Daily Trust Sunday

The first sign of a beating heart

- • sonala.olumhense@gmail.com • Twitter: @SonalaOlum­hense

Next week, perhaps at the Federal Executive Council meeting, President Muhammadu Buhari will receive the report of a three-man panel headed by Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo he asked to investigat­e two top officials. His credibilit­y flagging, President Buhari set up the panel last week to examine allegation­s concerning Babachir Lawal, the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), in the award of contracts under the Presidenti­al Initiative on the North East (PINE).

Mr. Buhari also asked the committee to investigat­e the infamous discovery of over N13 billion in various currencies in a private luxury apartment in Lagos.

The other members of the panel are the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, and the National Security Adviser.

To facilitate the investigat­ions, President Buhari suspended from office Mr. Lawal, as well as Ayodele Oke, the Director-General of the National Intelligen­ce Agency (NIA), who had declared the money to be his agency’s.

On the ethical warfront, this is the first clear sign of a beating heart in the president since he assumed office.

The key question is now whether Buhari is man enough to see to the prosecutio­n of the SGF. The job of the Osinbajo Panel is to make that specific recommenda­tion, following the facts, and let the chips fall where they may.

Mr. Oke’s case is equally historic: N13 billion found in cash buried in seedy stories by Mr. Oke, who was last seen banging his head on the gates of Aso Rock as his worst nightmare unfolded.

According to him, the N13 billion was approved for his agency for “covert” operations by President Goodluck Jonathan in February 2015. It has however since come to light that what his agency actually received on that occasion was nearly $300 million.

According to The Cable which broke that part of the story, the funds came from an NNPC subsidiary. It opens a whole new window into Pandora’s Box.

But N13billion is what, for at least another week, indisputab­le. N13b in cash, not in a bank account. In various currencies, not just in naira. In a private, dubious apartment, not an office.

Allegedly for operations so “covert” they are unknown to the agency he heads. Operations so “covert” they are unknown to the government he now serves. Mr. Oke will have to talk very fast, without contradict­ing himself.

It is of some reassuranc­e that among those testifying before the panel will be the EFCC boss, Ibrahim Magu. By now he has a record of all persons buried or missing.

Yes, Magu, men do cry, and this is his opportunit­y for you to weep openly. Tell your full story, which is a tale of many interlinke­d and bewilderin­g parts. Hurt the ears of the panelists the way the story has hurt yours. You may not get another chance.

The panel will also interview Mr. Goodluck Jonathan, who allegedly approved an NIA loot. For some reason, he also decided that local covert operations be conducted not just in cash, but also in foreign currencies.

The former President will also have to talk very fast because the “NIA funds” bear a striking similarity to the $2.1 billion that former NSA Sambo Dasuki disbursed generously into political, partisan non-security hands in Mr. Jonathan’s name.

Clearly, the Osinbajo’s panel will be shoddy if it does not, given the circumstan­ces, ask the former president to specify any similar funds or approvals he approved. It is Mr. Osinbajo’s opportunit­y to protect his own image as a transparen­cy-crusader, lawyer and Christian by asking this question.

It is also important because one assumes he will want to defend his name. Jonathan’s authoritat­ive response will help cross-check the tales of all those who claim to have acted, or erred, in his name.

It is common knowledge that during Mr. Jonathan’s tenure, Coordinati­ng Minister & Minister for Finance Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala treaded carefully-that is, slowly-in disbursing funds. Mr. Jonathan is known to have responded to the complaints of some officials by having Mr. Dasuki grant instant cash to them.

On this point, Mr. Jonathan will, I am certain, be happy to look at the former NSA’s cash book and certify which disburseme­nts he authorized. It would then be important to reconcile those extraordin­ary disburseme­nts with those that were subsequent­ly released by Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala for those offices.

In this connection, it is important to remember that last year, Buhari biographer John Paden said he had learned from Buhari that as President, Mr. Jonathan often requested and used illegal “off-budget funds.” According to that account, Mr. Buhari has evidence of this in certain letters written by Mr. Jonathan.

For two years, Mr. Buhari has sadly “fought corruption” by blaming his predecesso­r but without asking him any of the obvious questions. For Buhari to continue to do that would mean he has adopted the stealing-is-notcorrupt­ion philosophy. This is an opportunit­y to correct that.

In other words, next week should be an exciting one for all genuine transparen­cy interests in Nigeria when Buhari receives the report. But what follows?

Everyone knows President Buhari has been disappoint­ing in office in dealing with allegation­s concerning his officials, and for failing to name corrupt persons.

Will Mr. Lawal be treated differentl­y? In a sense, he already has: his case should have been referred to the EFCC months ago, not the highest-level presidenti­al treatment he is now getting. If he is found guilty, will he be prosecuted, or will he be let go with an apology, his babban riga unruffled?

It is also of interest that the president gave the panel 14 days for an assignment that ought to last no longer than three, or perhaps about seven, should Mr. Magu arrive with a library of documents.

But what happens after 14 days? One possibilit­y is: NOTHING.

Remember: in May last year, Buhari’s government, “embarrasse­d” by the second consecutiv­e disastrous report on Nigeria by the Global Fund, made some fire-eating speeches.

The Fund’s first report in 2010 revealed that Nigerian officials and organizati­ons had embezzled nearly $500m meant for fighting HIV&AIDS. Worse still, Mr. Jonathan’s government failed to honor a promise to prosecute those who were implicated, and The Fund scaled down its commitment­s to Nigeria.

Still,inthe2016r­eport,itreported­continuing abuses, including wide discrepanc­ies between drugs ordered and delivered; $20m paid to suppliers without confirmati­on of delivery; and $7.65m in unsupporte­d expenditur­es.

The Fund specified “extensive evidence of systematic embezzleme­nt of programme funds, fraudulent practices and collusion… and misappropr­iation of funds.”

In response, the Buhari government, feigning concern just like its predecesso­r, set up various investigat­ions to make the internatio­nal community happy, the first one by the EFCC.

The second was headed by the Health Minister, Isaac Adewole; and the third by the Auditor General, Samuel Ukura: two panels set up by Mr. Lawal, the SGF.

The fake Adewole and Ukura panels were to submit their reports within four weeks. One year later, nobody has been identified or punished.

That is why the gleeful sniggering and giggling on American television last week as they showed videos of the cash haul in an apartment in Lagos was painful, but understand­able.

But a poor Osinbajo report, or response to it, will be no occasion for giggling, especially at home. It will mark the end of any pretension­s to serious governance.

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