The Protean
Dimensions
By
Wole Soyinka
Nobel Laureate
Literature 1986
January 16, 2006
So many images lend
themselves to the morphology of corruption. From my own field of
literary pursuits I am tempted to propose the figure of the
nine-headed Hydra from Greek mythology. When the would-be challenger
has cut off one of those heads, he discovers that a few more
supposedly - have grown up in its place. At the same time, the
reptilian body lashes out right and left with its tail, while each
head lets off streams of corrosive venom.
Or should we think with equal appropriateness - of the octopus? An
octopus is defined by its eight arms or tentacles but anyone who has
ever tangled with an octopus must know that eight, like the Hydras
nine, is no more than a figure of speech. First of all, each of
those arms is fitted with myriad suckers, so that the arms not only
exercise a stranglehold, they also fasten parasitically on their
environment. What it must feel like within those flashing coils is
that the arms number, not eight, but eight times eighty-eight. This
is how it must be experienced not only by the unlucky victim but by
the would-be-octupus wrestler. True, very few of us actually get
caught in its coils, but many of us here, at one time or the other,
have seen Nature or science-fiction films where the hero battles for
his life with the monster from the deep. One moment, his oxygen
cylinders firmly in place and functioning perfectly, our protagonist
cruises serenely along the ocean-bed, marveling at the beauty of a
little seen world, the next moment, a seemingly placid floor erupts
beneath him, a long slithering arm, all pocked with suckers lashes
out, wraps itself around the explorerís neck and then ñ itís only a
matter of time. Several titanic thrashings and lashings later, the
luckless adventurer is dragged beneath the sand or mud, a few
bubbles float upwards and ñ end of story.
Now, imagine such an octopus with, not one, but nine heads and do
your multiplication. We love to excel in our nation, to go one
better than anyone else, so ours is a very special breed for which
neither the Hydra nor the octopus is adequate. I think I shall name
our native beast of corruption, a monster of truly mythical
proportions, the Hydropus, an amphibian mammal that thrives on land
and sea, in the desert and the mangrove swamps, feeds just as
readily on iron and steel as it does on crude petroleum. It is as
much at home under military dictatorship as it is under civilian
democracy and can derive moisture and nourishment from bitumen just
as readily as from virtual reality. Its especial genius however is
its ability to turn every bit of terrain into marshland or
quicksands, so as to leave its opponents no ground to stand upon.
Indeed the appearance of solidity is its secret weapon. One moment
you believe that youíre standing, literally, on terra firma, ready
to do battle, the next moment the ground disintegrates into
quicksands, under which the monster has disappeared. A huge tentacle
thrusts upwards from the pulsing earth and then you realize that the
quicksand is its natural home.
Have this image branded in your mind if you really wish to
understand why many Nigerians run in the other direction when they
realize that Hydropus may be operating right within and beneath
their own fields of livelihood. They turn a blind eye to its
flagrant activities because Corruption is a vicious beast with
sufficient tentacles to strangulate any reformist interloper while
the other arms are sweeping up the spoils of war in a steady,
uninterrupted flow, through its perfect camouflage of insubstantial
sands that give the appearance of a level playing field. With an
octopus or a Hydra, you can see your foe no one ever sees anything
beneath the quicksands, only the lulling, reassuring placidity.
Sometimes however, in the cinematic contest between mere mortal and
monster, we see rivulets of blood discolouring the blue of the
marine waters or seeping upwards from to borrow from another
mythology, the christian the Slough of Despond. Even after his
oxygen mask has been ripped off and his torso compressed beyond
human endurance, our hero succeeds in finding the vital spot and
plunges in his knife. The monster writhes, the tentacles lose their
elasticity and go limp. Our hero bobs up out of breath while the
beast floats to the surface, belly-up, its eyes glazed for ever. You
mustn’t tangle with the anointed champion of a morality tale - or
with cinema heroes - is a lesson learnt too late by the Hydropus
but, does it happen in real life?
Alas, ninety-nine percent of the time, it is the monster that wins.
It is a lucky protagonist who lives to tell the tale of his
encounter and this, regrettably, has been the story of the survival
ratings of the species on our continent. Here, the beast from under
not merely survives; it thrives, and the monster slayers are left
battered and bruised, for daring the Hdyropoid kingdom. Some people
have actually proposed that perhaps it is time we began to bestow on
Corruption a corporate identity or assist it to become one. I have
actually read an article to that effect I believe it was titled
Making Corruption Pay. I forget all the details but the basic idea
is that nations should incorporate the multi-headed, tentacular
entity, induct it into the Chamber of Commerce and tax it like any
other corporate venture. It might indeed pay a nation like ours in
the end. Finding itself rated as a commercial concern, quoted
regularly on the Stock Market next to Microsoft or Dow Jones
Industrial, it would be compelled to be productive, take better care
of its corporate image and behave a little more responsibly.
Before dismissing the idea, do bear in mind that Nigeria is not an
exception among nations affected by corruption it is merely the
scale that most observers find staggering and, more importantly, its
lack of a productive ethos. I am sorry that one has to use the word
‘thos’ in this context but, that is nothing new. The idea of ‘honour
among thieves’ similarly sounds like a corruption of the very
concept of ‘honour’ and yet, is that not an expression that has come
down to us from ancient times? Even armed robbers understand the
concept. Many is the tale told of an armed robber who invades the
home of a corporate thief. The gang is operating on inside
information and knows very well how much is the manager’s illegal
‘take-home’ pay on a daily basis. On breaking in, the robber is
especially incensed when the house-owner declares that he has only a
couple of thousand naira in the house. The invader searches
meticulously and, lo and behold, discovers five million tucked away
in a supposedly safe corner. You don’t have to be told why the
robber loses his temper He uses that very language of stressed and
disappointed moral values: what pains me in this country, he says,
is that there is such dishonesty. When all is said, there should
be honour among thieves, no be so dem say? If my memory serves me
right, the same sentiment was made by the president of this nation
in connection with the feuding duo of Anambra state. Such a
declaration should of course be considered the secular equivalent of
a papal encyclical.
But we do not even have to take such extreme instances and, in any
case, some of our armed robbers are simply incensed at the very
notion that an opulent looking home, whose owner should have
anticipated unexpected visitors, should keep so little money in the
house ‘Big man like you, na only dis small amount you get. You no
shame and a slap goes across the man’s face, some gun whipping or
indeed cold-blooded execution. Those are the sadists of the trade,
we will not dignify them with any attention. I have made that mild
digression merely to underscore the fact that we are indeed entitled
to speak of an ‘ethos’, even within the imperatives of corruption,
so perhaps we should not dismiss the rather startling notion of
incorporating Corruption as a legitimate enterprise, assisting it
with a constitution, a code of conduct, subjecting it to taxation
etc. etc.
It is of course tempting to console ourselves the fact that the
hydra-headed monster is also active in other lands and - let us
quickly stress this - its manifestation is guaranteed irrespective
of the kind of ideology flaunted by such nations. In communist
China, economic crimes are still high on the court lists, despite
the fact that these were often met with capital punishment a bullet
through the head. Corporate economic crimes are a regular feature of
American society at the very top levels - and, as the yet ongoing
case on Capitol Hill, Washington DC, of the gold-carat lobbyist with
the illegal touch promises, a fiesta awaits us of honorables,
senators, governors, making their appearances in court, arraigned
for accepting obvious illegal donations, kickbacks and corrupt
inducements, even as business moguls have riveted the US populace in
recent times, exposed as cooking the books - to give that its common
parlance ñ and bribing right and left in order to cover their
tracks. I do not think that any month, maybe week goes by in the
United States without some high-level scandal that should, strictly
speaking, earn that nation the inhibiting retort of ñ kindly mind
the beam in thine own eye before pointing at the mote in the eyes of
others.
Even audit firms, those supposed watchdogs of financial integrity.
have not been exempted is it possible to forget the notorious case
of the world-wide Anderson firm of Accountants? One’s confidence in
the book keeping profession is shaken to the foundations when such a
firm turns out to be more adept at cooking than keeping accounts. It
makes one think more kindly of cynics like one of one of own more
colourful state governors, now deceased, who, when staggering sums
were found under his bed following a military coup, claimed that,
since this was government money, he, as governor had the right to
decide where was the best place for its safekeeping. Imagine if he
had invited Anderson, the international experts, to invest his state
funds! Would the result have been any better? And then of course
there is the case of Enron, which nearly became a partner for one of
our states in the nation’s frantic search for a solution to NEPA. If
that exploratory reach had borne fruit, heaven knows what the
consequences might be for that state today. I make it a point of
duty to point out these examples when I encounter the pained, often
sanctimonious concern of the natives of that continent who make
corruption the first, middle and last word of conversation with you
when the subject turns to Africa. I remind them, for instance that
it was within the United States that a criminal conspiracy totally
liquidated a Pension Fund, amounting to billions, wiped out the life
savings of millions of individuals who had reached that stage when
they can no longer fend for themselves, threw them out in the cold
for a dismal, penurious end to their existence. I can think of no
instance of corrupt conduct more brutal, more inhuman in its
consequences. It was a death sentence for many pensioners, the kind
of economic crime that in my view, deserves the death sentence, if
one were a believer in the moral value of capital punishment.
Those reminders are necessary for situating Hydropus in its unique
environment, for even if we continued to stress such the above
examples of shared tendencies, including even a remarkable incidence
of corrupt judges in that nation, we find that there are still two
fundamental differences in the nature of corruption between nations
such as the United States and here, within Nigeria, both differences
being hinged on each other. Corruption, let us say, within the
United States, is a feature of productive precipitates, even if not
necessarily of surplus. In other words, a development project, or
productivity itself comes before the skimming.
Highways are built and maintained, power is generated, farms produce
real food, preservation techniques are updated, a war industry
produces real weapons, housing schemes are visible, consumerist
gadgets are invented, patented and marketed, universities are
maintained, health programmes sustained etc. etc., and it is from
within the process of such industries and social programmes that
corrupt opportunities insert themselves and are exploited. Let me
put it this way: something is actually shown for the corruption. We
all know that here, it is the opposite that reigns. A government is
inaugurated, a parastatal or ministry is approved and the first
question ñ shall we say, the project is agriculture? - the first
question is not: how do we breed a higher yield cow but, how do we
find a cow to milk? That is priority Number One. The caucus mulls
this question over and then, they invent, I repeat, invent a
project. The project does not come first, no, Corruption is the
project. All that is substantial is the name, this is where the most
creative energy is spent ñ a name that goes into the files.
Something that exists only in virtual reality. It may be based on
material reality, after all, there has to be something to launch,
something around which to conduct visitors from time to time, but as
far as the creative transformation is concerned, it is nothing but
the tale of the Emperorís clothes all over again. Let me illustrate
with a true story that is all too common, one that was told me by
the late Ojetunde Aboyade, appropriately, since it is in his honour
that we are gathered here today.
Oje named names and showed me the evidence of this quite minor,
unsung footnote of a venture that was so typical of the survival
tactics of that species - Hydropus Nigerianensis. It happened
during the construction of Abuja capital territory. A young lady,
who studied in ëde abroadí of America came home on long vacation.
Being a very active person, who had also grown up in that country
where the vacation job often amounts to a basic student ethic, she
asked her father if there was some way he could help her earn some
pocket money while home. The father sent her to a close friend who
happened to be involved in the construction of Abuja Capital
territory, which was then perhaps half-way developed.
Eagerly, she visited this man in his Lagos office, introduced and
pronounced herself on the job line for some pocket money. Well, said
the family friend, I only deal with the construction side of things.
If you’re looking for a desk job, I’m afraid I really haven’t much
to offer. Anything at all, said the eager young lady, in fact, I’ve
always preferred outdoor work. So - cut a long story short - the man
brought out his copy of the Abuja master plan, spread it out on the
table and pored over it. Finally, he stabbed at a section and said
here, see this road? We need a culvert between here, and - here. He
handed her another sheet of paper here are the specifications. You
think you can handle that? The girl was a bit flabbergasted. When
she had heard the job description as construction, she was looking
forward to actually working with her hands as one of a work gang,
now it looked as if she was being offered, without any experience
whatsoever, something like the position of a foreman.
Worse was to come. It was not to be a foreman, but the contractor
and organiser of all the required labour, skilled and unskilled -
structural engineer, surveyor, etc. She was an adventurous girl
however, and she remembered that she had an aunt who was a building
contractor - you know, houses. She grew excited at the prospect and
quickly re-affirmed her competence to undertake the project. Very
good said her father’s friend, and scribbled her a note. Take this,
report at that office tomorrow and collect your mobilisation fees.
The girl took a look at the figure and nearly fainted.
It was a most determined girl who returned home, contacted her aunt
and looked forward to returning to the US to boast to her mates how
she had gone home on vacation and ended up being one of the
foundation builders for the city of Abuja. Her aunt soon found her a
small-time builder, and a surveyor. Together they bought picks and
shovels, negotiated cement delivery to Abuja etc. etc. She hired a
minibus, and within days, she was on site, ready for the challenge..
Well, they arrived there, followed the map and began hunting for the
road. Throughout that day, they searched, searched and searched.
Nothing but pristine jungle. The map of what was supposed to be a
developed site had never been breached by human feet. Her father’s
friend had made a mistake, they decided, so she left her crew behind
and motored back to Lagos to see the family friend.
He received her quite warmly, asked how her vacation was going. His
mood underwent a change when he learnt where she had been, what had
brought her back. His eyes opened even wider when he learnt that she
had hired staff and bused them to Abuja, and his mouth fell apart
when she, expecting nothing but praise, revealed how she had gone
about the venture, the initiative she had shown. He shrank from her
as one would a dangerous lunatic, reached for the phone and dialed
her fatherís number, not taking his eyes from the girl for one
second. He got his friend on the line and stammered:
‘Chappie, I thought you said your daughter was bright. You told me
she was smart. Is this what you call smart? Intelligent? Your girl,
let me tell you, is mentally retarded. Do you realize what she did?
Do you know she actually went to Abuja, and with a construction
crew? I thought you said all she needed to make some vacation money?
Do you realize sheís actually squandered all the Mobilisation fee I
authorized for her? Chappie, she actually went there! She bought
cement. She hired workers. Sheís been thrashing about in the jungle.
Imagine, if she’d been bitten by a snake, wouldn’t you have put the
blame on me? Ode l’omo to o bi yi o “ He turned on the girl “Go, go,
get out of my office, go, I don’t ever want to set eyes on you
again. I don’t know who you are, but you’re certainly not your
father’s daughter”
That, as you all know very well, is not fiction. Very often, I
repeat, very often, when you hear of one governor or the other
especially during the military days - fulminating against a
non-fulfilling contractor, cancelling this and re-awarding the
contract, that’s what it is all about. The project exists only in
name, a road-map that was never intended to be followed, much less
developed. But it leads us easily to my second fundamental
difference between corruption over there and Hydropus elsewhere that
in the latter case, corruption can be absorbed by the society for
the simple reason already provided - corruption emerges as a
negative by-product of performance. Despite corruption in other
places. society grows, infrastructures sustain the edifice, and
employment increases, whereas here, corruption mostly thrives on
phantom ventures, so that society simply balloons and, when
punctured with the needle of creditors or of social stress, national
buoyancy turns out to have been nothing but hot air.
Hence the failure, till today, of effective electric power supply.
Hence the stagnation of mass transportation blueprints despite the
constant importation of foreign experts to resuscitate’ our railways
etc., and the massive infusion of government allocations. Hence the
decay of educational institutions. Hence the moribund communication
system at least until the explosion of Mobile telephony, several of
whose systems still do not communicate with one another. Hence the
near total abandonment of a structured health delivery. Hence the
slumification of what was to have been the model modern city of
Abuja, supposed to be the unifying symbol of a hydra-headed nation,
a belated attempt to re-order which cannot but be at enormous human
and material cost, the destruction of social fabric and
mini-businesses, a process that has earned the nation a load of
opprobrium from some concerned international bodies who,
understandably, identify the ongoing recovery project with the
unconscionable destruction of settled spaces like Maroko for the
land greed of affluent classes. Hence, to come home to closer and
tragic times, hence the succession of air crashes, easily foretold
by myriad near misses, the unbelievable phenomenon of herds of
cattle that take over runways, the potholed tarmacs that, for nearly
a full year had reduced air traffic over Lagos to only one runway
for both domestic and international traffic- a monumental disgrace
and primitive state of affairs that remained hidden from the public
until a fully loaded plane landed and nearly crashed, its fuselage
shot through and through with debris from a hastily patched spot on
the tarmac Hence the final agonizing, collective chastisement that
was finally administered in Port Harcourt to a nation that
systematically worshipped and sacrificed to Hydropus, even as this
monster held its environment in a slow strangulation grip and life
began to ooze out of our very pores, our young consumed by fire
before our eyes.
It is also comforting and self-cosseting to play games with the
criminal offshoots of corruption, such as the economic crime
commonly known by the name 419, one that has now assumed its own
‘hydropustular’dimensions world-wide. The basis and motor of the 419
extortion racket is none other than greed, greed as a human or shall
we even call it global phenomenon. The word-game that is played by
defenders or rationalisers of 419 goes by the name reparation. At
first, I thought it was simply one of these one-off, instant
gratification verbal gestures that we all make from time to time,
but I have since discovered that it is being taken seriously and
proposed by some as a valid moral proposition, one that allegedly
places the assailant, the con expert and defrauder on the side of
the angels.
Now, let me begin by emphasizing that I experience no sympathy
whatsoever for the equally criminal victims of this crooked game.
They belong to the world’s population of the greedy and corrupt who
in turn act to extend the provenance of corruption, and deserve, in
every sense, to be hoist on their own petard. When however, the
419ers are cast in the role of protagonists of reparation for the
African continent, in all seriousness, I feel insulted and
belittled. To hang on to such a notion, as a serious proposition, is
to exempt oneself from the burden of all moral and political
reflection. There is an objective mandate that sustains this
position but, in my case, and I am certain I am not alone, I also
acknowledge the basis of subjective experiences.
First, the objective and analytical. Let us go back to the theme of
corruption itself. 419 is based, not simply on the cupidity and
indeed stupidity in most cases - of the inhabitants of our world
but, most specifically, on the corrupt nature of Nigerians as
perceived world-wide. It succeeds because the world is persuaded, in
the first place, that Nigerians are endemically corrupt, and so the
tall tale, the most improbable tale of corrupt proceeds is accorded
credibility because the source of such dealings is, in the first
place, attributed to a Nigerian a top offi cial, a politician, a
governor, even sometimes a mere functionaire. In other words, most
of the tales we encounter would not be believed even by a moron if
the source of corruption were attributed to, let us say, a Finn or a
Norwegian. In short, the 419ers actually libel you and me,
collectively. Their so-called act of reparation is thus beamed in
the wrong direction, since it is a further exaction from me as a
Nigerian, a reduction of my moral status, applicable to all
Nigerians who had nothing to do with the slave trade or with
colonial or multi-national exploitation. Let us be clear in our
minds what the nature of this exaction is. The presumption of
decency. Of presumed integrity. The right to an identity at par with
the rest of the world. The right to freedom from a tainted
identity. The right to carry a passport of respect. Those who study,
work, or simply travel abroad know what I am speaking of ,they will
affirm that this is no theorising. 419 has made the green booklet
one of the most despised documents in the world. I do not see how
this amounts to Reparation. It is a double exaction from the victims
on behalf of whom the genuine reparations have been sought by
political activists with a historic consciousness.
I have already admitted the other personal- vein in my position in
this respect. It is not isolated and it is certainly not unique, I
am certain, to this speaker. Subjective though it is, it drives home
the general principles that we have just laid out. I was in the
United States, in California, when news came to me of the murder of
my friend and brother, Bola Ige. Let’s say that he was murdered last
night. I received the news in the morning. Most of that day, I sat
in my study, unable to do anything creative or productive. All I
achieved that day was to telephone here and there, take calls, make
myself available for telephone calls, leave my email open as I
waited for further news about an event that I could not yet fully
absorb. It was right in the midst of this existence in limbo, that
one message popped up on my laptop let us say, about ten hours
after I first received the news of his death, that is, less than
eighteen hours after his actual murder. This message had been sent,
allegedly, by Bola Ige’s widow, Justice Atinuke Ige. And what did
that message from the distraught widow have to say?
Surely, you have guessed by now. Tinuke was informing me that her
late husband, Bola, while he was alive, and in his capacity as
Attorney-General of the nation, had stashed away a staggering sum of
some two hundred and seventy million dollars, property of the
Nigerian people, and that she was looking for a partner through whom
this money could be laundered abroad. This indiscriminately
diseminated formula was familiar, boring and obscene in every
detail, one of at least a hundred thousand faxes and email messages
that fished around for gullible and greedy partners in the disposal
of corrupt acquisition. All that was demanded from me was a letter
with my letter-head, giving my bank account etc. etc., and a
guaranteed thirty percent of this loot was mine. Yes, this was the
content of the letter that came to me, allegedly from the head of
the Ige family, a High Court judge and a newly created widow who was
nothing less than my own sister. Someone in this very nation could
not even wait for a season of grieving to have subsided, had not the
scantiest respect either for the reputation of the dead man, not
long before his death appointed a member of the Judicial Reform
Commission of the United Nations Organisation, nor of his surviving
widow, whose reputation as an officer of the law was being
tarnished, brazenly among thousands of recipients of such letter. I
cannot tell, till today, which event was more lacerating to me
personally, on so many levels this indecent assault on the very
being of these two people, their families, colleagues and
profession, or the death of my friend, Bola Ige.That exaction, that
brutalisation of my inner psyche, is not something that anyone can
quantify, and it is not a price that I am prepared to pay for any
spurious theology of reparations. Many people simply do not
understand, have never taken the trouble of an imaginative
projection of the ramifications of the Advance Fee Fraud. Until you
have taken the trouble to do so, considered its effect on the lives
of innocents, kindly keep your theology to yourself. Some of us are
not pacifists and our response at such moments may be to take our
own need for reparations instantly into our own hands. Let me
repeat, I hold no brief for fools and victims of their own cupidity,
of any nationality, who fall prey to such blatant idiocies, but the
abuse should cease of the historic and moral mandates that belong to
such movements as Reparations.
Having touched on the subject of that unsolved murder, would you
consider me as being merely whimsical when I declare that, if only
the EFCC or an aggressive ICPC - had existed at the time of the
event, the murder of the Attorney General of this nation would have
been solved by now? It is not for nothing that I choose to create a
new mythological monster, the Hydropus, as a graphic representation
of the very phenomenon of the endless, self-replicating
ramifications of Corruption. Consider this. During the calamitous
soap opera of a trial of the principal accused, a judge, who later
threw in the sponge, spoke bluntly of a twenty-million Naira bribe
that had been offered him in the early stages of the game. He named
names. He kept a diary of calls both telephone and physical as well
as conversations that had taken place. Through one of those
remarkable coincidences, I was privileged to see photocopies of two
or three pages of this diary, with its meticulous notations, some of
them coded, but easily decipherable. What matters is that this
accusation was placed in the public domain that inducements were
offered to the judge to influence his decision one way or the other.
That allegation, which the public rightly expected to be followed up
rigorously, was permitted to drop like a stone in the middle of the
pond. A millstone in fact, one that was hung around the neck of a
casualty, that casualty being named - Justice. Again, I must remind
us all a high court judge, with a reputation to maintain, made an
allegation of attempted inducement in a case that involved a murder,
and not just the murder of any citizen - though this should still
warrant precisely the same response but the murder of the Chief Law
Officer of the nation, its Attorney General no less, and a servant
of the United Nations. That allegation was not investigated. No one
was called to question, not even by the disciplinary mechanisms of
the Judiciary. Was the trial judge hallucinating? Was he merely
attempting to draw attention to himself? Did he nurse a vendetta
against some of his colleagues? Was he afraid of the case and thus
sought an excuse to recuse himself from trial? Or, very simply, was
he telling the truth? One way or the other, this was a deafening,
screaming, inconsolable demand for investigation, one that, even if
it did not completely unravel the identity of the perpetrators of
this crime, would certainly have led some distance towards the
truth.
Let it be made quite clear that this is not being said now as a
result of the developments that have occurred in the high profile
case of the double murder of Mr. and Mrs. Igwe, the former being at
the time chairman of the Anambra chapter of the Nigerian Bar
Association. That case appeared to have become stymied, but was
given a new lease of life by the revelation that there was an
improper passage of money both laterally and vertically that is,
between the members of an alleged conspiracy, and from that network
up towards the zone of investigation, leading the dogged pursuants
of justice to demand that the Inspector-General of police at the
time be brought out and arraigned as an accessory after the murder
event. From any success in nailing an accessory to, or after the
event to identifying the specific perpetrator of the crime often
proves one short step. Corrupt money is paid by those who are
implicated in a crime, or by their agents. If we no longer have a
reliable agency for the unraveling of the crime of murder, we do
have, right now, an agency that pursues the crime of corruption.
No crime can be considered closed until it is judicially resolved,
and, regretful as I am to stretch even further the investigative
zeal of the EFCC, I wish to bring to its attention this three-year
old allegation that certainly rests within its purlieu who were
these who offered bribes in the Bola Ige case, and for whom were
they fronting? The full diary of the judge in question, one that I
am confident is in safe keeping, should be aired and probed for a
definitive answer to such questions. In the United States, where
organized crime proved such a thorn in the flesh of law and order,
and even economic stability, with the crime lords getting away with
murder, literally, not figuratively contract murder, elimination of
rivals, mass killings such as St. Valentine’s massacre - the
government resorted to the instrumentality of wait for this - tax
evasion! in order to break up the notorious and seemingly
impregnable Mafia crime syndicates. In Nigeria then, let us proceed
to unravel the phenomenon of Murder Incorported by going the route
of corruption. The cocktail of corruption and political murder is
one that guarantees the very unraveling of the seams of society, of
nationhood, since it breeds
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