Opinion
Capital Punishment As Panacea For Corruption
One of the endemic ills in Nigeria is political corruption. This vice dates back to very early times in our political history. Many people, especially political office holders have been accused of one financial malfeasance or the other. This is because the conduct of some of them fell short of the expected standard of honest and responsible people.
Corruption is a deviation from accepted behaviour or established patterns of behaviour in any society. Instances of corruption include taking of kickbacks, award of illegal contracts and diversion of public funds into private pockets, among others.
The Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Dahiru Musdapher recently canvassed death penalty for corrupt public office holders as a deterrent. He stressed that for corruption to be minimised in the country, a capital punishment must be meted out to offenders. According to him, the judiciary is ready to enforce capital punishment on corrupt public office holders.
Also worried by the high level of corruption in Nigeria, Professor Ben Nwabueze recommended a violent revolution as the only panacea for corruption and other ills in our country. He said that Nigeria needs a surgical transformation going by the rate at which corruption has eaten deep into the fabric of our system. Like every other Nigerian, the Professor could not understand why political office holders allocate billions of naira to themselves as in the case of our federal lawmakers, while those who voted them into power live in abject poverty.
It is ridiculous to note that the main reason why many people aspire to occupy public office in Nigeria is not to serve, but to loot our commonwealth. While public office holders engage in all forms of corruption, the main functions and objectives of government, which include provision of social infrastructures, education, security and general development, suffer.
It is in view of this that I support the death penalty suggested by the Chief Justice of Nigeria to serve as a deterrent to political corruption in Nigeria. The revolution recommended by Professor Nwabueze is another good measure, but the fear is that it could be hijacked by some evil men against their perceived enemies. At the end of the day, innocent people would be the victims. The bloody revolution of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republic (USSR) in 1917 is a case in point.
Perturbed by the general penchant for corruption in Nigeria, especially among public office holders, the Rivers State Governor, Rt. Hon Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi, recently berated some modern day politicians whose business in political offices is to convert public monies into private use through illegal contracts. According to him, some politicians in Nigeria aspire to get into various public offices not because they have the desire to serve, but because they want to gain immediate access to wealth at the expense of helpless people of the country.
In the same vein, the Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Mrs. Farida Waziri has called for psychiatric test for aspiring public office holders. To the EFCC boss, some aspiring leaders are mentally and psychologically unsuitable for public office because of the way they amass public wealth. She observed that the extent of aggrandisement and gluttonous accumulation of wealth she had seen among public office holders suggested to her that some of them were mentally and psychologically ill and therefore not suitable for public offices.
According to her “We have observed public office holders amassing public wealth to a point suggesting madness or some form of obsessive-compulsive psychiatric disorder”.
The above important observations made by well-meaning citizens call for serious concern of all of us. In fact, under the current democratic dispensation, cases of corruption seem to have reached the unpardonable height. Just recently, three members of the House of Representatives were arrested by the EFFC for allegedly diverting six billion naira of public funds into their private pockets. The same goes for some former governors who are now in the custody of the EFCC.
It is high time our public office holders realised that the primary purpose of being in public offices is to serve the people and not to steal public funds. Public funds are meant for the development and betterment of the society in general and not for private and selfish aggrandisement. Nigerians should therefore be selfless whenever they find themselves in public offices.
Tolofari, a distinguished fellow, Institute of Corporate Administration of Nigeria, lives in Port Harcourt.
Mann Tolofari
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