Opinion
Fighting Corruption In Nigeria (11)
A critical look at our local government system will show that it has become a breeding ground for corruption. Despite the huge monthly allocation from the Federation account, there is nothing to show for it. Public fund is being wasted rather than channeling it to develop the local government area. Provision of basic amenities becomes a mirage.
It is disheartening that local government monthly allocations that range from N60 to N70 million, just to say the least, cannot be utilised to provide or develop the area. Instead of providing the dividends of democracy to the rural dwellers, most local government chairmen use public fund to enrich themselves, share it amongst their political godfathers whom they believe were instructmental to their emergence. To checkmate the high level of corruption going on in the local government, the State Assembly should perform their oversight functions, institute an ethics committee saddled with the responsibility of monitoring the activities of the local government administration.
The civil service is another corruption prone area going by the ghost worker syndrome that sweeps across all the ministries and parastatals in the country. This is a system used to defraud the government. The workforce is fraught with ghost names which those preparing the voucher know do not exist. They smuggled in those names with impunity and this causes the government to spend more than its budget.
To curtail this ugly monster, the government should conduct biometric data exercise or request from all heads of department to submit their nominal roll for perusal or engage on physical verification so as to ascertain the genuine workers and then fish out the ghost workers.
In the same vein, our university system is not left out. Corruption has reduced the system to an unsavory market place where degrees and certificates are bought through sorting. Lecturers embark on protracted strike over one excuse or the other, thereby altering the academic calendar thus rendering students idle. Some lecturers are materialistic. Rather than molding character for the common good of the society, they are lured into sharp practices. Selling of hand-out and less commitment to duty which lead to corruption need to be tackled so as to control the scourge.
Furthermore, to fight corruption in our campuses, the university authorities should institute an internal mechanism to nip in the board this ugly trend and punish any eering lecturer who indulges in corrupt practices. This will make the students to engage in hard work rather than waiting for manna from above.
The National Assembly should, through its over sight functions, dig deep into various sectors to enable them unravel corrupt practices. Any person or persons found guilty should face the wrath of law no matter how highly placed in the society.
Again, the Code of Conduct Bureau should ensure that public office holders declare their assets before and after leaving office. Those assets declared should be physically checked to ascertain their authenticity. It appears that the agency is in comatose now. I say this because I have never heard who and who the agency has taken to court for false information, let alone convicted.
Fighting corruption in Nigeria should not be cosmetic. The Nigerian Press should show more concern in this fight and shun the temptation of “brown envelop”. The press should double its efforts to objectively expose those who feed fat on corruption. For a country like Nigeria to attain its peak in economic growth by the year 2020, her leaders should show total commitment and resilience to tackle the monster head on.
EFCC again, should discourage “plea bargaining”. In my own view, plea bargaining may encourage more corruption rather than eradicating corruption. It is like asking a thief to give you back some of your properties which he/she had stolen.
The fight against corruption is every Nigerian’s burden including those in the Diaspora. Together we shall win the battle and makes Nigeria a corrupt-free nation.
Nnadi is of the Rumuji Police Station.
Linus Nnadi
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