SUNDAY MUSINGS: Our Nigeria: A Perpetually Scandal-Ridden Society ? By Mobolaji E. Aluko, PhD Burtonsville, MD, USA
Sunday, April 3, 2005
The latest scandal of the moment, following last week’s break of the Bribery-For-Budget Education Ministry/National Assembly scandal, is the one involving the seemingly wrongful allocation of 207 housing properties in Ikoyi to privileged members of Nigerian society, including many of President Obasanjo’s personal household as well as cabinet ministers, state governors and other government functionaries. It included disclosures like:
QUOTE
A source told The Guardian that eight certificates of the property were last week handed over to Mrs Obasanjo. They included the property allegedly allocated to
* Mr. Henry Abebe at 23 Milverton Road to the tune of N158,400,000. *Dr. Yemisi Abebe got 12, Ikoya Avenue, Ikoyi at N80,400,000 while her husband, who is a personal assistant to the first lady, *Dr. John Abebe, was given the property at 1B, Iru Close at N64,800,000. *Mrs. Franca Abebe was allotted the property at 7B Maroko, close at N57,600,000.
Those who had made part-payment were the
*Senate President Wabara who was allotted the property at 23, Queens Drive, Ikoyi, at N208,800,000. He had paid N50 million. *Osun State governor Olagunsoye Oyinlola has reportedly made full payment for the property on 16, Alexander Avenue, Ikoyi, at N112,800,000. *Mr. Felix Odimegwu of the Nigerian Breweries Plc was reportedly allotted two property, 20, Lugard Avenue at N98,400,000 and 22A, Lugard Avenue at N79,200,000. He had paid in full for the two. ……
UNQUOTE
This list was first published on April 1, 2005. The text of the president Obasanjo’s memo to Housing and Urban Development Minister Mrs. Mobolaji Osomo was uncharacteristically short:
QUOTE
Dear
Minister, terms, about the way you seem to be handling the sale of Federal
Government properties in Lagos. I have a document sent to me anonymously (copy attached), where 207 people had been allocated or offered land/property for sale surreptitiously; some with full payment, some with deposit and some without payment at all.
I
also feel personally embarrassed that almost all members of my wife’s
family are on that list.
As
it is, the entire list will now be cancelled without fail, the money
collected should be refunded and all the property will be advertised for
sale, except those allocated to Ambassador Ibrahim Gambari and Chief Emeka
Anyaoku which had been approved long before this excersise on special
condition of encouraging their relocation to Nigeria and on the basis of
current value plus 10 per cent. Report faithful compliance with this instruction.
Yours sincerely,
UNQUOTE
Talking to a cousin over the phone over the newspaper report, I confided in him that I strongly believed that it was an April fool’s prank which would be promptly denied in the April 2 newspapers, and that the irresponsible newspapers might expect some lawsuits for libel. So imagine my horror when the following day, I started to read some hemmings and hawings.
Some samples of reactions (paraphrasing now):
Vice-President Atiku; Dr. Okonjo Iweala: “Ehm, I got some housing offer, but I rejected it. I declined.”
Dr. Charles Soludo, Governor Central Bank; Minister Frederick Bozimo : “Ehn, em, Some forms were sent to me, but I did not send them back.”
NAFDAC DG Dora Akunyili: “Ehm, the official residence in Lagos that I am living in was offered to me under the monetization scheme, and I was given first option to decline purchase.”
Governor Oyinlola, Osun State: “Ehen, yes, yes, I got my allocation and paid N110 million through a bank loan.”
Governor Donald Duke: “Ehm, I was allocated a house, I applied – but have not heard back since !”
Minister of Works, Senator Adeseye Ogunlewe: “Ehm, I was allocated a house, and I accepted the offer, and I paid. But sha o, if it has been cancelled by Mr. President, no shaking, he is the boss: just give me my money back !”
National Orientation Minister, Chief Chukwuemeka Chikelu: “Ehm, I was allocated a house, and I accepted the offer. Abeg, no further comment, please !
Acting Inspector-General of Police, Mr. Sunday Ehindero: “Ehm, have no comment. It is government’s policy. I will abide by it.”
But the one by Oby Ezekwesili was most interesting:
“Ehm, where is that Minister Osomo ? She has to apologize to me PROMPTLY for my name being on that list ! As Due Process czarina, I am profoundly embarrassed by this episode: I requested no house and made no payment.”
Some questions are so pertinent as to be ridiculous to be asked;
It can be mind-boggling the level of both selfishness and corruption that has been exhibited and is now being revealed by many Nigerian elites, particularly in government. It shows that many of them spend their waking hours tilling the ground in their own directions rather than looking out for the people whose welfare is supposed to be government’s business.
It is quite disheartening, and shows why our country is where it is. It is not actually that the money we get in the country cannot go far enough, but it is that a few Nigerians have cornered all the advantages of financial resources for their own good, leaving the rest of the country holding an empty bag.
But there is a further tragedy: what do we do with all of these disclosures: Tafa Balogun and his billions; the National Assembly and the millions bribery; and now the Ikoyi Housing scandals ? It almost looks as if while dealing with one scandal, another comes to wipe the earlier one out of thought, and then we are constantly gasping, expecting what will come next.
Tafa can be fired, Osuji can be fired; Osomo could (and should) be fired, Wabara can resign as Senate President, even all of them prosecuted, etc.. But what kind of moral malaise in the country produces all of these criminals and fraudsters in and out of government, including possibly in the president’s bedroom ? One cannot but pity the president in his present predicament in his seeming loneliness in his crusade: How can so many people have such a penchant for corruption and fraud, without inhibitions ? Are the government audit and control systems so bereft of integrity that these people act with impunity – out of habit since these things must have been going on for so long ?
What must we now do to change things so that we are not constantly locking the stables after the horses have escaped ? While many might ask for revenge and jailings of these criminals, it is infinitely better to prevent these kinds of crimes and fraudulent practice BEFORE they occur, first because they might simply present more avenues for corruption as these people attempt to bribe their way out of their latest problems, and secondly otherwise they sap the development of the country and make us far poorer than we really are.
Clearly, corruption is a cancer that we must tackle HEADLONG in the country, and the emphasis should be on instituting measures to PREVENT these instances from occurring, not just triumphalist rejoicing at the discovery and punishment of the fraudulent ones.
It is all exasperating, but all the movement will be without motion if we don’t ALL seize the moment to institutionalize transparency, accountability and integrity in our system not merely by prosecuting and jailing guilty persons; but through strengthening our laws and their enforcement; opening up the transparency and accountability process to public view; instituting zero-tolerance of corruption in our police and judiciary; and tightening the screws on our banking system
BIBLIOGRAPHY
http://nigerianmuse.com/nigeriawatch/officialfraud/?u=Ikoyi_govt_housing_scandal.htm Ikoyi Government Houses Offerred/Sold Without Due Process
http://nigerianmuse.com/essays/?u=Day_long_knives_education_ministry.htm MID-WEEK ESSAY: Reacting to the Day of the Long Knives in the Education Ministry
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