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Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by Omenkata: 7:00am On Jan 24, 2016 |
By Obi Nwakanma The minister for justice just announced that judges found to be corrupt will be tried by this administration. This is problematic. Though this sentiment is much shared, it should not be left to the president and his administration to define “corruption,” or determine which judge is corrupt. For the avoidance of doubt the writ of this republic does not make the president the supreme authority of the land. The constitution is the governing authority of this republic, and the president is, as are all Nigerians, governed by the Constitution. It would amount to overreach for the president to break the thin glass boundaries that established the separation of powers under the constitution. It would be power-grabbing, and the National Assembly and the courts must keep an eye on this president. In fact, it is about time that the National Assembly moved to reduce some of the powers granted the president, because one of the great sources of corruption in Nigeria is the enormous and almost limitless power granted the executive by this constitution designed by the military. Let me advert the minds of Nigerians to January 1, 1984: a military coup had just sacked the democratically elected Government of President Shehu Shagari. At the head of that coup was a tall, lean, unsmiling General, who came across as a Spartan, no-nonsense, missionary soldier, out to rescue Nigeria from political and economic collapse. Shagari had just been re-elected in a very controversial election, which had the great Nnamdi Azikiwe spewing fire in his very prophetic, as it turned out, post-election letter to Nigerians, “History Will Vindicate the Just,” published widely in the Nigerian Press. It was clear that the election was riddled with irregularities. Yet, corruption in the politics of those years was the bread and butter kind. It was confined mostly in the political parties. The civil institutions were still intact: the public service; the judicial system; the entire bureaucracy of state governance which could put to check to the excesses of political leadership. And they were still all there in 1984. Then came Buhari and his dark-browed praetorian guard, sacking the civil government, and instituting a rule by decrees. The first order of business was to dismantle the credibility of the elected political leaders the soldiers had sacked. In very elaborate fashion General Buhari and his rubber-stamp Supreme Military Council authorized the arrest, detention, and prosecution of the discredited politicians. His Minister for Justice, Chike Ofodile quickly crafted decrees that established extrajudicial tribunals that evacuated the powers of the civil courts. Some of the trials were in-camera. But it soon became obvious that these arrests and detentions were skewered mostly against politicians from the South, particularly of the group that called itself the Progressive Peoples Alliance (PPA) and by politicians from the Middle Belt. It might have been inadvertent, but the impression it created was of a partisan, regionalist witch-hunt of Southern politicians – some of them the most popular, and in fact, the more credible in their visible achievements in the four years between 1979 and 1983. One of the most dangerous contributions of Buhari’s era as a military dictator was the erosion of the credibility, dignity and the aura of impartiality of the Nigerian judiciary, until then seen my Nigerians as the bulwark against tyranny; and most credible of the three arms of government, particularly with the sack of the parliament, and the seizure of executive power by military decree. The judiciary lost its independence. Malleable and second-rate people were rapidly appointed to the bench. As the generation of solid jurists began to leave the scene by the attrition of time, a new generation of judges, the product of a corrupted judicature became more or less judicial executioners of the mandate of anyone in power. The corruption of the Nigerian judicial system, which had been subdued to military decrees began with Muhammed Buhari in 1984. The use to which he put the courts of the land was corrupt. This is the fear that President Buhari’s opponents are currently expressing in the current use of state power, in what is being increasingly seen as a partisan witch-hunt to suppress a political opposition. Again, the same method seems obvious: Buhari is arriving the scene of government again at a time when oil prices have dipped very dangerously, and perhaps more dangerously is that the era of hydrocarbon is rapidly coming to an end, which means, even more financial instability for nations like Nigeria that have long depended on oil to fuel their national economies. To all intents and purposes, as like in October 1984, Nigeria is broke. Buhari has suddenly discovered that he is unable to meet the lofty promises of his campaign, and his political strategy now is to beat the drum of corruption ad nauseam, and blame his old political opponents for his own increasingly apparent inabilities to revive the economy, or lead. For a man who spent twelve years seeking the office he now occupies, this president does not seem to have any clear, alternative strategies, or able to deliver on the promises he made. Now, here is my worry: the arrest of the PDP National Publicity Secretary, Mr. Olisa Metuh, and his arraignment in handcuffs give negative optics to this government. Yes, Buhari claims to be fighting corruption, and Olisa Metuh is accused of receiving N400 million from Colonel Sambo Dasuki, allegedly from the $2.1 billion approved for the NSA for arms procurement, the question most Nigerians are now asking is: was Olisa Metuh awarded an arms contract which he didn’t deliver, or is it just about receiving money from Dasuki. Why lock him up, and bring him to court in handcuffs, when not even Sambo Dasuki was brought to court in handcuffs? Is this a ploy to intimidate, humiliate, and ultimately punish and silence the PDP’s spokesman who has so far been engaging the current regime and calling some oftheir assertions to question? Because even people like Falae received money, and have publicly declared that they’d not return it because it has nothing to do with arms procurement, and they have not been locked up or brought to the court in chains. While every Nigerian supports the president and his administration’s apparent resolve to investigate, prosecute, and retrieve Nigeria’s stolen funds from whoever embezzled such funds, we must continue to insist that unless it is all for show, the process must not degenerate into illegality of its own. It is both sad and distressing hearing distinguished scholars of the law like Itsay Sagay, and the Criminologist, Professor Femi Odekunle arguing in support of a “limited rule of law,” these days. It points exactly to what went wrong with Nigeria: a shiftless and inferior elite incapable of the hard, long view. If the argument were to be made about a limited rule of law, Abacha would have hanged Odekunle who was brought before a military tribunal accused with Diya of plotting a coup. But in the convenience of his current elation, the good professor has forgotten. Buhari is not fighting corruption. He is enabling corruption by interfering in the judicial process. If he were fighting corruption he would have addressed the following questions: how did the system fail so much that Sambo Dasuki as the NSA could appropriate and dispose of state fund as though it were personal funds without oversight? What happened to the old system of financial control that required a vast and complex system of inter-departmental coordination? What happened to the public tenders system? How come the police services, charged with crime prevention, did not anticipate and prevent this financial crime before it happened through its own police intelligence? How come the EFCC is only just showing interest after the facts? How did the disbursement of this money escape the Federal Audit Department, the government’s official inspectorate arm, which ought to report all transactions and irregularities to both the National Assembly and the Executive, and if need be, to the police, in the event that any government agency is misappropriating state fund. What this president has been unable to do is understand that what happened here is beyond Dasuki, it is systemic failure. It is in part the result of some of the forces Buhari himself unleashed against the system in 1984. Corruption is not only the “looting” of public funds, it is the corruption of the institutions when they are turned to the private, and convenient tools of people in power – and they lose legitimacy and capacity. http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/01/buhari-is-not-fighting-corruption/ 107 Likes 12 Shares |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by Omenkata: 7:01am On Jan 24, 2016 |
very educative but soo annoying to the walkers Lalasticlala 40 Likes 3 Shares |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by Bhella5(m): 7:01am On Jan 24, 2016 |
A |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by digoster(m): 7:03am On Jan 24, 2016 |
Buhari is just being clueless and hypocritical 101 Likes 7 Shares |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by Nobody: 7:03am On Jan 24, 2016 |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by oshyno(m): 7:05am On Jan 24, 2016 |
A lot will comment without reading. Just watch Just as I anticipated. Back to the matter, this piece vividly explains why av been against Buhari's way of fighting corruption. What fuel corruptiion in Nigeria is not individual but institutions. When the institutions are streghtened, people will not have loopholes to steal. Why do we have something like security vote for God's sake. No governor is against it bcuz that is where they embezzle money from. Adams Oshomole when he was NLC chair was spitting fire about how these people emebezzle tru security vote, now his mouth has lassa fever. Daz bcuz he too is choping tru same security vote. Buhari know avenues through which they still money, instead of finding a solution he is busy playing to d galary. Who even told him the recovered funds won't be looted again, or how can he explain such stupendous allocation of N39B or so to Lai Mohamed ministry. N800m or so for building website. Ofcourse these guyz will come up with reasons why such amount is justified. Buhari is definitely not listening to the advice of even his advisers. If not for constitutionality of ministarial appointment Buhari would not have appointed anybody. He believes everybody is corrupt except him. 53 Likes 3 Shares |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by Ate247(m): 7:16am On Jan 24, 2016 |
would be ryt bck |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by greatiyk4u(m): 7:19am On Jan 24, 2016 |
Buhari as the president is the custodian of the constitution.. This man is only appealing to pity because certain people of his interest are involved.......from his write up, he sees erudite scholars like SAGAY and ADEKUNLE as been partisan and getting it all wrong cos they differ from his opinion This current fight against corruption is holistic enough to address all the institution reorganization and transformation to address the root cause of the rot.... For now, Buhari's actions and in actions are still within the tolerable limit 38 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by vedaxcool(m): 7:27am On Jan 24, 2016 |
Foolish piece by a foolish defender of corruption. If judges recieve bribe then it means they havr acted in a way that is corrupt, this means they have a case to answer. Simple. About the Financial Audit Department not doing their work and holding Santasuki well the foolish author should ask clueless Jonathan why nothing worked under him. 44 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by okosodo: 7:27am On Jan 24, 2016 |
Only enemies are corrrupt 14 Likes |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by osaslord500(m): 7:36am On Jan 24, 2016 |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by tuniski: 7:46am On Jan 24, 2016 |
vedaxcool:zombie! Let buhari strengthened the institutions and stop the diversionary tactics of hyping d arrest of last admin stalwarts while corruption continue to grow as the economy suffers! 61 Likes 3 Shares |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by mcee1(m): 8:11am On Jan 24, 2016 |
Vanguard is the most useless news papers at the moment Op,just say Igbos news paper. 12 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by Aufbauh(m): 8:15am On Jan 24, 2016 |
Buhari is not fighting corruption, he is just fighting Vanguard..... Discontented media house of wailers. Forgive me as i do not bother to read their long wailing epistle.... Mtcheew 15 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by Omenkata: 8:20am On Jan 24, 2016 |
[s] Aufbauh:[/s] ignorance is a bastard 40 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by Omenkata: 8:23am On Jan 24, 2016 |
[s] mcee1:[/s] vanguard is existing before you where born and will still exist till your demise and no kind of propaganda and falsehood can stop them. they remain the most reliable news agency amidst many aisha infested rice junk news out there like punch and co. so mr man roger that 38 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by Omenkata: 8:25am On Jan 24, 2016 |
[s] vedaxcool:[/s] Nonsense 15 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by knightsTempler: 8:28am On Jan 24, 2016 |
For those who care to know: Oil boom is over! The cost of a metal barrel (drum) is more expensive than the cost of crude oil of one barrel volume now! Even large pizza is more expensive than crude oil! The cost of three bottles of Guinness is more expensive than a barrel of crude oil! Is like many people have no idea of the gravity of the trouble at all. Many people that know should try enlighten those on self-denial of the reality of global economic crisis! Stout bottles expensive pass crude oil now...And still Nigeria senators want to spend N115bn in 2016 for their luxurious burden on the economy with N4.7bn set to buy imported 2016 SUVs to fight corruption....LMAO@@@~ #MMA 47 Likes 5 Shares |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by Aufbauh(m): 8:28am On Jan 24, 2016 |
"Being ignorant is not so much a shame than being unwilling to learn" - Benjamin Franklin Omenkata: Go figure and learn! 8 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by Omenkata: 8:30am On Jan 24, 2016 |
[s] Aufbauh:[/s] rawbish 7 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by millhouse: 8:41am On Jan 24, 2016 |
mcee1:and the nation news is your cnn abi? 18 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by Omenkata: 9:22am On Jan 24, 2016 |
millhouse: Leave the pained guy 5 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by drss(m): 9:53am On Jan 24, 2016 |
his royal dullardness, buari dullard is using kworopshun to fight his enemies. Eg arms deal trilogy by APC buari dullard govt does not exist! it was invented to persecute dasuki n entertain zombies. 16 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by drss(m): 9:54am On Jan 24, 2016 |
Happy sunday lalasticlala. |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by drss(m): 9:58am On Jan 24, 2016 |
digoster:buari dullard has turned nigeria into daura kingdom. a kingdom were d rule of d king is supreme n cannot be question. only zombies enjoy living in dis stone age kingdom. 17 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by drss(m): 10:05am On Jan 24, 2016 |
Omenkata:dis is how buari dullard fight koroption... 12 Likes 1 Share
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