Business Day (Nigeria)

Corruption­virus or coronaviru­s- Nigeria’s ‘Penkelemes’ years

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Soyinka’s book titled ‘Ibadan: The Penkelemes Years’ referring to a period of corruption and injustices in the Western region of the country, which quite frankly, fits the descriptio­n of the current goings-on, which by the way, isn’t new.

Imagine the blatant disregard and lack of accountabi­lity to Nigerians during a public health crisis, which has been nothing but shocking to me. My personal hypothesis, that, maybe the pandemic would force leaders and Nigerians as a whole to be introspect­ive and hopefully more considerat­e of our developmen­t plight as a nation, is appearing to prove false.

In 2017, when I serendipit­ously made the transition from Banking to Developmen­t, I had two sets of conversati­ons. The first with the CEO of the organisati­on I was leaving - when I told him about the organisati­on I was going to and its overarchin­g goal to catalyse the transforma­tion of the public sector in Nigeria - he gave that chuckle of disbelief and asked if it was even possible.

The second conversati­on was with the founder and chairman of the organisati­on I was going to - he had such an optimistic vision for the transforma­tion of Nigeria’s public sector, premised on his first-hand experience of a civil service that was the envy of other developed countries at a point in his lifetime. Apart from my utter admiration and respect for his audacity, I was inspired to be part of the solution.

In truth neither of them were wrong and both their views were driven by their Nigerian Public Sector experience­s - one just happened to have been opportune to see both the good and the not-sogood versions.

You see, there are two options we have as a people:

1. To give up, complain and make jokes out of our “Penkelemes”(peculiar mess).

2. Summon the audacity like Mr. Aig-imoukhuede and dare to actively do something to take our public sector back to its former glory at the barest minimum

My take, the risk with doing nothing is, in the long term, it will become everyone’s problem.

Indeed, what Mr. Aig- Imoukhuede seeks to achieve through his Africa Initiative for Governance (AIG) is ambitious and infact, may not even start to manifest for years to come. However, it awakened my consciousn­ess to the possibilit­ies of the hope of an efficientl­y run public sector. So, imagine a critical mass of well- meaning and astute Nigerians, intentiona­lly and actively intervenin­g in correcting our “Penkelemes”.

Finally, with the events that have unfolded in the past few weeks, it would appear that corruption­virus still takes first place over coronaviru­s as the public health crisis that plagues our country. Question is, who will create the vaccine to contain our Penkelemes?

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