|
Since the BIG news broke, I have been
agonising. I don’t know whether I should
consider this as a victory, justice,
retribution, or insult. Like many
Nigerians, home and abroad who heard or
read the news of Bode George and his
co-conspirators’ conviction and
sentencing, the news was met with mixed
feelings.
On the one hand, I was actually happy
and felt good to know that a man of Bode
George’s standing and calibre in
Nigerian society and politics, could be
convicted in our corruption-ridden
judiciary, coupled with the normal
inevitable bungling of the law
enforcement agencies involved in his
investigation and prosecution, knowing
what we know of how they have been
deliberately bungling the prosecution of
the biggest thief of them all, James
Ibori (pardon me for the name-calling,
but this is the mildest phrase I can use
for him here)
On the other hand, I, like many
Nigerians felt aggrieved at the size of
the punishment, that is, sentencing to
only 30 months imprisonment, stealing
billions of our money, Nigeria’s money,
that belongs to you and I, that is meant
to develop our country, that is meant to
alleviate or poverty and other problems.
We all feel that the punishment is not
commensurate with the crime, for indeed,
stealing of public funds is one big
crime in most parts of the world, but
maybe not in Nigeria. We really need
good and severe examples to be made in
Nigeria in the fight against corruption.
We perhaps need to see some blood (not
necessarily the human blood, but maybe
stiffer sentences and punishments) that
will endure as deterrents.
Truth be told, many of us would like to
see the likes of Bode George, Peter
Odili, many Northern ex-and present
Governors, some former Heads of State
and Presidents and Vice-Presidents,
civil servants, etc, lined up against a
wall and shot, but we will not get that
wish in a very long time, not as long as
their cabal of evil still run the roost
over our lives and country. No, we won’t
get that wish. Also, I don’t think we
are that blood-thirsty, though I believe
it is about time we got sanguine about
this.
Look at it this way. Since Yar ‘Adua was
elected in May 2007, the corruption war
has waned, what with a corrupt Attorney
General and Minister for Justice in
charge of fighting the same corruption;
what with corrupt ex-Governors still
calling the shots, either in the
background in the seat of power or in
the legislative arms of government; what
with these thieves calling the shots in
their respective states.
In fact, in Bode George’s case, it is a
widely held belief that he was only
convicted and sentenced because he was
an ex-Obasanjo man who had fallen out of
favour with the current PDP-led
Government. If he had been in the good
books of current PDP top hierarchy, like
Ibori is, Bode George would not even be
arraigned in court, would he?
The Bode George saga has made me take a
very deep look at the issues of the rule
of law, crime, justice and punishment in
Nigeria.
The rule of law may very well prevail in
Nigeria on paper, but in practice a
quite different picture emerges - one of
arbitrary arrest, incompetence and
indifference. This begs the question as
to whether Nigeria is a democracy. We
are not confronted here with a few
rotten apples spoiling the contents of
the barrel but with a system which
tolerates corruption, where massive
bribery, embezzlement, looting and pure,
unadulterated incompetence and
mismanagement of funds meant for the
public are accepted oiling of the
machinery and where an appropriate ethos
of professional pride is entirely
lacking.
Citizens, whatever their faults, should
not be regarded as prey, as easy game.
Criminals, in this case, corrupt
government officials, should not be
allowed to wander about unpunished. A
remedy must be found.
As we know and have experienced
thousands of time, not everyone is equal
before the law in Nigeria. The lust for
gain and the lack of brakes on the
exercise of power on the part of the
government and the law enforcement
agents have always been a recipe for
disaster. Yet another flagrant abuse
supplied to me on an anecdotal basis
concerns an infamous local part-time
political thug and part-time armed
robber in a small town in South Eastern
Nigeria. Everyone knew him, as he drove
around in brand new cars, rubbing the
noses of law-abiding citizens in the sad
truth that crime does pay with his
conspicuous and arrogant display of
prosperity. When he was finally
arrested, he faced the prospect of
serving a lengthy sentence. The narrator
of the tale bumped into him before he
was taken into custody, and quizzed him
over whether he was worried that his
beautiful cars might be stolen whilst he
was doing time. The reply came that it
did not matter, as he would be free
within a couple of days. His prediction
was correct: a few days later he indeed
resumed his normal routine, cruising
through the dusty streets.
When I was growing up in South West
Nigeria, most people believe that judges
are honourable people. Unfortunately,
nowadays, we’re ruled by laws that are
controlled by those who hold power over
us. Furthermore, the judicial system
that we placed so much faith in isn’t
set up to protect our rights. It’s
controlled by people who have turned the
system into a racket that benefits the
politicians, the elite and the crooked,
not the people.
Corruption in the judiciary damages a
range of development goals: it denies
poor people access to justice, it
undermines the credibility of the
political leadership, and it makes the
country insecure for economic
investment. Corruption occurs in
numerous guises – bribery, nepotism, and
influence trading – and affects
different parts of the judicial process.
Pliant prosecutors, judges and court
staff may ignore criminal acts of
corruption or have them improperly
dismissed. Relevant evidence may
conveniently disappear, or prison
sentences curiously reduced. Corrupt
appointments, promotions, and
disciplinary actions mean that justice
sector staff may be ill-equipped to
handle complex cases, including those
involving international corruption.
Corruption, dishonesty and unethical
behaviour amongst public officials
represent very serious threats to the
basic principles and values of
government, undermining confidence in
the democratic process and threatening
to erode the rule of law.
Incidentally and ironically,
Transparency International, in a report
published a few years ago reported that
despite widespread problems with
corruption in Africa, especially
Zimbabwe, there are examples in Nigeria
where trial times have been improved and
judges are more rigorously screened
before being appointed.
At the time, the report made a number of
recommendations to strengthen judicial
independence and combat corruption:
-
Judicial appointments should be made
by independent bodies
-
Judges should be appointed on merit
-
Judicial salaries should reflect
experience and performance
-
Judges should be liable to prosecution
if corruption is suspected
-
Allegations against judges should be
investigated by an independent body
-
Judges should be removed or
transferred in a transparent manner
according to fair standards
The above recommendations, if adopted by
our various governments in
Nigeria
would surely go a long way in restoring
our confidence in the judiciary.
Having said these, we really must give
credit to
Justice Olubunmi Oyewole of the Lagos
High Court. Justice Olubunmi Oyewole,
mild as the sentences he pronounced are,
has served notice that a few judges with
courage and probity can still be found
in Nigeria’s citadels of justice. He
must be commended.
Also worthy of commendation is the EFCC,
who saw this through with better results
than expected. However, they still have
the Ibori matter hanging around their
necks like a stone mill. Perhaps this
should spur them on.
In our society's criminal justice
system, justice equals punishment. You
do the crime, you do the time. You do
the time, you've paid your debt to
society and
justice
has been done. But justice for whom?
Certainly not the victim, who are the
Nigerian people.
There certainly is a need for punishment
for corruption in Nigeria. It is perhaps
more so because it is corruption in high
places that has created a lot of the
social problems we have today in the
country.
Collective academic thoughts on
punishment are of the opinion that the
need for punishment can be for three
main reasons (Marty
Price, 1997):
Punishment as a need to incapacitate.
Incapacitation, unfortunately, must
continue until we can learn how to
generate change in such individuals.
However, the need for incapacitation
must be understood as separate and
distinct from the need for punishment.
When we focus on punishment and
incarcerate offenders who are not
dangerous, including those who have
committed victimless crimes, we consume
precious correctional system resources
which should be reserved for those
offenders who must be incapacitated for
our protection.
Punishment as a deterrent to crime.
If punishment deters crime, we should be
the safest nation in the world. If
punishment deters crime, then the answer
to our out-of-control crime problem must
be that we need to lock up more people
still. How far should we go with this
approach?
Punishment for the purpose of
rehabilitation.
Relatively few offenders are
rehabilitated in prison. The vast
majority pass through the "revolving
doors" again and again. Offenders are
"warehoused" in institutions where
violence, meanness, deceit, manipulation
and denial are rewarded by the culture
within. In most cases, offenders return
to the community as individuals who are
then even more antisocial than before
they were incarcerated
Then why punishment? If
punishment is not really about
incapacitation, deterrence or
rehabilitation, then what is it about?
Punishment is primarily for revenge (or
retribution.) Victims of
heinous crimes commonly demand revenge.
It seems like a natural response. (And
we must acknowledge that the crimes of
corruption perpetrated on us by our
leaders are indeed heinous – how many
lives have been lost directly or
indirectly as a result of their
misdemeanour and flagrant abuse of
power?)
Price, 1997, further pointed out that
social research is suggesting that for
many crimes, sentences of from one to
two years are the most likely to be
effective, while longer sentences may be
counter-productive to rehabilitating
offenders. He argued that what society
should be implementing is “restorative
justice” rather than “retributive
justice”. A
restorative justice
approach concerned with righting the
wrongs to victims and making amends,
repairing the harm done (in whatever
ways possible, including victim
compensation) and restoring the lives
affected by crime, offers us a much more
hopeful vision for the future.
Furthermore, wrote Shaswata Dutta,
each society has its own way of social
control for which it frames certain laws
and also mentions the sanctions with
them. These sanctions are nothing but
the punishments. ‘The first thing to
mention in relation to the definition of
punishment is the ineffectiveness of
definitional barriers aimed to show that
one or other of the proposed
justifications of punishments either
logically include or logically excluded
by definition.’ Punishment has the
following features:
-
It involves the deprivation of certain
normally recognized rights, or other
measures considered unpleasant.
-
It is consequence of an offence
-
It is applied against the author of
the offence
-
It is applied by an organ of the
system that made the act an offence
The kinds of punishment given are surely
influenced by the kind of society one
lives in.
The way I see the Bode George
punishment, much as I have argued in the
past that corruption in Nigeria needs to
be dealt with as strongly as possible,
so as to serve as deterrent to current
and up-coming treasury looters, is that
the fact that an irresponsible, corrupt
and useless old man has been convicted,
sentenced and jailed is indeed cause to
renew our belief that all hope for
redemption of our country is not lost.
Tafa Balogun got 6 months,
Alamieyeseigha got about a year,
Lucky-boy Igbinedion was even given the
option of fine and a slap on the wrist,
but the old fool Bode George was not
even given the option of a fine, and
straight to jail he goes. Of course, he
has the right to appeal against his
conviction, but for now, the word
“Convict” will forever be etched in our
memory of him. We know this, as opposed
to that of James Ibori, which we are
still finding difficult, for one reason
or the other, to prove.
Perhaps Lagos-boy Olabode George should
be ashamed, but the Nigeria of nowadays
does not recognise the word “shame”, and
thereby we saw his supporters in court
still hailing him. Fifty years ago, he
would have been hounded out of town in
shame. That says a lot about our
societal norms and a departure from our
cultural, religious and moral values.
This is why I will not blame him, but
instead blame our society. Why, in 2
years time, upon his release, he will go
to his church and do a thanksgiving
service, attended by his family, friends
and other supporters, and his pastor
will be heaping praises and prayers on
him, blaming his detractors for his
prison sojourn.
However, I still would not like to gloat
about Bode George’s travailsl, if indeed
we can call it that, after all, it can
be said he brought it all unto himself
(as most thieving insincere politician
in Nigeria are wont to do), and believe
me, he thoroughly deserved what was
coming to him, and more, but what about
many past corrupt governors who are
still roaming the streets of Abuja and
Lagos. Tafa Balogun , the former
Inspector General of Police is free ,
James Ibori is free (and actually
surreptitiously running the affairs of
this country), Peter Odili has a court
order that prohibits the EFCC or any
other law enforcement agency from
investigating or arresting him,
Chimaroke Nnamani (he of the over 200
properties in one city) is a Senator ,
Achike Udenwa is a minister , Luky
Igbenedion is free, Babangida is Free ,
Obasanjo is free , Tony Anenih is free ,
Professor Egwu is a Fedreal Minister,
Orji Uzo Kalu is Free , Bola Tinubu is
still making billions in Lagos, David
Mark is our Senate president . So why
would only Bode be the scapegoat? How
much money did he steal that Ibori did
not exceed 100 times?
These people and many of their ilks got
us in the mess we are in today and
actually are the causative agents of the
Nigeria’s bad international reputation.
I don’t know how you feel, but if
thieves are ruling a country, how do you
want the international community to view
the ordinary citizens of the same
country, re-branding or no re-branding?
However, Nigerians have become cynics,
and I don’t blame them. This is because
for the past forty-nine years, we have
come to realise that our leaders never
tell us the truth, or exhibit any
behaviour which will let us have any
confidence, trust and faith in them.
Therefore, we view anything that comes
from governments, politicians, civil
servants with a high degree of cynical
wit. Already, concerning the Bode
George issue, we have a lot of
conspiracy theories; some are of the
view that he was only convicted because
he had fallen out of favour with the
current Presidency and PDP hierarchy
because he was an Obasanjo man; yet
another theory is that it was just a
show from the Government to make people
think that the war against corruption is
still very much on their priority, and
thereby a convenient scapegoat like Bode
George need to be made; another one is
that PDP wanted to sacrifice Bode George
to launder their image; another is that
the trial judge was instructed not to be
too harsh on him and that was why he got
only 30 months.
Well, who knows? In Nigeria, anything
sure can happen, or be made to happen,
especially when we are being ruled by
thoughtless, cruel, vicious, murderous,
corrupt, dishonest, insincere,
inconsiderate, selfish, insensitive,
sadistic, Vagabonds in Power. Sadly, how
can we trust anybody in power?
Let the truth be said always.
Reference:
Marty Price, J.D, 1997.
“Punishment - What's in it for the
Victim? A Restorative Justice Discussion
for Crime Victims and their Advocates”.
Published in
Kaleidoscope of Justice,
Vol. 5, No. 1, March/April 1997 (Maine)
Shaswatta Dutta, undated“Theories of
Punishment: A Socio-legal View” quoted
from Legal Service India.com (http://www.legalserviceindia.com/articles/pun_theo.htm
)
Akintokunbo Adejumo lives and works in
London, UK. A graduate of the University
of Ibadan, Nigeria (1979) and University
of Manitoba, Canada (1985), he also
writes on topical issues for newspapers
and internet media including
Nigeriaworld.com, Nigeria Today Online,
Nigerians In America, Nigeria Village
Square, Champions Newspaper,
ChatAfrik.com, African News Switzerland,
New Nigerian Politics, Gamji.com,
Codewit.com, etc.
He is Codewit Favourite Author of the
Month, March 2009.
He is also the Coordinator of CHAMPIONS
FOR NIGERIA, (www.championsfornigeria.org)
an organisation devoted to
celebrating genuine progress,
excellence, commitment, selfless and
unalloyed service to Nigeria and
Nigerians.
|