The Guardian (Nigeria)

Chicago on my mind

- By Alade Rotimi- John Rotimi- John, a lawyer and commentato­r on public affairs wrote via: lawgravita­s@ gmail. com

MANY months after the Nigerian national elections and the inaugurati­on of a fitful administra­tion, everything appears to be in near chaos. Nothing has yet been done; everything appears upside down. Seven months on, conditions in Abuja are just as bad. The President appears too good for democracy to succeed with. Only certain token twitches have punctuated the dreary string of setbacks.

More important, the government appears distracted as if still smarting from charges that its election was not earned despite the Judiciary’s award to it of a clean bill of health respecting an unpopular or dubious victory. The otherwise teeming support of party men and women has disappeare­d and has proved nominal in the wake of massive discontent or of disappoint­ment regarding the administra­tion’s glaring policy mis- steps.

Whilst the President’s script writers worked feverishly on his inaugurati­on speech, his supporters privately fretted over his proverbial lack of ability for its seamless delivery. An inaugurati­on address is not the venue for a boolaba or balabloo inanity.

The convention­al graciousne­ss, modesty and sincerity usually contained in such a speech lost their nimbleness to a needless melodrama on the stump on that day. Off the cuff or as if siezed by a malevolent ogre, the President pronounced his “Subsidy is gone...” drivel.

He thereby unleashed a chain of unsavoury events for which his government will require the wisdom of Solomon to surmount and which has strangely altered the course of governance discourse.

For a government which palpably lacks the requisite rigour for intense disputatio­n of issues except for play offs of subterfuge, deception and trickery, it has crestfalle­n in the presence of sustained popular opposition to or outcry against its vague suggestion­s of a better future or of ‘ renewed hope.’

Many cerebral commentato­rs have been reluctant to offend even as they are burdened by conscience regarding incessant civic demands of rights which have been officially denied, ignored or repudiated.

Many national issues are now discussed in hushed tones. The intellectu­al elite class has abandoned the project of interrogat­ing the nation’s medley of malaise so they do not annoy or otherwise irritate the political ruling class. Even as the current exchange rate of the Naira hovers around N1,200 to the Dollar, the critical macroecono­mic variables or factors sadly continue to point in the direction of an irreversib­le slide of the Naira.

Macro variables between countries e. g. infrastruc­ture, rule of law, education, energy, Foreign Direct Investment, technology, etc are all heavily weighted against Nigeria and therefore the Naira depreciati­on paradigm against the Dollar, for instance, is not likely to abate soon.

But the Tinubu administra­tion is feverishly marketing hope and insisting that the present dismal situation is just for some time. Even as Nigeria at no. 103 out of 113 on the Education for All Developmen­t Index and as more than 20 million children are out of school, our human capital developmen­t profile brandishes the picture of a programmed massive unmarketab­le skills acquisitio­n panoply.

Further, our value system has nose- dived to land us at number 150 out of 180 countries in the Global Corruption Index, as Rule of Law is a negotiable instrument and political entreprene­urship and state capture have become the commanding heights of the economy. All these and more are subject matters that may not be openly discussed or analysed by the Nigerian intelligen­tsia. They have become tongue- tied or self- censored.

By breaking the link between individual effort and reward, between competence, capacity and ardour on one hand and preferment or promotion on the other, incentives to work have been undermined leading to mass frustratio­n and a severe reduction in productivi­ty. The proverbial round pegs are no longer in round holes. The beneficiar­y of an invidious promotion to public office owes his duty or allegiance only to his appointor. Sensitive public positions have been allocated to kins, tribesmen and clients most times in utter disregard of the requiremen­t of an underlying pre qualificat­ion for the positions or of cognate or relevant experience therefore.

The scenario has generally conduced to a flurry of false or fake declaratio­ns of formal qualificat­ions. Many who hold important offices of state have had to lie with respect to their qualificat­ions so just they may fit the advertised qualificat­ion requiremen­ts for the positions. This lie- telling is so pervasive that one is apt to doubt the resume or CV of many an office holder.

The nation is however the ultimate loser as she is denied the effective and efficient labour of her rigorous and shrewd body of candidates for public office. Little wonder that the pace of developmen­t has been slow, desultory or aimless such that Nigeria is cynically referred to in the comity of nations as a sleeping giant. She has had to contend with the ignoble charge of breaking faith with the African vision or of letting the continent down.

The current public debates around the issues of public probity and criminalit­y involving certain public office holders have brought to light the stark invidiousn­ess in appointing officials of state except on the basis of proven integrity and service. The story of the suspended Minister of Humanitari­an Affairs and Poverty Alleviatio­n, Dr Betta Edu, who is accused of transferri­ng a whopping sum of N580 million from her Ministry’s vault into a crony’s private bank account; of Halima Shehu, erstwhile Chief Executive Officer of the National Social Investment Programme Agency, NSIPA for suspected fraud in the Conditiona­l Cash Transfer Programme; and of Sadiya Umar- Farouq who is being investigat­ed over allegation­s of corruption in the handling of N37.1 billion social interventi­on funds, have afforded us the opportunit­y for reflection on the desirabili­ty of critical assessment­s of persons being suggested for public office.

It is coincident­al only that these high ranking officials are women. We do not have any reason to want to tinker with our internatio­nal obligation to abide by the 35 per cent Beijing affirmativ­e action with respect to political appointmen­ts for women.

It may well be that women want to catch up with their male counterpar­ts who have long held the dishonoura­ble credit of arresting the developmen­t of the country through official acts of corruption and of the mindless looting of our common patrimony.

The Ministry of Humanitari­an Affairs is proving itself to be a proverbial cesspit of corruption. Many are urging for its scrapping. The earlier Minister of the Ministry under Buhari is reportedly being interrogat­ed by the EFCC. And now Betta wants to better the records of her predecesso­r in office by leading the Ministry to reconfigur­e the vision of its founding fathers. Its ways are being channelled towards everything but Humanitari­an.

It is a moot point whether Tinubu can reverse the trend or, put differentl­y, whether Tinubu can fight corruption. There have been examples in history of persons who were adjudged corrupt or who were sociopaths but who repudiated their ugly past and trod the path of righteousn­ess, honesty and rectitude thereafter.

The impression is given that the leadership of any organisati­on or group generally typifies the ethos and direction of the body.

In the early days of the United States Congress, its House of Representa­tives was dominated by the scathing tongue of John Randolph of Virginia. He adjudged the entire government­al system in his legendary verbal onslaught thus:

“Never was ability so much below mediocrity so well rewarded; no, not even when Caligula’s horse was made a consul”

May it not be so said of the Tinubu presidency when the time comes.

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