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Something
most unusual but significant for its
implications occurred in the past week,
and it has been almost overlooked; it
should be recalled and analysed: it is
the public reporting of a security
awareness seminar that the National
Security Adviser had with the newly
appointed Ministers, and what he said.
His statements at that meeting were made
public by his Chief Press Secretary
which means that the leakage of the
encounter was deliberate and
premeditated. But why would the office
of the National Security Adviser release
the details of a Ministerial Security
briefing? This is not standard practice
particularly here where the security
agencies are not only sworn to an oath
of secrecy, but are required to conduct
their affairs away from the prying eyes
of the public and the "offensive
tongues" of public commentators. What
exactly does the NSA seek to achieve
with the weighty statements he made at
that meeting? Was he setting a tone for
something? That his office is sending a
clear message is clear enough, for it
would be an ultimate breach of national
security for that office to engage in
frivolous dancing in the market place.
What the National Security Adviser has
done most unusually is to offer a
critique of the Nigerian system. He
tells us matter of factly that the
Nigerian state is failing and in urgent
need of rescue. Coming out of his
reported statement is the declaration
that Nigeria faces a human development
crisis and that the quality of human
development has serious implications for
national security. He is right.
He
laments what we all know already: the
poor state of the health and education
sectors, Nigeria's poor rating in the UN
Human Development Index, the spread of
poverty, the menace of unemployment, the
failure of Nigeria's education system,
other distortions within the system
which promote instability and
insecurity, including the low value that
Nigerians place on human lives. If we
take this as a national security report,
it can be assumed that the Nigerian
National Security Adviser was directly
telling his immediate audience and other
Nigerians that our country is not
working. His review of the situation is
an open and unapologetic indictment of
the governance system in the country: a
subtle and not so subtle way of saying
that from a security perspective, the
Yar'Adua administration has failed
Nigeria. Beyond him, the Obasanjo
administration has also failed Nigeria!
The country needs to start afresh. This
is quite a political statement coming
from a National Security Adviser. But
again, he is right. This country is in a
mess. Lt. General Aliyu Gusau may have
confirmed what we all know, based on
security findings, even if the evidence
is there for all to see, but we should
all be frightened that our condition may
be worse, and that the full security
dilemma facing this country has not been
brought to the open.
However, the proper linkage that the NSA
established between the performance of
the sectors of the economy and the human
development index is apposite. It
reflects the spirit of Chapter Two of
the Nigerian Constitution where security
is considered not only a matter of
physical security, but also economic and
social security. As General Gusau
pointed out,
Nigeria
faces a serious crisis of human
security. And if by any chance at all,
he was speaking with the approval of the
Acting President, he was thereby
defining for the Ministers, their
primary assignment. In attendance most
instructively was the Secretary to the
Government of the Federation, Yayale
Ahmed and the Head of Service, Steve
Oronsaye both of whom served as
moderators at the meeting.
But it
is not enough to define the problem.
Since a security profile of the Nigerian
crisis has been formulated, we expect
that this will serve as guideline for
service delivery. And so Alhaji Gusau
told the Ministers that their job is to
ensure that government policies and
their implementation help to promote the
security of all Nigerians. This much
should have been obvious to anyone who
has been offered a Ministerial
appointment and has accepted to serve.
But the good faith of the new Ministers
cannot be taken for granted. We have
seen over the years, public office
holders for whom the privilege of public
office is considered an opportunity to
address the challenges of personal
security. Since the appointment of this
new set of Ministers, there have been
speculations that some of them are in
government to amass wealth towards the
2011 general elections or to promote the
interests of their Godfathers. In case
anyone of them is in any doubt, they
should be advised to take the meeting
with the National Security Adviser as a
warning and a threat. The sub text of
that meeting is a reminder that they are
being watched closely: "beware, we are
watching you!" The Security
establishment has perhaps stumbled on
some disturbing details about some of
the appointees and the Nigerian public
has been brought into the know just so
that nobody complains about a Minister
from his or her village being victimized
when such particular Minister is found
with his or her hands in the cookie jar.
And if truly a veiled threat was being
issued, in no way should it be an idle
threat.
If
human security must become a cardinal
objective of the governance process,
then government must take more seriously
the national integrity framework.
Thieving Ministers who are only
interested in their own pockets pose a
threat to the survival of other
Nigerians. The Jonathan administration
has been making a lot of statements
about fighting corruption; if it fails
on this score when a review is attempted
a few months hence, the people will be
in a sure position to dismiss the Acting
President's statements at the
inauguration of his cabinet, and during
his visit to the United States, his
administration's re-invigoration of the
EFCC and the ICPC and the National
Security Adviser's meeting with the
Ministers and the heads of government as
nothing but hypocritical.
I do
not consider it an accident that about
the same period that the National
Security Adviser held a seminar for the
new ministers, there was a sudden
re-awakening at the anti-corruption
agencies, ICPC and EFCC, with both
agencies descending on two men who may
ordinarily be considered very powerful:
that is former Governor of Delta State,
James Ibori and Chairman of the PDP, the
ruling party, Vincent Ogbulafor. A few
months ago, with the jailing of former
PDP strongman Commodore Olabode George,
the point had been established afresh
that no man is above the laws of the
land. But Aliyu Gusau has indicated that
there should be more persons behind
bars. He dismissed the anti-corruption
campaign as ineffective, selective and
unreliable, noting that the leaders of
the two agencies are guilty of "wrong
doings".
He also
descended on the crime prevention
machinery and the judiciary, noting that
both promote criminality through
negligence and inefficiency. His words
were strong and specific: "very little
attention is paid to the prevention of
crime. Proactive security measures
assist to prevent crimes. Good laws and
efficient penal system will deter
criminals and reduce crimes. It seems
our current legal system promotes
crimes...This is because it penalizes a
few unfortunate individuals while
society sees many they consider guilty
enjoying their loot in freedom. Some of
the agencies involved in anti-corruption
have credibility problems, their leaders
being accused of wrong doings." Such
words coming from the National Security
Adviser is the equivalent of the CIA
boss in the United States indicting
senior officials of state. In plain
language, the Nigerian National Security
Adviser was directly accusing top
officials of state of "wrong doing."
He
didn't have to spell it all out; he
managed to send a strong signal. Could
it be that the President is planning to
remove the heads of the anti-corruption
agencies, and the police and make some
changes in the judiciary? Within 48
hours after the NSA's statement was
reported, all the indicted agencies
sprang into action. On April 21, the
newspapers were already reporting: "ICPC
charges Ogbulafor, four others with
fraud." The Police headquarters also
sent its men to go and arrest Chief
James Ibori. So important did the Ibori
matter suddenly become that a combined
team of all the security agencies in the
land stormed Delta state to arrest the
former Governor. So far, they have been
successfully resisted by militant
youths: an obvious confirmation of Aliyu
Gusau's disclosures about inefficiency
and the ridiculous nature of national
security. Again, the same charge of
being selective and partial would still
apply. The law enforcement agencies
should not crank to life like bad
engines only when one mechanic comes
along to offer a necessary spark: the
import of Gusau's statement should again
be the urgent need to rebuild the
institutions of state. For the question
may be asked: are the security chiefs
having been indicted by the office of
the NSA struggling to keep their jobs,
by following a script or they really
mean business?
The NSA
didn't spare the Governor of the Central
Bank either. Without mincing words, he
accused the Lamido Sanusi CBN of
sabotaging the Nigerian economy with
policies that promote instability. Aliyu
Gusau was not on the soap box looking
for votes. He was speaking as National
Security Adviser. And we can for that
reason alone still assume that he was
speaking seriously. And that he has the
authority of the Acting President
backing him. If I were Lamido Sanusi, I
would seek a security interpretation of
the NSA's statement. Well, it is clear
enough isn't it? It is a serious charge
indeed for a country's National Security
Adviser to dismiss the CBN as a saboteur
institution. The NSA wasn't talking
economics or banking but security.
And
according to him, the current
interventions by the Central Bank of
Nigeria "seemed to have damaged economic
activity in the banking sector to the
detriment of the larger society." Charge
no 2: "the travails of the banking
sector reflect the double standards
critics perceive in the administration
of justice; what every bank seems to be
doing, yet only a few banks were
penalized." The bank chiefs who were
indicted by Sanusi's CBN must be
clinking glasses. The Renaissance
Professionals, the mouthpiece of the
anti-Sanusi lobby must be dancing. But
it is surprising that there has been no
statement yet from the CBN defending
itself against the damning verdict from
the National Security Advise, for there
are contradictions of logic in the NSA's
position on corruption and how to fight
it which the CBN should be able to
identify. For example, against what
benchmark is the NSA comparing Sanusi's
CBN? Is there an alternative blueprint
which nobody is aware of? And is the NSA
not aware that he invariably heats up
the polity and sends the wrong signals
to investors when he publicly dismisses
critical institutions of state? However,
if Gusau was speaking the mind of the
Acting President in all of these
matters, then the stage may have been
prepared for some critical personnel
changes in the days ahead.
But is
it really progress that they seek or
greater control of the levers of state?
The NSA has indicted the anti-corruption
agencies, the police, the judiciary, the
Central Bank of Nigeria and he has
offered a candid review of national woes
identifying them correctly as issues of
security. He left out the intelligence
agencies which he oversees. Those
agencies are just as inefficient and as
unreliable as all the others that have
been adjudged guilty of "wrong doings."
He talked about the carnage in Jos and
the Boko Haram killings, and the need
for proactive measures in the prevention
of crime. How do we prevent crime if the
intelligence agencies and the security
advisers cannot manage open
intelligence? The rot is widespread and
it is all encapsulating and there is
work for the Jonathan team. Analysis of
the dilemma in the corridors of power is
useful but what Nigerians really need is
change and progress and concrete
assurance that the new drivers are
willing to serve and make a difference.
The
buck stops at the Acting President's
table. He must draw a fine line between
mere posturing, political rhetoric and
actual performance. It is unfortunate
that so early in the day, some
characters are already on the streets of
Abuja campaigning for Jonathan to be
president in 2011. Jonathan's minders
should not tell us that these are fifth
columnists at work. Such campaigners and
their sponsors pose a threat to national
security; they are just as guilty of
wrong doing.
Ahmed
Yerima's 4th wife-By Reuben Abati
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