Corruption Has Won The Battle
Against Corruption.
“The United Nations (UN) says
Nigerian kleptocrats have milked the
nation to the tune of about $100
billion dollars thorough various
acts of grand corruption, the cost
of which it lamented by far exceeded
the damage caused by any other
single crime”(Daily Sun, Wednesday,
December 3, 2008 page 9).
“The greatest incitement to crime is
the hope of escaping
punishment”(Marcus Cicero).
As far as Nigeria is concerned, we
should think not what we can do to
corruption but think of what
corruption can do to Nigeria and
Nigerians. I have made the above
statement because of the level of
corruption and the sequential
reports of corrupt practises in
Nigeria. On the average there are
new cases of corruption reported
weekly on the Nigerian dailies. The
rates are very alarming. I am also
99% sure that many cases of
corruption do not make headlines
mainly because the go unnoticed by
the press or the law enforcement
agents. For the purposes of space
and time, I will examine few cases
of corruption in last 12 months to
buttress my point. I will start with
the power probe.
The National Assembly revelled that
$16 billion dollars was invested in
power sector without anything to
show for it. This investment was
made without any single megawatt
being added to the national grid. To
make matters worse was that some
contractors didn’t even know the
sites. Talk less of doing any job.
Where is this money? Am sure $1
billion out of this amount can build
about 3 new refineries. $1 billion
should be enough to do a second
Niger bridge across River Niger. $1
billion can build a low cost housing
estate in Lagos or else where in the
country. $1 billion can build a well
equipped hospital in Nigeria thereby
stopping our government officials
from flying abroad all the time for
medical attention. $1 billion can be
used to create jobs for at lease
10,000 Nigerians. $1 billion can
provide maximum security prisons
where corrupt people can be sent to.
The list of what the money can do is
endless.
Towards the end of March 2009, the
Nigerian dailies reported that the
Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission (EFCC) arrested 2
comptrollers of Customs over an
alleged complicity in a 3 billion
naira customs duty scam, involving
the controversial Vaswani brothers.
The Vaswani brothers are the owners
of Stallion Group. Their head office
is in Victoria Island Lagos.
Then came the Halliburton $150
million dollars bribe money traced
to Zurich. The total amount was $180
million dollars, which means that
$30 million dollars is yet to be
traced or found. This bribe was paid
to facilitate the award of $6
billion dollars LNG contracts. My
argument is that the $6 billion
which was the quoted contract sum
would be about 20 times the initial
costs of the project. The federal
government should conduct more
enquiries and ascertain how much the
original cost of the contracts
should have been. This is with the
view to knowing how much was
actually stolen.
At the heat of the Halliburton bribe
money discovery, President Yar’Adua
promised the nation that once he has
a response, he will make public the
names of the culprits and take
appropriate action. As part of
taking his action, he inaugurated
the Okiro Panel. The committee has
eight weeks to submit its report. We
are waiting and watching how it will
go. To be fair and to achieve a
balance, the president should name
every person involved in corruption
henceforth. A good starting point
will be to name those behind $16
billion dollar unaccounted resources
invested in the power sector. Until
he does this, many Nigerians will
tend to believe the accusations made
by Mallam Nasir el-Rufai that the
federal government is insincere in
the fight against corruption.
Guardian newspapers of Wednesday, 22nd
April 2009 online version reported
about the African Petroleum (AP)
Plc’s share price manipulation scam
that made AP to suffer over N240
billion losses. The culprit in this
case was named as Mr Eugene Anenih,
the managing director of Nova
Finance and Securities Limited.
As if there was a competition, the
following day being Thursday, 23rd
April 2009, Thisday newspapers
online version reported that the
suspended chairman of the National
Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC)
with six other commissioners were
being charged for fraud of N1.5
billion naira.
Thisday newspapers of 7th
May 2009 online version reported
that 3 house members including a
serving senator of the country are
on the run over a N6 billion naira
rural electrification contract scam.
The same paper reported about
officials of the Universal Basic
Education Commission (UBEC) arrested
over N1.7 billion naira contract
scam. Thisday newspaper of 8th
May 2009 online version reported the
story of N250 million bribe scandal
given over the Ekiti re-run
elections.
Guardian newspapers of Wednesday 13th
May 2009 online version reported an
allegation made by the special
adviser on petroleum to President,
(Dr Emmanuel Egbogah). He alleged
that some members of the national
assembly have taken bribes from some
oil firms to truncate the federal
government’s reforms in the
petroleum sector. The amount was not
mentioned.
Just recently, Nigerian dailies
reported about the arrest of one Mr.
Ejike
Onwosugbolu who was carrying N250
million naira cash on three suit
cases. On interrogation, he
confessed that the money belonged to
the present Anambra State governor
(Peter Obi). Nigerians are waiting
for what the EFCC will do about this
case.
“The greatest incitement to crime is
the hope of escaping
punishment”(Marcus Cicero).
Corruption has prospered in Nigeria
mainly because corrupt
government/private officials have a
way of escaping punishment. It also
shows the mindset of these evil
people. Quoting former Justice Oputa,
“Nothing will happen in our nation,
in our society which did not first
happen in our minds. If wrong is
rampant, if indiscipline is rife, if
corruption is the order of the day,
we have to search our individual
minds for that is where it all
starts”.
Prevention is better than cure. My
simple advice to the authorities in
Nigeria should be to fashion out a
preventive strategy against
corruption. Secondly the authorities
should consider making corruption a
capital offence. We can borrow a
leaf from China on the best way to
fight corruption. The political
parties were the indicted national
assembly members are from, should
take disciplinary actions against
them. But before then let them
refund their loot to the people of
Nigeria.
Corruption is every where in the
world, but the difference is how
various countries approach it. When
the expenses scandal involving
British MP’s became open in the
United Kingdom, the Tory leader
(David Cameron) ordered senior
conservatives to pay back thousands
of pounds to the tax payers. The
Tory leader humiliated several
members of the shadow cabinet by
naming them one by one on the
national television. He ordered all
the people involved to return the
total amount claimed. He apologised
to the nation for the actions of his
party members. In same way, the
Nigerian parties were the corrupt
national assembly members are from
should apologize to Nigerians.
America is also another to place to
look out for how to deal with
corrupt people. A good example
should be Madoff who master minded
one of the biggest fraud in history.
He was sentenced to 150 years in
prison. Nigerian authorities can do
same at home if the federal
government is true to its fight
against corruption. If no tough
measures are taken, corruption will
continue to win the battle against
corruption. May God bless Nigeria.
Chinedu Vincent Akuta
An activist and leader of “Support
Option A4 Group” Leicester-UK
akutachinedu@yahoo.com
http://briefsfromakuta.blogspot.com/