymied by inter-agency rivalry and not much helped by what – to sound charitable – could be described as the reluctance of the office of the Attorney-General of the Federation to co-operate entirely with the process. Much of the resulting injury on the credibility of the Buhari administration’s anti-corruption fight has been almost entirely self-inflicted.
The stock response from the administration is “corruption fights back”. Sadly, this is a confession of mental laziness and strategic vacuousness. Corruption is a crime. Conviction for it results not merely in jail time but also, for those involved in politics or public life, the end of all ambition. As a matter of law, they are entitled to defend themselves. As a matter of self-interest, they will fight to stay politically relevant. Those who seek accountability for allegations of corruption must surely anticipate that they will be fought. It is not too much to ask them to show up with a plan and to work hard to cultivate allies too. The administration appears to sound as if it expects those accused of corruption to walk to jail meekly and forever show gratitude for being called corrupt.
This is why President Buhari’s much-advertised fight against corruption is officially in disarray. The real problem is that, clearly incapable of fighting the ailment, the administration has chosen to fight its symptoms with the wrong prescriptions. Corruption of the Nigerian hue is a crime against a common patrimony in search of a people or of the shared values to underpin nationhood. Ayo Sogunro comes closest to a credible diagnostic when he recently argued: “[w]ithout social equality there can be no social justice. And without social justice, corruption and patronage will continue to flourish.” In the absence of a shared sense of ownership of the Nigerian nation-space, most of those with the opportunity set upon what should be our common patrimony. What we call corruption is in fact competitive asset stripping of the country.
The answer to this may well involve some prosecutions and convictions. But first, it must begin with a different kind of leadership that gives every part of Nigeria and every Nigerian a shared sense of co-ownership of the country and reassurance that they belong. Second, it must prioritise prevention, institution-building and processes whose effectiveness don’t depend on notions of proximity to the president, his pillow-mates or their confidants. Third, it must be undergirded by competent economic management, with a clear plan to invest in social goods, including education, human wellbeing and basic healthcare. President Buhari has proved dis-interested in undertaking the first; indifferent to creating the second; and entirely befuddled by challenge of the third. The fate of his preferred preoccupation with arrest and detention was, therefore, always predictable. The only surprise is that it has taken this long to become this evident.
Chidi Anselm Odinkalu, a member of the National Executive Committee of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), writes in his personal capacity.
- Mr. Abdin
- nikoroorire
- Abdullahi Abba Bukar
- Intrepid
- Papashango77
- anneedu
- Aisha Mammud
- Aisha Mammud
- Aisha Mammud
- BABUYANMA
…President Buhari’s much-advertised fight against corruption is officially in disarray. The real problem is that, clearly incapable of fighting the ailment, the administration has chosen to fight its symptoms with the wrong prescriptions. Corruption of the Nigerian hue is a crime against a common patrimony in search of a people or of the shared values to underpin nationhood.
President Buhari’s much-advertised fight against corruption has degenerated into a demolition derby. As happened with many previous efforts to fight corruption in Nigeria, different outposts of power and influence in the president’s coterie appear determined to use anti-corruption as a cover to settle intra-palace scores.
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), headed by an acting chairman, is pursuing the prosecution of the president of the Senate before the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT). While those proceedings pend, the Senate, whose president is accused of corruption by the EFCC, has declined confirmation of the acting chairman of the EFCC citing a report by the State Security Service (SSS), which accuses the nominee of abuse of power and of human rights. These allegations of human rights abuse against the EFCC’s acting chairman are made without any hint of irony by an SSS that has earned a dismal reputation for respecting only court orders that it likes or in favour of only those it approves of. Meanwhile, the judiciary, many of whose senior-most officers have become objects of ridicule at the instance of the EFCC and the SSS, must somehow bring itself to arbitrate with a straight face the winners and losers in this squalid mess.
To some, this report card is evidence that there are no sacred cows in this “fight” against corruption. It is indeed easy to mistake injury for progress when the goals are unclear and a strategy is non-existent. There surely is a fight but it is increasingly difficult to sustain the idea that it is President Buhari’s fight or indeed a fight for the interest of Nigerians.
To be sure, this is not the first time an administration will be up-ended by those supposed to implement its proclaimed commitment to fighting corruption. In 1970, General Yakubu Gowon declared that he would “eradicate corruption” from Nigeria within six years. It was an impossible mission proclaimed with the starry-eyed certitude of a 35 year old intoxicated with power unmitigated by experience. Four years later, Godwin Daboh, instigated, it was suspected, by then Governor of Benue-Plateau State, Joseph Gomwalk, published an affidavit listing sundry allegations of corruption against Gowon’s Communications Minister, Joseph Tarka. Gowon’s indecisiveness turbo-charged the allegations. By the time Tarka was eventually forced to resign, Gowon’s commitment to fighting corruption looked terminally hypocritical. Less than one year later, Murtala Mohammed intervened to put the Gowon regime out of its misery.
President Buhari is no stranger to proclaiming anti-corruption wars. His earlier incarnation as Nigeria’s Head of State in 1984-85 is remembered for his War Against Indiscipline (WAI). Then, as now, the effort was defined essentially by its preoccupation with the arrest, detention or imprisonment of mostly high level public officers accused or suspected of involvement in corrupt enrichment. In the pursuit of that objective, due process was regarded as an inconvenient obstacle, largely to be disregarded. Then, however, he had the cover of military rule. As civilian president, he is naked before politicians and process and the sight is not pretty.
With a mind-set that appears to confuse drama with output, much of the anti-corruption campaign of the administration has lacked a clear diagnosis, coherent principles or an over-arching strategy. Every step is judged on a whim. When the State Security Service (SSS) went after some senior judges at the beginning of October 2016, many were ecstatic. Now that the Senate has relied on a report purportedly issued by the same SSS to decline confirmation of the administration’s nominee to head the EFCC, the same voices that saw virtue in the SSS now see vice in the decision of the Senate.
In the absence of a shared sense of ownership of the Nigerian nation-space, most of those with the opportunity set upon what should be our common patrimony. What we call corruption is in fact competitive asset stripping of the country.
The effort to develop an anti-corruption strategy within the administration has itself been stymied by inter-agency rivalry and not much helped by what – to sound charitable – could be described as the reluctance of the office of the Attorney-General of the Federation to co-operate entirely with the process. Much of the resulting injury on the credibility of the Buhari administration’s anti-corruption fight has been almost entirely self-inflicted.
The stock response from the administration is “corruption fights back”. Sadly, this is a confession of mental laziness and strategic vacuousness. Corruption is a crime. Conviction for it results not merely in jail time but also, for those involved in politics or public life, the end of all ambition. As a matter of law, they are entitled to defend themselves. As a matter of self-interest, they will fight to stay politically relevant. Those who seek accountability for allegations of corruption must surely anticipate that they will be fought. It is not too much to ask them to show up with a plan and to work hard to cultivate allies too. The administration appears to sound as if it expects those accused of corruption to walk to jail meekly and forever show gratitude for being called corrupt.
This is why President Buhari’s much-advertised fight against corruption is officially in disarray. The real problem is that, clearly incapable of fighting the ailment, the administration has chosen to fight its symptoms with the wrong prescriptions. Corruption of the Nigerian hue is a crime against a common patrimony in search of a people or of the shared values to underpin nationhood. Ayo Sogunro comes closest to a credible diagnostic when he recently argued: “[w]ithout social equality there can be no social justice. And without social justice, corruption and patronage will continue to flourish.” In the absence of a shared sense of ownership of the Nigerian nation-space, most of those with the opportunity set upon what should be our common patrimony. What we call corruption is in fact competitive asset stripping of the country.
The answer to this may well involve some prosecutions and convictions. But first, it must begin with a different kind of leadership that gives every part of Nigeria and every Nigerian a shared sense of co-ownership of the country and reassurance that they belong. Second, it must prioritise prevention, institution-building and processes whose effectiveness don’t depend on notions of proximity to the president, his pillow-mates or their confidants. Third, it must be undergirded by competent economic management, with a clear plan to invest in social goods, including education, human wellbeing and basic healthcare. President Buhari has proved dis-interested in undertaking the first; indifferent to creating the second; and entirely befuddled by challenge of the third. The fate of his preferred preoccupation with arrest and detention was, therefore, always predictable. The only surprise is that it has taken this long to become this evident.
Chidi Anselm Odinkalu, a member of the National Executive Committee of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), writes in his personal capacity.
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Mr. Abdin
Business at work.
koyan
IBB: Nigeria under Jonathan is in safe hands—IF you mean
well for Nigeria support jonathan. IBB
Former President Ibrahim Babangida
has said that Nigeria under president Goodluck Jonathan is in safe hands.
He stated this on Tuesday when he
played host to Jonathan and his campaign entourage in Minna. The former
military leader said Jonathan was a leader who would continue with the dreams
of the country’s founding fathers.
READ HIS FULL SPEECH BELOW
The Former Chairman who is now the
Director-General of Namadi Sambo and Goodluck Jonathan Campaign Team, the deputy
chairman, distinguished ladies and gentlemen.
My Governor, the chief servant. Mr President, I want
to thank you most sincerely for finding time amongst your crowded programme to
pay me a visit.
I feel deeply touched Mr. President
because on your own, you travelled to Germany to see me just coming out from
hospital after a gruesome nine-hour operation on my back and tummy, I felt
deeply touched by your kind presence.
Then when I struggled and traveled
back to Nigeria, you found time to also visit and see how I was doing. I thank
you Mr President and I want to tell you that I appreciate that very kindness.
You have also made a very good
decision to visit me during your campaign tour because Minna is known for
producing Presidents. Either from your name sake, Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe who
was born in Zungeru, not very far away from here.
Since then all the Presidents that
this country has produced have got one thing or the other to do with Minna.
They do come to us for blessing and today I will offer this blessing to you.
The house has played host to quite a
number of activities in the past. When we were doing nocturnal activities to
get PDP on track, we also played that role here in this house.. but we
were doing it in the night because we didn’t want to be caught.
Ahmadu Ali will also bear witness
that this was so during the NRC and SDP days, so this is a peculiar and
particular turf and myself and the family are very proud that we were able to
play the little role we could in this.
I want to commend the party and the
party leadership for being very strong and one of the good things that this
party has done, Mr Chairman of the party, is that our vision about the
formation of two parties is good for this country.
I have seen in PDP a party or
organisation that is devoid of religion, ethnicity and so on and this is
something we prayed for and you are showing the lead and I want that to
continue.
If others are breaking up, you must remain strong and I
think that is how it should be.
I’m glad you backed the President,
back him strongly. The passion which the President has got, I share a common
passion with him. That passion is making sure that Nigeria stays peaceful,
stable, developed and transformed.
It is a passion in Mr President that
anytime I see you, talk to you, I come out with the impression of a very young
man who has passion for this country.
I wish you well on this and I want
to assure all of you that Nigeria under Jonathan, we are in safe hands.
Once more Mr President, Mr Chairman,
Mr Vice President, all the distinguished friends, I want to thank you for
finding time to be with us. Thank you so much.
nikoroorire
Ohaneze Ndigbo, thanks for your endorsement of Jonathan for a second term, but when are we expecting an Igbo President of Nigeria-Food for thought ?
Dan
They cannot eat their cake and have it. The south-east have now produce their president in the name of Ebele Azikiwe. After the north it will go back to the south-west and then south-south before another Ebele in the south-east, that is 24 years time to come; it is as simple as that.
Abdullahi Abba Bukar
I want to believe that Ohanaeze Ndigbo get it wrong. We should graduate from politics of sectionalism to that of achievement and safety of our lives and properties. And if we are to rate the the present government with rational minds, there will be no reason why people from the Northeast will give GEJ a second time. The common story we hear from the South East is Boko Haram is a thing of the north. Some often say live them to kill themselves, we have no business in that. But it is in record that even Igbos were arrested at Nsuka with arms enroute to Boko Haram. What did GEJ did? Nothing.
Gurian
What is politics of sectionalism? Where were you when the Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF) endorsed Buhari?
Abdullahi Abba Bukar
No right thinking individual or entity will go for someone whose under his leadership a section of people are being kill daily and he or she doesn’t care. Yes he does not even care because his face is constantly smiling.
Intrepid
T. Orji, the neophyte, is not a bright face for NDIIGBO. He has ruined Gods own state.
Papashango77
Ohanaeze is a total failure.Well it is made up of old men with old ideas. Enemies of Nigeria. They can endorse him for all I care but I hope them come out that day to vote him as well. Those who have held this nation hostage God will visit them with fire and brimstones and when that fire start burning they should stand to face the music. 2015 is the year God will suprise all the enemies of our great nation. The yearnings and the aspirations of the suffering masses have been take note of. The time is now!
anneedu
Good they endorse him but it was the same ohanaeze APC was blaming PDP for burning their building
Aisha Mammud
Good decision from the Ohanezes for endorsing Jonathan for the 2015 poll. Nigerians are solidly behind GEJ because he is the best candidate compared to the other strong contenders. Up GEJ! #GEJ4NAija
glo
Nwaokem, why you dey answer hausa name? Are you ashame of your true identify ? Anu ohia!
Aisha Mammud
IBB: Nigeria under Jonathan is in safe hands—IF you mean
well for Nigeria support jonathan. IBB
Former President Ibrahim Babangida
has said that Nigeria under president Goodluck Jonathan is in safe hands.
He stated this on Tuesday when he
played host to Jonathan and his campaign entourage in Minna. The former
military leader said Jonathan was a leader who would continue with the dreams
of the country’s founding fathers.
READ HIS FULL SPEECH BELOW
The Former Chairman who is now the
Director-General of Namadi Sambo and Goodluck Jonathan Campaign Team, the deputy
chairman, distinguished ladies and gentlemen.
My Governor, the chief servant. Mr President, I want
to thank you most sincerely for finding time amongst your crowded programme to
Aisha Mammud
Any one who says Jonathan does not deserve to be our president should see a psychiatrics! Even
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