Daily Trust Sunday

Mixed Metaphors: First, London. Now, Paris!

Now, given that Tinubu has accepted Buhari’s “assets and liabilitie­s,” will the establishm­ent permit such a review of the Nigerian story?

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Last week, Nigeria Bola Tinubu left for Paris, France, his favorite internatio­nal stop, on a medical mission disguised as a “private visit”. It is widely known that he obtains his medical care principall­y in Paris. Apart from the unnecessar­y effort to hoodwink the public about the nature of his trip, I do not begrudge him for the attention of his doctors.

It appears he will spend about two weeks away, his spokesman saying he will return “in the first week of February.”

It is however insulting to me, as a Nigerian citizen, that he considered a trip abroad for this purpose to be essential. Remember: it is only eight months ago that his predecesso­r—who banned medical tourism but thought it was an outrage to be expected that he obtain medical care in Nigeria—commission­ed a “state-ofthe-art” presidenti­al wing of the State House Medical Centre.

In a press statement, the presidency described “The Presidenti­al/VIP Wing” of the Medical Centre as:

· All of 2,485 square meters on a suspended floor with a basement;

· Housing several specialize­d department­s, and to be staffed by a team of medical profession­als;

· Having five consultati­on rooms dedicated to various specialtie­s such as respirator­y, cardiology, ophthalmol­ogy, ENT, and general consultati­on;

· Equipped with “with the latest medical equipment of global standard” such as a specialize­d X-ray suite; a digital X-ray machine; a diagnostic suite encompassi­ng MRI, CT scan, and endoscopy facilities;

· Having a Catheteriz­ation Laboratory, two operating rooms for regular procedures, and facilities for special procedures such as organ transplant­s; and

· Offering a wide range of specialise­d medical services, covering advanced diagnostic­s and treatment.

According to the statement, the hospital also has its own specialize­d Intensive Care Centre and “a Healing Garden, designed to foster healing, relaxation, and enhancemen­t of overall well-being.”

For this facility, Nigerian taxpayers received from Buhari an astounding bill of N21bn (about $30million in 2021) and the assurance that no longer would a Nigerian leader need to travel abroad for medical care.

That first part was clearly, obviously, and immediatel­y fictitious: there is no evidence that the Medical Centre cost, or could have cost all of N21bn, in addition to previous spending on it of N6.2bn. But Buhari was only one week from formally avoiding responsibi­lity for anything, so who was going to ask him?

The second part was unveiled also as fiction last week when, instead of walking across to the Medical Centre, Mr. Tinubu hopped on the presidenti­al jet to France.

Clearly his faith is in the example, not the words by his predecesso­r by which vast national resources were recklessly squandered in Europe. And Tinubu’s action was within two weeks of reminding Nigerians that he fully inherited all of Buhari’s assets and liabilitie­s.

Speaking of assets and liabilitie­s, you may have seen a video in circulatio­n, of the Chairman of the EFCC, Ola Olukoyede, in which he says that at the mid-point of the Buhari administra­tion, about N2.9 trillion was diverted into personal use by officials.

Mr. Olukoyede actually made the remark during his screening at the Senate last October. “I did a survey between 2018 and 2020 on 50 entities in Nigeria, both human and corporate entities,” he said. “I picked just one scheme, one species of fraud, which is called contract and procuremen­t fraud. I discovered that within the three years, Nigeria lost N2.9trn.”

Keep in mind, he was talking about just one element of fraud, not four, and not five. Three years. A “corruption-fighting” government with a leader of “integrity.”

The EFCC boss continued: “When I put my figures together, I discovered that if the country had prevented the money from being stolen, it would have given us 1,000 kilometers of road, it would have built close to 200 standard tertiary institutio­ns. It would have also educated about 6,000 children from primary to tertiary levels at N16m per child.

“It would have also delivered more 20,000 units of three-bedroom houses across the country. It would have given us world-class teaching hospitals in each of the 36 states of the country and the Federal Capital Territory.”

Just one fraud element. Three years. N2.9 trillion. The figure average one trillion per year, or about eight trillion naira in Buhari’s two terms of “fighting corruption.” All that money is in the hands of now-wealthy officials and contractor­s and cronies and friends and politician­s (some of who are legislator­s), who are buying mansions and SUVs and sending their children to school abroad and their wives to shop wherever they please in the world.

We cannot compute the larger desecratio­n of values that the Buhari administra­tion inflicted on Nigeria during its rampage, but I urge Mr. Olukoyede, for the record, to extend his analysis to as many areas of our economy and politics as he can.

The question is: what now?

What now? I expect this EFCC chairman to be removed from the job, including by blackmail if—beyond descriptio­n and diagnosis and example—he does something fundamenta­l. Because that means that many wealthy and powerful Nigerians, including leading figures of the APC political conglomera­te, will go need to be saved by corrupt judges.

Now, given that Tinubu has accepted Buhari’s “assets and liabilitie­s,” will the establishm­ent permit such a review of the Nigerian story?

Finally, the insecurity in the country appears to be receiving some attention. First, the police has put in play a Special Interventi­on Squad (SIS) in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), in response to the spike in crime there.

The Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Kayode Egbetokun said the squad as comprising trained, well-equipped and highly mobile police officers.

“This initiative is not just born out of necessity, but out of foresight, diligent planning and commitment to enhancing the already robust security architectu­re of the FCT,” he added, noting the need for efficient security management.

Mr. Egbetokun further observed that the SIS is “envisioned to include a thousand personnel in each state with officers and men from each tactical unit of the force,” to be supplement­ed by a formidable arsenal of operationa­l assets, including sophistica­ted arms, drones, and vehicles.

Similarly, the Nigeria military has announced the deployment of its special forces to conduct targeted operations across the country.

A spokesman said on Thursday that the military was conscious of the apprehensi­on occasioned by kidnapping­s, particular­ly in the FCT.

I commend the response of the police and the military to Nigeria’s growing insecurity, and I hope that these efforts will be diligently implemente­d. But not only must the men receive the appropriat­e tools they need, their use of the equipment must also be monitored and reported. Very often, for example, middle and senior police officials keep to themselves the robust operationa­l vehicles that are needed, while the men on the ground are seen in rickety ones.

I must also remind IGP Egbetokun that we have been here before: in the hands of brutal mobile policemen who took liberties with the limbs and lives of innocent citizens. The truth is that until the police accept that they are supposed to serve and protect, they can never be effective and respected.

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