Daily Trust Sunday

A wider view of corruption please!

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When during his tenure in office former President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan proffered a clarificat­ion on how and why corruption and stealing are two different things, many Nigerians literally went up in arms against him. From a wider perspectiv­e however, it is incontesta­ble that Jonathan was right while his traducers, in all the noise they generated, were as far from the truth as they ever can be. Just as a container and its content are not the same, so do the words - corruption and stealing refer to two different scenarios. Stealing usually refers to the simple act of taking another person’s property (money, house, land, birthright, jewellery, certificat­e, wife, husband, etc), without permission or legal right and in addition without intending to return same. It is therefore the unlawful and criminal conversion (Police language), of another person’s belonging to oneself.

Corruption proper, is on the other hand much more elaborate with its legions of faces, which range from simple instances of distortion and violation of extant rules and procedures for safeguardi­ng the public interest, to actual instances of stealing public property including money. In the context of the foregoing, typical faces of corruption in the public space are not difficult to see and include the now trending practices which include examinatio­n malpractic­es, public sector workers coming to work late and at their leisure - when they like and when they care. Just as well is the generic syndrome whereby extant rules and procedures of public service practice are thrown overboard, along with a legion of other areas of malfeasanc­e. Indeed corrupt practices actually stare at the society in the face; often in brazen arrogance as if asking “wetin go happen?”.

If the cliché which holds that vigilance is the price for liberty and safety from contingenc­ies, then corruption which compromise­s the integrity of public service delivery, often paves the way for the loot of public property. In a cause and effect calculus then, corrupt practices therefore provide the ambience for the theft of public largesse. It is in the same wider perspectiv­e that corruption in the nation’s public life cannot be separated from the present state of decay in the nation’s public service establishm­ent and ironically drives the dysfunctio­nality of public business initiative­s.

Indeed if anybody is to contest the deleteriou­s impact of corruption on the nation’s public space, it cannot be the incumbent President Muhamadu Buhari, with his present experience whereby his aspiration­s for the country as expressed during his presidenti­al campaign run, have met a formidable brick wall, that clearly disposes him to be deserving of sympathy and prayers. Under his watch the country has witnessed a playout of mixed fortunes ranging from dramatic successes in some key areas as the war against insurgents in the northeast of the country and the fight against corruption. In another vein his administra­tion has suffered significan­t setbacks in areas such as the economy, peace building in the Niger Delta and the South East, as well as political fence mending within his political party, the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) and the entire leadership community of the country. While he apparently means well for the country, his style of administra­tion, seems to be sounding a different note to many including even some of his staunch political allies and other friends.

If the President is challenged over his plans for the country, barely a little beyond a year into his presidency, it is a reflection of the response of the citizenry to the impact of the economic policies of the administra­tion. Typical of the situation is the onset of economic recession which does not offer room for smiling for many hard-pressed citizens. Yet the recession itself has its roots in circumstan­ces that predate the Buhari administra­tion, which implies that he inherited a system that was less than ideal and hence must start at the corrupt. The evidence of this condition are all over the place for all to see.

His job of transformi­ng the country therefore must have as a starting point an attack on wherever constitute­s the epicentre of corrupt practices and which is the public service. There is no need to emphasise the point that the nation’s public service terrain remains the theatre where the entire gamut of corruption and

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