Lest
we forget, like many past government, this administration rode to power on
the back of the promise to fight corruption. It is safe to say though,
that more than any previous administration, the present administration comes
top on the perception that a government will actually fight corruption. For
many Nigerians, the one reason why this government was voted into power was the
belief that corruption which was perceived as the problem ofNigeria shall be
brought to a stop.
President Buhari then General Buhari
was the symbol of this perception. For many who voted for him, he was an
embodiment of integrity, a man capable of doing no evil, an incorruptible
disciplinarian and in their view, was what Nigeria needed
at the time. He was even applauded by many when he claimed he could not afford
the presidential nomination form of his party despite having served as a
military head of state, a key player in another military government adjudged as
most corrupt by both local and international bodies, a former military
governor, a petroleum minister and chairman of the Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF),
an agency that was also alleged of corruption. This was perceived by his
supporters as evidence of his incorruptibility.
Citizens did not care much about the
economy or economic credentials of the then candidate Buhari. People did not
even analyse how feasible it was for the naira to be equal to a dollar and how
it can be achieved and sustained. They just assumed that fighting corruption
was enough to get the economy going. In one of the campaign speeches, in his
perception, blocking the leakages was equal to growing the economy. The
people’s expectations were very high. For once, Nigeria may
be rid of corruption. For the sceptics, only time will tell.
On 12th November 2015, about six
months after the swearing in of this administration, the news of the first
corruption scandal was broken. It was the president’s own party man, Senator
Dino Melaye, who raised the alarm that the TSA policy which the new government
had insisted on implementing may have been fraught with corruption. He alleged
that while the appointment of a collecting agent (REMITA) was unconstitutional,
it was also milking our collective purse. As ministries, departments and
agencies were ordered to shut down their accounts with the banks and remit to
the federation account their revenues, the collecting agency REMITA, already
made 25 billion naira for doing nothing within six months. There was some
uproar but the administration quickly came out to debunk the news calling those
who unravelled it, scandal mongering individuals. In their defence, they were
quick to agree that the idea of implementing a single treasury account was of
the previous administration, implying that whatever may be wrong with it, is
part of the failings of their predecessor. This was despite celebrating the
applause that their implementing the TSA initially generated. The
Senate on her part ordered her specific committee to begin a probe. The names
behind the REMITA agency remained a matter of speculation. The Senate probe
panel findings and report was never brought to light. Today REMITA has come to
stay and whatever commission they earn is still ongoing.
On December 22, 2015, the president
went to the floor of the National Assembly to present a budget to a joint
session of the National Assembly. And was applauded by many including the
Senate president Dr. Bukola Saraki for being the first president in recent
times to have come before the national assembly to present a budget himself.
His immediate predecessor had the minister of finance and coordinating Minister
of the Economy presenting the budget. Also it was the administration’s first
budget since coming to power and for the first time in Nigeria ’s
history, a 6 trillion naira budget was being presented. There was a lot of
enthusiasm on the part of citizens.
But this enthusiasm was soon dampened
with the news that the budget presented by the president to the national
assembly was different from what the MDA’s prepared and presented to the budget
office. The budget has been padded, “Padding” meaning additions to make fatter.
The president was immediately absolved of any blame by his supporters as
expected. But for many, it wasn’t just that such could still happen in an
administration that pride itself as intolerant of corruption, it was about the
response to the discovery of such graft. As it is for most issues, the
president would not even comment on the issue for a while. When he eventually
commented, it was indeed a tough talk. “Those who are involved in the budget
padding shall not go unpunished”. Nigerians waited earnestly for the punishment
that shall follow. Even the president’s support base was hopeful and boasted of
how the “padders” shall be brought to book and appropriately punished. That
should help to clean up the embarrassment this caused the administration. Now,
let’s be clear. The president may not have been culpable of padding the budget,
but being an “anticorruption czar” and at the time when he was going hard on
members of opposition party on perceived corrupt practices, the expectation
from many was that the president will go hard on the culprits in the same vein.
This never happened. After many months of dilly-dallying, all that was heard is
that 180 personnel in the budget office had been redeployed.
Redeployed? Was that the punishment
promised?
Well, redeployment was the punishment
served on the perpetrators of the crime of budget alteration for personal gain.
Thereafter, was the budget padding scandal that rocked the national assembly.
Understandably, the executive had no direct power over the legislature and the
polity was laced with the argument of whether or not the legislative arm of
government had power to alter the budget they were presented with. The national
assembly did have their day in the court of public opinion and with the
executive arm bent on proving that the NASS, as an institution was corrupt,
this was well explored.
A few months after the inception of
the present administration, precisely in October 2015, the NCC slammed the
Telecommunications giant, MTN a $5.1b fine for failing to abide by the rules.
At a time when the nation was struggling with rock bottom crude prices coupled
with insurgency in the Niger Delta cutting down production, this was expected
to provide some relief. After months of negotiations, the fine was largely
reduced and terms of payment agreed. Shortly after, the news was that the
president’s close senior aide who is also a close relative of his, has been
bribed 500 million naira to help reduce the fine to the new amount. Eventually,
this scandal caused those at the helm of the negotiations on the part of the
MTN their job. But for the FG, nothing was said and nothing happened. Abba
Kyari, the president’s chief of staff implicated in this scandal not only
retained his job but continued to be a key player in the operations of
government. In a bid to save face, a probe will usually be ordered, the report
of which we will never hear of and they will never act on. Just as the dust was
settling on the MTN’S scandal, comes another.
In October 2016, the House committee
on the North East, uncovers a contract of N270m for grass cutting in an IDP
camp in the NE awarded by the administration’s then SGF, Babachir Lawal to a
company he allegedly owned.
At a time when the administration was
putting people in handcuffs and showing them to the world via all media
platforms as thieves of funds meant for fighting Boko Haram, when the last
administration’s NSA is permanently locked in jail, despite several court
judgement ordering otherwise, the former SGF in the present administration
supposedly fighting corruption just had his company cut grass in the IDP camp
for N270m (two hundred and seventy million naira). Camp for internally
displaced persons resulting from same Boko Haram crisis. After so much foot
dragging, another probe panel was set up while the alleged remained in his
position boasting of how it was impossible to remove him. In one of his
outburst, he referred to the news as “balderdash” and in another, he openly
questioned the ability of the presidency to deal with him when he threw the
question “who is presidency?” to reporters. Eventually, despite the
probe panel’s indictment of him, it took the president almost one year and a
public uproar in form of protest rallies before Babachir was removed. Till this
very moment, no charges have been brought against him.
Like I once told a friend, the
scandals in this dispensation are so many and frequent that it is becoming
difficult to keep pace with. While that was ongoing, another bomb shell came.
This time, from the president’s immediate family. The wife of the President and
his daughter both openly state that despite huge budgetary allocation to the
state house clinic, the hospital could not boast of even syringes. The
president had just returned from his over 100 day’s overseas trip and there
were speculations that the president’s wife had also gone abroad for a brief
medical check up. Now to put it in proper perspective, what this allegations
meant, let us be reminded of the budgetary provision for the state house clinic
for the 2016, 2017 budgets.
In the 2016 budget, it is public
knowledge that the State House Clinic had N3.87b in allocation, an amount more
than the budgetary allocation to all the Federal teaching hospitals in the
country. Despite this huge sum, the First Lady claimed she had to go to a
private hospital for an X-ray. So the question therefore is what then happened
to the budget? The permanent secretary’s defence is that zero amounts
were allocated for capital projects.
So was N3.87b and N3.2b used for
recurrent expenditure for two years? This is a unit of government that is in
the President’s bedroom and yet there is so much they are unable to account
for. For a government that is fighting corruption, this is definitely not what
even his supporters expected. Like all the other scandals, it is the NASS once
again that has tried to initiate a probe and as usual nothing really will come
out of it.
The scandals went from drip, drip,
and drip to an avalanche. The pace of occurrence of the corruption scandals
have become so frequent that one may find it difficult to keep up with. The
administration’s Minister of State for Petroleum wrote to the President who is
also the Minister of petroleum complaining of how contracts totalling $26b had
been inappropriately awarded in the NNPC, a parastatal under his ministry by
the GMD without due process. The letter either by accident or deliberately was
leaked to the public and there was another uproar. The letter has highlighted a
lot of red flags in addition to the accusations of financial impropriety. But
wait a minute, why will the president’s own minister in his cabinet and his
deputy in the Petroleum ministry be needing a letter to communicate happenings
in his ministry as grievous as these allegations to him? All the questions were
quietly answered by individual citizens in their own quiet time. But everyone
keenly awaited the President’s response. As Nigerians were still trying to make
out what has become of this administration as regards the promise to fight
corruption, this is another bomb shell.
And after the usual period of
silence, the president finally did act. A separate meeting with both the
minister and the GMD was held after which he ordered both aides to go sort out
their differences and ensure they work together. By the next day, the photo ops
of both men hugging each other flooded the front pages of most national dailies
showing that reconciliation has taken place. That was the much done for a
government that is fighting corruption.
And finally came the mother of all
scandals: Mainagate. Ibrahim Maina is the pension boss who was sacked on
allegations of corruption by the last administration and was on the run from
prosecution. In October 2017, it was all over the news that he has not only
been reinstated, but was also promoted after redeployment to another ministry,
the ministry of interior. Even the chairman of the Senate committee on media
said on national TV how much of an embarrassment this was for the country. For
many, even strong supporters of the President, this was the straw that broke
the camel’s back. The uproar was loud enough for all to hear. And the question
on everyone’s lips was how did this happen. Those who will always defend the
administration and absolve the president of any blame irrespective of the event
and the facts, struggled this time to do so. There were denials on all sides.
The involved ministries heads all pointing at each other. Shortly, there was a
leaked memo that showed that even the head of service warned of the dangers of
reinstating Maina, a fugitive.
For reasons not yet clear, the
desperation to readmit Maina into the Federal Civil Service didn’t allow them
to heed. They went ahead and he was redeployed and promoted. The specific
Senate committee invited all alleged to be involved to the Senate for
questioning. The revelations where grievous and shameful for any government,
how much more one that pride itself to be intolerant of corruption. The
president has been accused of being aware, even by the alleged. In another face
saving mechanism, the president did ask for the firing and immediate arrest of
Maina. Sacking was done, but arrest was never made. Until this very moment,
Maina is still at large and has been bold enough to speak several times from
his hiding and was even represented by a lawyer in one of the public hearing by
the Senate committee. He has severally claimed that the President ordered his
reinstatement. No doubt the reinstatement of Maina has hovered between the
Ministry of Justice, the Ministry of Interior and the Presidency. At the senate
hearing, the Minister of Justice did reveal that Maina requested for a meeting
with him while he was in Dubai and
he in turn sort clearance from the DG of the DSS to meet with him. Isn’t it
ironical that the chief law officer is asking for clearance from the DG DSS to
meet with an alleged culprit? There was clear evidence that so many
things were wrong. The presidency has since denied complicity and as is with
most other scandals, was quick to blame it on the last administration.
Obviously, Nigerians must be tired of hearing that. And only recently, in a
move that looked to further buttress the federal government’s complicity, the
AGF had sought and secured court injunction prohibiting the Senate from
continuing the probe. In the words of the Senate: “what do they have to hide?”
We hope time will tell.
For staunch supporters of the
president, who see him as incapable of doing wrong, and incorruptible, he will
still be absolved of this scandal with the usual phrase of “the president is
not aware”. But that will at least not absolve him of incompetence. If he is
not an accomplice as they want us to believe, then he is grossly incompetent.
However, the president has some room for his own redemption. Someone must take
responsibility for this action or at least agree to be the fall guy whose head
should roll. Would that happen? Only time will tell. Meanwhile, may we not forget
that why all these are ongoing, the alleged pension thief in question is still
at large. There are speculations again, that the failure to arrest him by
security operatives is very deliberate. A few weeks ago, the president was
quoted to have said “only God can judge looters”. Has the president resolved to
fate? It is not three years yet in a four year term of the administration and
all these are corruption scandals in the executive arm of government in a
government that is fighting corruption.
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