|
These are hardly the best of
times for
Nigeria’s ruling party, the self-styled
biggest party in Africa. First, its
attempt to conduct the primaries for the
election of its candidate for the
governorship election due in Anambra in
February ended in fiasco because of an
attempt by its top hierarchy in Abuja to
impose Professor Chukwuma Charles Soludo,
whose five-year tenure as governor of
the Central Bank of Nigeria is now
hanging fire, as the party’s candidate.
The courts have since dismissed the
imposition null and void making the
prospects of the party’s success in the
elections very bleak indeed.
Second, last Thursday, the
courts annulled the election of Chief
Iyiola Omisore as a senator from
Osun
State. Omisore had been elected a
senator while in prison as a suspect in
the mysterious murder of Chief Bola Ige,
the country’s Attorney General and
Minister of Justice inside his Ibadan
home in December 2002. Even more
controversial than his legal status at
the time of his election, Omisore
reportedly won the votes in the Ige’s
home village of Esa Oke
by a landslide.
The biggest setback for PDP,
however, is, without doubt, the
conviction, penultimate Monday, of
“Lagos Boy”, Chief Olabode George, the
immediate past Deputy Chairman of the
party, for sundry crimes, including
corruption involving tens of billions of
Naira, as chairman of the Nigeria Ports
Authority (NPA).
First time I knew of the
conviction penultimate Tuesday, I was
incredulous. Olabode George jailed? For
corruption and sundry crimes? The larger
than life scourge of the country’s
opposition parties, particularly in his
South-West regional constituency?
Olabode George, deputy chairman of a
party that has become a past-master at
sweeping even the biggest heap of dirt
under the rug?
It turned out all the
newspapers that carried the news, mostly
as lead, were not merely hallucinating.
However, anyone who has followed the
story of George’s conviction from when
his chairmanship of the board of the NPA
was first investigated would understand
why the conviction would be greeted with
so much incredulity.
The News magazine which
was probably the first to break the
story about George’s self-aggrandizement
back in August 2005 predictably ran
George’s conviction as its cover story
with the picture of the man behind bars
wearing a puzzled look.
The headline read “The Fall of
Boy George” a play on the well known
British transsexual pop star, Boy
George. In a country like
Nigeria where memories can run so short
that headline may yet turn out to be
premature gloating. But this is another
subject for possibly another day.
For now there is no doubt that
the conviction of George along with the
NPA’s chief executive and several other
directors is a huge set-back for PDP, if
only because some of those jailed along
with him are the party’s kingpins in
their respective pivotal states of Kano
(Aminu Dabo, the managing director),
Sokoto (Abdullahi Aminu Tafida), and
Borno (Zanna Mai-Deribe).
The road to their conviction
began not, as The News reported,
with the audit report of JK Randle and
Company in 2004. Trouble for George and
Partners began much earlier when
President Obasanjo appointed Malam Omar
Farouk Ibrahim, then managing director
of New Nigerian but presently
director of public affairs of the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries (OPEC), to investigate the
accusations and counter-accusations of
corruption between George and the Dr.
Ojo Maduekwe, then minister of
transport, NPA’s supervisory ministry.
This was in June 2002. Ibrahim submitted
his report in January 2003 a little over
three months behind his initial
deadline.
Ibrahim’s digging found enough
rot to indict both parties, but by then
the president had gone too far in
pursuit of his Third Term Agenda, an
agenda in which both board chairman and
his minister were key instruments. Not
surprisingly Obasanjo consigned the
report to the presidential dustbin.
However, like a cork the case
simply refused to be supressed. The
findings of the Ibrahim report led to
the more damning J.K. Randle audit
company which was even more professional
in its investigation.
Even when he was confronted
with the Randle report Obasanjo refused
to take any action against George.
Instead, he appointed another committee,
this time under Engineer Mustapha Bukar,
then a director in the office of head of
service, to conduct further
investigations. Bukar’s committee not
only confirmed the findings of the
Randle report, it unearthed even more
corruption against George and Partners.
Still, the president did
nothing. Yet this was the same man who
had said again and again that his war on
corruption would know no sacred cows
much less spare them. “I have asked the
question,” he once said in an interview
with African Economy (September –
November, 2004), “who is that highly
placed Nigerian that is above the law? I
don’t know of any one. Our dragnet to
the best of my knowledge spares no one.”
One answer to his rhetorical
question about sacred cows was right
under his nose staring him in the face
in the name of one Olabode George, a
Deputy Chairman of his party. But for
obvious reasons the president refused to
see it. Instead, he decided to reward
George with one of the country’s highest
national honours – Commander of the
Order of the Niger (CON) – “for
excellent services to the country”- or
words to that effect - as George would
boast in a most cynical attempt to
whitewash himself.
Now that the almost impossible
seemed to have happened and a high PDP
chief has been jailed for corruption,
what next? Before we all roll out the
drums in celebration of this victory of
the war on corruption – a celebration
which, of course, is in order - we
should remember that this is just one
battle in a war that is far from over.
We should remember that even though
George and his co-travelers are down,
the tens of billions that they looted
which would have made a difference in
the lives of millions of Nigerians is
probably lost to the country for ever.
We should remember that George and
Partners may yet shed their prisoner
status, possibly sooner than we think,
to enjoy what they stole.
We should also remember that
while George and his co-travelers are
down, there are several even more venal
and villainous rogues in politics, in
business, in sports, in the professions,
in the academia, you name it, who are
not only roaming our streets free. They
are right inside the corridors of power
calling the shots on who becomes what in
our political-economy.
No doubt the jailing of
Olabode George and the others for
corruption as a movers and shakers of
politics in
Nigeria is a cause for hope that the war
on corruption is far from dead and
buried. But, at the risk of sounding
like a damp squib, I must point out that
the fight against corruption can never
even begin in earnest until each and
every one of us sees himself as a
shepherd who has one responsibility or
the other to discharge at his own level
in the society or community in which he
lives.
|