Opinion
The Deepening Conundrum
The conundrum still stares us in the face. In spite of the infectious melody of our democratic experience, and the puritanical dialects of its captains, Nigeria is still being hunted by the specter of corruption which is steadily gravitating towards the national ethos.
The alleys, the boulevards, the neighborhoods, the market squares, the offices are all dancing to the fugue of corruption and its kindred ills. Even those with redemptive candour, those with rehabilitative ethos lack the spunk to confront the cankerworm head on.
Before this democratic peregrination, many of us had roved in bewildering hopelessness, contemplative of the tragic end of a nation in wanton rapine and brigandage. The frenzy of fear and national repulsion that attended the military hegemony was spontaneous.
The Babangida metaphor and Abacha phenomenon became the surviving animation. With bestial license, both the high and the low gleefully thrived in the game of brigandage and looting of our collective patrimony. At that time, the moral rectitude was eclipsed by the arrogant clatter of gestural selfishness. And so, Nigeria slide into Hobbesian society.
With our new democratic garb and accoutrement since 1999, we had hoped for a relief, a new social mores needed to assuage our acute sense of hope lost.
It is a sad irony however, that 14 years down the democratic lane, our hope of redemption still appears too dim if it has not lost in the nightmarish perpetuity. Those corrupt tendencies which we thought had been buried with the military carcass still confront us with the most vicious potency.
There is irony in this drama. At the inception of this civilian dispensation, there was eloquent preparedness by the ruling power to confront the hydra-headed of corruption, as well as contain the savagery of the brazen brigands who yesterday converted the public till into private property that must be hauled away with reckless impunity.
The anti-corruption law and anti-corruption agencies to wit: Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and Independent Corrupt Practice Commission (ICPC) established by former President Olusegun Obasanjo were the first lever that won our spurs and laurels. This gesture excited ordinary Nigerians and inspired the most effulgent confidence in them. The rescue was prompt.
Apart from the stunt of scapegoatism made of Abacha’s men of yesterday, some ministers with itching and filthy hands were relieved of their duties. A serving governor, once thought to be invincible was rooted out of office in most disgraceful manner; while many local government chairmen and federal legislators fell to the guns of the anti-corruption agencies.
Today however, the salvaging mission the Federal Government thrust upon itself through the establishment of EFCC and ICPC appears to be lacking the moral force needed to confront the quotidian menace of corruption. The mission is now voided of any enduring legacy. It does not excite us anymore. It does not inspire us again.
On daily basis, the cankerworm of public theft and brigandage of tax payer’s money eats deeper into our national marrows. With democratic ego, civil ruthlessness and egregious abuse of office, those entrusted with our national cake have grown itching palms.
From the custodians of the State treasuries, to the helmsmen of the MDAs, and from the potentates at the helms of local government councils to the unlettered councillors, everybody engages in the pillage of oil-earned monies in the name of white elephant projects. Only a handful of them are above board. Recently, the judiciary, once considered to be the sanctuary and the most sacred of all institutions has been infested and decimated.
The people’s frustration is further exacerbated by the sacred-cowness made of some contemptuous thieving government officials who brazenly siphoned public till into private purse. If you are in doubt, where is AbdulRasheed Maina and his co-pension fraudsters? Where are fuel subsidy rogues? They are still in the country riding roughshod over us with much swashbuckling, calling bluff of both the anti-corruption agencies and various committees set up to probe their nefarious activities.
The fact that nothing concrete and sturdy has been done to bring them to book, even in the full glare of overwhelming evidence to do so, has confirmed the initial pessimism that the anti-corruption noise of the Federal Government is a mere window-dressing meant to throw dust into people’s eyes and as well shore up underserved image for the country.
If you are in doubt, ask Transparency International what is Nigeria’s current ranking in the anti-corruption ladder.
Boye Salau
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