administration’s seemingly tolerant disposition towards corruption,
President Goodluck Jonathan recently tried to turn the tables against
Nigerians, blaming them for the failure of the anti-graft war. Launching
his offensive at the 54th Annual Conference of the Nigerian Economic
Society in Abuja last week, the President said that corruption had
continued to thrive in the country mainly because his fellow citizens
tended to “reward corrupt practices.”
From the President’s perspective, Nigerians had lost touch with their
traditional values of honesty and hard work, which used to be the
foundation for wealth acquisition. “(If) a young man who just started a
job and, within six months or a year, comes up with a car of N7 million
to N15 million and you clap for him, then you are rewarding corruption,”
he argued, as he tried to persuade Nigerians to share his views. There
is no doubt that the President was spot-on in his observations, but dead
wrong in reinforcing the blame culture.
Certainly, the orgy of recklessness and greed in the country is quite
troubling. Nigerians now worship money and the society no longer asks
questions regarding a person’s source of wealth. Even in glaring cases
of public office holders corruptly enriching themselves, once they
manage to escape into the warm embrace of their kith and kin, they can
be sure of maximum support and protection. A very good example of this
was the case of a former governor of Delta State, James Ibori, whose
arrest by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission officials was
stoutly resisted by gun-totting young men at Oghara, his home town,
shortly before his escape from the country and eventual arrest abroad.
Not willing to be outdone by the youths, elderly women also came out,
bare-chested, to protest the alleged witch-hunt of their son. The same
“innocent” son of Oghara is now serving a 13-year prison term in the
United Kingdom over the same corrupt offences for which his people
attempted to shield him from arrest.
The same thing also happened when a senior civil servant,
Abdulrasheed Maina, who was accused of misappropriating public pension
funds, was asked to come and explain his role at the Senate. Not only
did he refuse to appear before the lawmakers, group after group came out
to stage protests, warning the security agencies against laying a
finger on the suspect. Also following in the same pattern, a former
governor of Bayelsa State, Diepriye Alamieyeseigha, who jumped bail
after his arrest in the United Kingdom for alleged money laundering and
returned to Nigeria, allegedly dressed like a woman, was warmly
celebrated at home for his great escape. These reflect the extent to
which Nigerians are willing to go to “reward corrupt practices.”
But corruption has brought about untold hardship to many Nigerians
and is believed to be responsible for the country’s underdevelopment.
The chair of Transparency International, the global civil society
organisation that fights corruption, Higuette Labelle, says “corruption
remains an enormous drain on resources.” In many cases, resources
allocated to education, health, transport, sports and other critical
areas are misapplied or stolen outright, leading to a fall in the
general quality of life. Corruption in Nigeria is described by Global
Campaign Against Corruption, a rights group, as “a wall-to-wall
phenomenon, blanketing and smouldering every aspect of the country’s
socio-economic life.” It is believed that over $400 billion of the
country’s resources have been lost to corruption in the past 40 years.
The President’s statement, therefore, sounds so appealing to a public
seething at the arrogant flaunting of ill-gotten wealth.
Having made his point, however, it would be wrong for Jonathan to
think that Nigerians are satisfied with that simplistic explanation for
the pervasive nature of corruption in the country. It would amount to
passing the buck for the President to come up with such an excuse and
think he would be applauded. If his observation is that Nigerians are
wallowing in corruption, what has he done about it? Why is he the
President?
The President’s stinging remarks provide a sobering insight into his
leadership style. For leadership to be credible, a report, The Fight
Against Corruption: A World Bank Perspective, says, it must transcend
mere pronouncements or ethical exhortations to combat the evils of
corruption. It needs to be backed by concrete, monitorable and
time-bound actions, to which the country’s leadership is held
accountable.
For a leader that desires the best for his people, what is required
of Jonathan now is not lamentation, but to reposition anti-graft
agencies in the country to rein in the scourge. What Nigerians need to
fall in line is a conviction that the leadership is not accommodating
towards corruption. Jonathan can set this example by publicly declaring
his assets. He should also ensure that those accused of corrupt
practices are not only put on trial, but that their trial is
expeditiously done. Curiously, close to two years after the fuel subsidy
scam came to light, nobody has been conclusively tried and punished. It
is actions such as this that encourage corruption. But, in the fight
against corruption, leadership has to be by example, not by precept.
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