Opinion
That Monster Called Corruption
Corruption, to very many people, is like the allegory of the “blind men and the elephant”. Each of the blind men who had the privilege of touching the elephant gave it a description that was relative to their perspective. In other words, the blind men’s descriptions were founded on their covert understanding of what they perceived the elephant to be.
It is pertinent to state that such description could be fraught with the problem of limited knowledge as a result of ignorance, primordial sentiment and, of course, fear. Thus the outcomes of the blind men’s visit can be coloured by the principle of relativity. Conversely, the reports that the elephant is like a wall, gong etc incidented by the visitors do not really reflect truth or reality but were figments of the imaginations of blind people.
In contradistinction to the elephant and the blind men’s myth, the descriptions on corruption by all shades of opinion, so far, reflect in quite unmistakable terms the monster it actually symbolises and represents. Corruption has never been associated with anything good. In fact, the acclaimed Senior Advocate of the Masses, the legal luminary, Gani Fawehinmi, of blessed memory said, “Corruption is worse than prostitution because while prostitution destroys the individual who indulges in it, corruption destroys an entire nation”.
Little wonder when he was alive, Gani did not only hate corruption with passion but initiated and prosecuted several anti-corruption cases. He was a vanguard and one of those who were in the forefront of the titanic struggle to end this moral and ethical scourge. Corruption has dented the credibility and integrity of many public officeholders so much so that it is becoming increasingly difficult to define what corruption is and who is free from it.
The crux of the matter is that even those who, by virtue of their statutory obligation, are required to fight corruption frontally are neck deep in it. They are either first line offenders or accomplices who by dictates of the law are liable to arrest and prosecution like the principal felon.
Corruption, therefore, has become a normative and fast becoming an integral part of our social, business, administrative and academic life. Corruption has eaten deep into our ethical and moral values system that a public officer who tries to leave office clean and without abusing his office is seen by the corrupt minds as ‘not wise’. This corruption mentality has become the bane and the greatest challenge society is facing. It is one of the leading causes of avoidable crisis in families, communities, state and the country that more often than not, degenerates into loss of lives and property.
Why do civil or public servants falsify their age to continue to remain in office or to be eligible for a preferred job? Why would a person change financial records to amass wealth or gain financial advantage? Why would traders and petroleum products dealers create artificial scarcity to exploit the masses?
How can a person explain a situation where some uniform people stay on the road, collect money and give a blind eye to contrabands, adulterated and illegally refined products, even arms and ammunition to pass without effecting arrest of defaulters?
How on Earth should some judiciary workers impose outrageous levies on people who go to do transactions, like affidavit? While the oath fee is usually a paltry sum, judiciary workers make daily fortune out of unsuspecting people at a place that is supposed to be the temple of justice where truth, integrity and accountability should hold sway.
How can one explain a situation where cases in the law court are allegedly lost or won on the ember of financial capability even when it is presumed that the law is not only blind, so does not take into cognisance acquaintance and tendencies that can translate to undue influences, miscarriage of justice but is and should be seen incontrovertibly as “the last hope of the common man”?
Why should a pensioner process his terminal benefits giving out a ‘pound of flesh’ to those who are obligated by job description and paid to do that? Why would a pensioner pay upfront a certain amount for their legitimate entitlements — pension and gratuity to be paid to them?
Why would some people in position demand and accept financial and sex gratification in exchange for job? Why would admission into schools and choice courses be on capacity to pay or human connection syndrome? Why would some lecturers pressure weak students to give money or sex for grade not a product of the student’s endeavours?
Why would a public officer abuse the use of imprest – counting it as part of their emoluments instead of office running cost that is accountable at the end of the month as a precondition for another allocation?
Why would some pastors collect money dubiously from church members? And why would a public officer want to acquire the ‘whole world’ at the expense of the people whose resources he or she holds in trust and should be accountable to? How many times have present and successive administrations tried to fix the electricity problem, but to no avail? What about revamping of our moribund refineries and other critical national assets that had in the past been pivotal to revenue and economic mainstay of the nation?
How many times have political elites played ‘the more you look the less you see’ riddle in the polity so much so that elections are won even before they are conducted? Like the Bible Habakkuk who sounded philosophical over the moral and social indiscretions of his day, I can go on asking questions. However, the answer is not far-fetched. And the answer is corruption.
The inability of majority of Nigerians to afford two meals a day or live above poverty level index of Nigeria is an evidence of stinking corruption. How could the masses wallow in an orgy of abject poverty while very few ride in flamboyant cars and live in palatial houses. Corruption, no doubt, is a scourge and accounts for the gross state of underdevelopment the country is facing.
Corruption is the greatest enemy of the people. It is repugnant to the ideals of our founding fathers. It is a canker worm that is destroying our resources and our chances of greatness.
Let us join hands and fight this scourge. Society should stop celebrating questionable wealth and let us return to rebirth and inculcation of values reorientation in the society to save our nation from getting to the precipice.
By: Igbiki Benibo
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