Former Delta State governor, James Ibori
Along
with six friends, I watched television footage of the crowds that
cheered Chief James Ibori as he drove on the streets on his return home
last week after his prison service in the United Kingdom. There was
pronounced silence as we watched young and old struggle to catch a
glimpse of the man. Like us, it was obvious that many in the crowds
that followed his jeep at close quarters did not believe it was indeed
Ibori until he, at a point, emerged from
the top of his jeep to show an
apparently well-fed and healthy-looking former Governor. There was a
long silence after the spectacle had we just watched, broken by a
question we all thought was rhetorical: "Do these people know what
Chief Ibori was, and what he did?" What followed was an animated and
passionate argument that laid bare many of the skeletons in our nation's
cupboard. Our fundamental values as people are apparently as varied and
questionable as we choose to make them. The lady who asked the question
was not going to be ignored. She asked again if this is the typically
Nigerian rent-a-crowd, or a spontaneous and genuine outpouring of joy
among people whose hero had returned after being jailed in a foreign
country for stealing, in all probability, their commonwealth.
In
a few exchanges, arguments that corruption is a Nigerian elite affair, a
matter of personal opinion, a phenomenon determined by a cultural
perspective or an effective value redistribution mechanism which anchors
political power competed for hearing and dominance. There was no
arguing away the reality before all Nigerians: either Chief Ibori is an
extraordinarily likable politician who could do no wrong by his people,
or the concept of private plunder of public resources is unknown where
he came from. It was relatively easy to tick-off familiar arguments and
refrain from many parts of the Niger Delta region, such as those that
make heroes of locals who 'liberate', appropriate' or 'personalize' the
communities' assets in oil and gas, as opposed to 'strangers' from the
rest of Nigeria and the world who 'steal' it under official cover.
People form the Niger Delta who will feel insulted by this criminal
conclusion were not at the airport and road sides holding up placards
saying 'no to corrupt politicians'. By default, voices that agonized
over the bleeding of communities by strongmen in the Niger Delta had
submitted to a narrative that the use of public office or violence to
divert massive resources was tolerable if it was done by locals. If half
of the energy devoted to making the case for larger control of revenues
by local communities had been directed at fighting corruption that
stole huge resources from the same communities by politicians, the Delta
region will not so viciously offend all standards of just and equitable
development.
Chief
Ibori's return will open up many uncomfortable points in debates
regarding the place of official corruption in our lives. There will be
those that will insist that the fight against corruption is an elite
affair, between those who have not amassed wealth illegally either
because they could not, or were deeply predisposed against it, on the
one hand, and those who see the acquisition of illegal wealth as a
normal and essential element of acquiring power and serving the people.
They will point at the verifiable fact that no Nigerian politician has
ever acquired power without spending huge resources, most of which will
not stand up to close legal scrutiny. That is the investment in an
enterprise with the surest guarantee for returns. The distance between
stolen wealth and productive activities of the vast majority of citizens
make it difficult to raise requisite levels of passion and anger
against the pillage of common resources. What is endemic is the
pervasive and residual resentment of the rich, fueled by suspicion that
all wealth is stolen. The popular clamour to humiliate the rich by any
means available is constantly hounded by deep-seated convictions that
everyone will be corrupt if they get the opportunities.
Do
Nigerians know the nature of the damage which systemic corruption does
to their lives and the nation, or do they think the fight against
corruption is largely a ploy by some elite to settle scores? Not to
answer the first question in the affirmative will be to insult
everything we value: our religious faiths and other key social values,
our politicians who daily remind us that our strengths and assets have
been bled dry by corruption, and our indignation at the situation we
face daily when we have to submit to corruption. It is the second
question which our recent experiences and current circumstances has
difficult answers. This administration came to power to fight
corruption, and we have a long list of suspects on trial or under
investigation to prove it. If therefore, a committed supporter of the
current campaign against corruption asks if the cheering crowd that
welcomed Ibori knew what he was and what they were involved in, he
should be prepared to answer some difficult questions as well. Do our
leaders know that corruption at lower levels, the type that touches
every citizen still thrives without fear or cover? Do they know that
commercial drivers routinely and openly hand over money to police and
other army of enforcers and regulators on our roads in full view of
citizen passengers who duly note that nothing has changed? Do they know
that every transaction, every activity that is service is still
substantially fueled by bribes and inducements?
There
is a massive disconnect between the fight President Buhari's government
is waging against corruption and the life of the Nigerian who has long
readjusted to living with bribery, inducement, cheating, bending of
rules, impunity and a host of other practices that suggest that only
those who steal billions are corrupt. The difficulties imposed by an
economy in recession make cheerleading the fight against corruption more
difficult. Poor citizens ask if government knows how difficult life has
become; why the cost of palm oil, matches, sugar and garri rise
literally by the day and no one does anything about it. School fees,
diesel, medications, rent, transport and every other essentials are
becoming unaffordable. The state is receding at a dangerous rate from
many Nigerians, many among whom now provide their own security, basic
infrastructure and other essentials of life. When you do this on a
permanent basis, it is difficult to have much sympathy for the case that
everyone should live within their means. It does not help the
administration's cause when much mileage is made against suspicion that
it is reluctant to look too critically at its own side in a nation where
saints and sinners wear the same faces, but can be told apart with a
strong will and a commitment to expose corruption.
Some
weeks ago, Vice President Osinbajo appealed to Nigerians to dislike
corruption in all its ramifications, or the battle against it is as good
as lost. This an important attempt to hit corruption where it hurts
most: in those circles where wealth and power bulldoze their ways into
our adulating and weak hearts. You have to feel for a President whose
singular hallmark has been the fight against corruption, and a Deputy
who doubles as a priest, that they stand at a point where they could
persuade Nigerians to stay overwhelmingly loyal to the fight against
corruption, or one that could register an irretrievable loss. If the
Buhari administration will not win the fight against corruption, it is
going to be difficult to see who will. If it will win this war, this
administration needs to re-strategize and re-focus on value change and
an aggressive campaign to stop small scale corruption which citizens
live with. If a citizen cannot be saved from paying bribes for just
about everything of value, he is unlikely to see any wrong in Chief
James Iboris life. The battle for 2019 will test the effectiveness of
the anti-corruption campaign. If billions or trillion are going to have
to be spent by politicians and their backers in business they will have
to steal it now.
I
am about to take a break to serve the nation in another capacity. I
thank you for reading me and giving me the courage to share my thought
with you.
Good bye
Congrat!!!:
We at ThepressLodge.blogspot.com.ng congratulate Dr. Hakeem Baba-Ahmed on his new appointment as Chief of Staff to the Senate President, Bukola Saraki. May Allah assist you in your new task. Amen.
We at ThepressLodge.blogspot.com.ng congratulate Dr. Hakeem Baba-Ahmed on his new appointment as Chief of Staff to the Senate President, Bukola Saraki. May Allah assist you in your new task. Amen.
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