Beware Of Politics
Of Anti-Corruption
By
Kayode Komolafe
culled from THISDAY, October 4, 2006
Nothing brings the politics of
anti-corruption campaign into focus sharper than the position of the chief
campaigner himself, President Olusegun Obasanjo. If you doubt this
proposition, you need to do a text analysis of the President’s
pronouncements in the last few days on corruption. These statements and
other factors have made the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)
the toast of the moment,
Last Thursday, the President spoke on the briefings made to the senate the
previous day by the chairman of EFCC, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, in which he said
that 31governors were under investigation. The President said inter alia: …I
have read one or two of these reports, these are series of allegations, many
of them spurious.
“Many of them are worthy of investigation and I asked the EFCC chairman
today and he explained that there were allegations going on but no
conclusion drawn. How can you say all governors are corrupt?
“So if there is any sensational report, I don’t think anybody should be
unduly disturbed about it. When cases are concluded, necessary actions will
be taken.”
It is remarkable that the President was addressing the National Executive
Council meeting of his party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). It is also
believed that prior to the meeting the party’s apparatchiks had been
mounting pressure on the President, pointing out to him that Ribadu was out
to decimate their organisation by beaming his anti-corruption searchlight
into the activities of PDP governors and other officials. In the view of
these custodians of PDP values (whatever these values are), by making the
symbols of the party targets of his anti-corruption war, Ribadu is aiming
at the jugular of the party itself. The matter becomes more curious when
some of the governors that were not given an anti-corruption clean bill of
health by Ribadu happen to be those perceived to be the good boys of Aso
Rock. In fact, the curiosity is more on the part of those who hitherto
have been accusing Ribadu of targeting the political enemies of the
President. If those regarded as having political proximity to Aso Rock are
now said to be under investigation or have even been indicted as some are
wont to say, then Ribadu’s EFCC should be watched closely. The cases of
three governors could be used to illustrate this point. The three
governors are perceived to be close to the President (and therefore
expected to be untouchable by EFCC). First is the Ekiti state Governor Ayo
Fayose.
Earlier this year, he played host
to the President who was on a state visit. On that occasion, the President
acknowledged his “achievements” and ‘execution of projects”. In fact, the
President adopted him as a political son and asked for forgiveness on his
behalf from those he might have offended. In appreciation, Fayose danced
than to some tunes of “omo o le jo baba ka binu omo” ( you don’t quarrel
with a son for taking after his father). With this what further insurance
would Fayose expect from any federal agency prying into the affairs of Ekiti?
However, if you ask Fayose now what he makes of the President’s visit in
retrospect, he would probably tell you that the seeming presidential
endorsement of governance in Ekiti State has not insulated him from the
current storm. It is all politics.
Similarly, the President was effusive with praises as he inspected projects
in Enugu State during his last visit to the state. He even compared the
state to other states , which receive huge amounts from the allocations
from the Federation Accounts. He commended the state governments for
projects such as the Enugu State University Teaching Hospital and College
of Medicine; Ebeano Underground Tunnel; International Conference, Centre;
Judiciary Headquarters and dualization of roads among others. .Despite all
these, the petition against the state government formed the basis of
Ribadu’s appearance in the senate last Wednesday. Any one who understands
the workings the politics of this dispensation would not classify the state
Governor, Dr. Chimaroke Nnamani among the enemies of Obasanjo. If anything,
he can only be accused of being an Aso rock favourite. Pending the legal
fireworks in court, the state government seems to be giving a subtle
response to EFCC’ accusations with his media campaigns under the slogan of
“Enugu is Working. To God is the Glory”. The state government has been
highlighting its projects as if to say if the governor embezzled all the
money, how were these projects funded?
Thirdly is the case of Governor Peter Odili of Rivers State. He is reputed
to be an ally of the President. Perhaps, the President had visited and
commissioned projects in Rivers State more than any other since 1999. In
reciprocity, Odili is also frequent caller in Aso Rock. Besides, he could
also be called a family friend of the President’s family. The other day,
Odili ‘s family was announced as the sponsor of the wedding of Muyiwa, the
son of the President and his late wife Stella. So how can you talk of the
President’s friends among the governors and Odili’s name would be missing.
Yet, if you ask EFCC men, they would tell you that they are investigating
the activities of Rivers State.
Not a few must have interpreted the President’s statement last Thursday as
being in favour of these governors and a few others. Some people said the
President was provoked to talk because Ribadu was not sensitive enough to
spare his acolytes.
But such views must have been disproved on Sunday morning when the same
Obasanjo said: “ We cannot afford to falter, be diverted, distracted,
confused, discouraged, intimidated or reversed. We must remain focussed and
resolute.
“In particular, the war against corruption must be deepened and sustained
if appropriate deployment of our scarce resources to the right sectors and
eliminate fiscal decay and indiscipline. There will be no relenting on the
fight against corruption. We have put our hand on the plough and there is
no looking back, going back or sliding back”.
The statement was made on a more symbolic occasion, the Independence Day
Broadcast of the President. By the way that was his last broadcast to the
nation on the occasion of 46th Anniversary of Independence. Ordinarily,
that speech was to be the rehearsal of his farewell to the nation,
encapsulating the core principles that have governed his administration in
the last seven years. The speech didn’t quite capture the transitory
significance of the moment. But that is a matter eminently suitable for
another column.
What do you make of these two seemingly contrasting statements of the
President within four days? The speechwriters and other apologists of the
President would probably argue that there is no contradiction in the two
positions. By describing the reports of Ribadu’s appearance before the
senate as “sensational”, Obasanjo has in no way disowned the
anti-corruption activities of EFCC, the official spokesmen are wont to say.
Beyond officialdom, however, a plausible explanation is that the
anti-corruption campaign of this administration risks being enmeshed in an
intractable politics. And this is the point that the President, EFCC and
the public should be wary of. This is no time to reduce the anti-corruption
campaign to politics. The Obasanjo administration cannot afford to play
politics with its anti-corruption policy because it is the best
advertisement it has got. Beyond what the administration does or does not do
with infrastructural decay, political reforms or job creation, the statement
made on corruption would linger more in the collective memory. .It does not,
probably, occur to the enthusiasts of this administration that the aspect
that captures the popular imagination in what is nebulously dubbed as
reform agenda is the anti-corruption effort.
Ironically, it is the policy that has presented the government with the
greatest contradiction. It is a different matter whether the administration
and its strategists (and who are they by the way?) fully grasp the
dialectics of this campaign.
It is not generally known that beyond the surface criticism that the
EFCC’s activities are selective, there are deeper questions about attempts
to fight corruption in this land. To start with, the Nigerian state has not
begun to address the structural foundations of corruption that is inherently
bolstered by this system. For instance, how many upper and middle class
elements can honestly account for their acquisition within the system? In
this country, we live a lie. The truth of the matter is that no one is ready
to own up publicly to the logic of primitive accumulation which governs the
system. The character of the Nigerian state at the moment is such that it
cannot address these fundamentals of corruption. We are talking of the
political economy of corruption. That is why the system lacks the capacity
to scrutinise its public and private sectors thoroughly for corruption. In
the public sector, how many senior civil servants can account for their
wealth? In the private sector, how many companies can come out clean if
subjected to the same rigour of examination that Enron , Worldcom and others
were subjected to in the United States? The point at issue is that the
problem is deeper than what sloganeering can tackle. Beyond the surface
there are t issues that should task a determined leadership.
Understandably, it may be argued that the challenge of the moment does not
permit the luxury of going into the sociology of corruption and other
derivatives from it. The job given to Ribadu’s EFCC is to tackle economic
and financial crimes under which we can accurately categorise the havoc
being wreaked by the 419 community and the unfathomable graft by political
official holders. On the basis of that it can be said that, so far, it is
hard to accuse EFCC of malicious prosecution. In cases where EFCC has
accused state governments of diverting local government funds there has been
no state where local governments have said their funds were not diverted.
The EFCC also insists that it has not brutalised anyone in the course of
investigation or arrest. It is also noteworthy that the prosecution of the
cases of fraud against non-political office holders does not generate as
much controversy as when politicians are the subjects. The EFCC is reputed
to have recovered billions of dollars some of which have been returned to
foreigners duped by some fraudulent Nigerians, but this has not generated
much interest on the part of the larger public. In this regard, the EFCC
finds itself in a difficult situation as it is perceived as a mere tool for
whipping political enemies of the powers that be. The other day, in a piece
on this page, Ribadu himself admitted there is a deep contradiction between
the reality of what EFCC is doing and the perception out there. The problem
is that this perception remains in some informed and powerful quarters. For
instance, in the face-off between the President and his deputy, the camp of
Vice President Atiku Abubakar sees the EFCC as nothing but a tool. To large
extent, this is the perception of not a few of the governors.
As a matter of fact, it is little remembered now that another agency, the
Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC) had said earlier that 24
governors have cases to answer. The ICPC said their files had been forwarded
to the Chief Justice of the Federation, requesting him to appoint
independent counsels to investigate these governors in the light of the
constitutional immunity they enjoy. The job of EFCC is more complicated by
the fact our political culture has not matured to the extent that public
officials would spare the system of tension by admitting to misdeeds in
their official capacities. Only last week, John Prescott began his address
to the British Labour Party Conference on an apologetic note saying he was
“sorry’ for some misdemeanour while in office. The former South African
Vice President Jacob Zuma admitted wrongdoing and explained himself in the
course of a judicial process and the court has vindicated him for now. A
similar thing could be said of former United States’ President Bill Clinton
who was impeached but not removed from office because of his ‘inappropriate
relationship” with Monica Lewinsky. In all these cases, public officers
admitted wrong doings. But in Nigeria, public officers fight to the finish
claiming innocence of wrong doings regardless of evidence to the otherwise.
Another critique is that the Obasanjo administration has not addressed the
most pernicious form of corruption, which is the corrupt process of getting
to power. With power, other forms of corruption are enhanced. The road
leading to power in Nigeria is laden with corruption. Corruption cannot be
fundamentally tackled until that road is blocked and a cleaner road is
opened.
In sum, the EFCC should be insulated from the vagaries of contemporary
politics of underdevelopment. Apart from confronting present challenges,
Ribadu has a greater task of building EFCC into an institution that would
outlive the Obasanjo administration in its strength and weaknesses. The EFCC
should be developed into a professional institution to check corruption.
Its stature is diminished when it is perceived as a tool of this
administration that would expire in seven months time.
Virile political institutions
have sustained the Italian political system. That is why it has been to have
characters such as Berlusconi as prime minister without collapsing. The
EFCC may insist on its strategy, but it should do a rethink of its tactics.
There should be no political statements from the commission. If the police
and the armed forces are not allowed to make political statements, the EFCC
cannot be exempted from the rule as an agency of the state. Currently, the
seemingly political statements of EFCC are creating problems for some of the
politicians it is bound to investigate. That also makes EFCC vulnerable to
accusations. of political persecution. That problem would be avoided if
EFCC avoids making statements that would make it vulnerable to being drawn
into the increasingly messy political fray.
Perhaps, the EFCC should only make its statements in the course of
prosecution. That would accord the work of the commission the immunity from
politicisation.
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