Corruption as a recurring factor in Nigeria again came under
focus on Wednesday with former President Olusegun Obasanjo rapping the
President Goodluck Jonathan administration and the National Assembly for
promoting corruption and poor governance.
“For quite some time, the covered and hushed-up corruption
has had its toll on the economy,” Obasanjo said.
He said the increasing corruption under Jonathan had damaged
the economy, warning that “in the future, we will have a budget that cannot be
funded.”
“We may have to borrow to pay salaries and allowances.
Revenue allocation to states and local governments has already drastically
reduced. Capital projects at all levels may have to be drastically cut or
stopped,” he added.
The ex-President spoke in Abuja at the presentation of books
by a former Chairman of the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related
Offences Commission, retired Justice Mustapha Akanbi. Obasanjo was the chairman
of the occasion.
He said, “Nigeria cannot continue to indulge in disdain of
truth, elevation of corruption and incompetence, reinforcement of failure,
condonation of heinous crimes and celebration of mediocrity, tribal bigotry,
fomenting violence and anti-democratic practices in states and National
Assembly.
“Corruption in the National Assembly also includes what they
call constituency projects, which they give to their agents to execute, but
invariably, full payment is made with little or no job done.
“In all these, if the executive is absolutely above board,
the offending members of the National Assembly resort to subtle or open threat,
intimidation and blackmail of the executive.”
On the escalating insurgency by the violent Islamic sect,
Boko Haram, Obasanjo said Jonathan’s delayed understanding of the menace posed
by the group caused the worsening insecurity in the country.
He said, “Boko Haram is not simply a menace based on
religion or one directed to frustrate anybody’s political ambition. It is
essentially a socio-economic problem that is tainted with religion. It is a
gargantuan danger to the nation and to all Nigerians.
“Initially, President Jonathan’s understanding of Boko Haram
phenomenon suffered from wrong reading and wrong imputation. That is what led
us to where we are today.
“It took even the President more than three years to
appreciate and understand that it is a terrible mix of poor education or lack
of education; misinterpretation of what Islam and the Quran teach and stand
for, poverty, unemployment, injustice, drug, gun trafficking, human
trafficking, fallout from Libya, revenge, frustration, struggle against
inequality, imitation of international terrorism leading to training and part
of the absorption by international terrorist groups and general poor
governance, including corruption. I have always maintained that the solution to
Boko Haram or any organisation like it lies in the application of carrot and
stick approach.”
However, Obasanjo did not go unchallenged at the forum as
the Oba of Lagos, who was also the chief launcher of the Akanbi books, Oba
Rilwanu Akiolu, accused Obasanjo of failing to account for the barrels of crude
oil sales despite boasting he would do so before he came to power.
Akinolu said Obasanjo, before he assumed the Presidency in
1999, pledged to ensure transparency in the Nigerian oil sector “but later
reneged on his promise as the oil sector was besieged with quantum corruption.”
“Obasanjo failed to address the problems with the number of
crude oil per barrel produced daily; how many barrels are exported for sale as
well as the use of the proceeds”, the monarch alleged.
The ex-President fired back that it was during his tenure
that allocation to states became transparent with the publication of monthly
revenue to the three tiers of government.
He said his government “also worked out modalities to
enthrone accountability and transparency in the oil sector.”
Vice-Presient Namadi Sambo, who was represented by his
Senior Special Assistant (Monitoring), Mr. Femi Oladele, commended Justice
Akanbi’s effort on anti-corruption and commitment to service.
He said by carving a niche for himself in the fight against
graft, the jurist had left indelible footprints in the sands of time.
In his remarks, Akanbi observed that although there were
allegations of witch – hunt during the Obasanjo administration, the
ex-President never interfered with his job in the ICPC.
na dem sabi.... birds of d same feather.
ReplyDeleteEx-president Obadanjo is practising hisfailed 3rd term ambition on GEJ. This is a clear case of a port calling a kattle black. How did he acquire a whole village -Ota to himself and many others amidst ...?
ReplyDelete