Business Day (Nigeria)

Nigeria: No tunnel, no light, no end, if... nd

- IKEDDY ISIGUZO Isiguzo is a major commentato­r on minor issues • Isiguzo is a major commentato­r on minor issues

OUR philosophy of robing an unwillingn­ess to act with heaps of hope will be the nal ruination of Nigeria unless we bring it to an abrupt, but decisive halt. We enjoy the convenienc­e of deceiving ourselves with claims about a certain tunnel with light at the end.

e legend is that we should strive to locate the exilir of a tunnel. e fallacies about this tunnel are that it has light at the end. Nigeria abhors light. It may not be an o cial position. Our practices, however, suggest otherwise.

If such a tunnel exists, ours must be without light. Why can't we be truthful enough to tell ourselves that there is darkness at the end of the tunnel.

We live a certain deceit about a rosy future forgetting that things would not fall on our laps because we keep saying "It's well", at the instance of the religious. We have excelled in building hope on nothing.

Nowhere has "It's well" resolved a situation. When applied with a matching frequency to the challenges of Nigeria, the cliché sounds more like a surrender to the despairing times, and submission to the unknown consequenc­es of living in Nigeria.

e much-maligned Yahaya Adoza Bello, former Governor of Kogi State, is a perfect t for the search for light at the end of the tunnel. EFCC raised hell the other week in an orchestrat­ed campaign to arraign Bello over allegation­s that Bello helped himself to more than N80 billion of Kogi State funds.

Abuja was abuzz with tales of EFFC'S seige to Bello's house on Benghazi Street, Wuse Zone 4, Abuja. With his street locked, movements restricted, the public argued about the manner of Bello's arrest, not whether he had a chance of escaping as he later did.

ose in the know say all that drama, including declaring Bello wanted, having the Immigratio­n

Service alerting the border posts about him escaping to North Africa, EFCC Chairman, Ola Olukoyede, a pastor swearing he would resign if he did not prosecute Bello, were mere sizzled jazz.

Did it take long before the police joined the fray to allow Bello breathe? Where else would the police chief ask police o cers attached to a wanted man to return to base immediatel­y without the suspect?

Why did the Inspector-general of Police not tell the o cers attached to Bello to arrest the former Governor? None of us, we should agree, speculatin­g on why Bello was le free, understand­s how the police works. It is a complex web that hardly works.

Further speculatio­ns are permitted. It was the EFCC, not the police, that declared Bello wanted. It was up to EFCC o cers to earn their pay. Experts say the police aided EFFC by pulling out its o cers.

EFFC'S disinteres­t in arresting Bello was obvious a little a er he was set free during the siege to Benghazi Street. Oluwakemi Pinheiro, SAN, an EFCC lawyer, dropped the rst hints that EFCC would not arrest Bello.

e senior lawyer said the Nigerian Army could be invited to arrest him. While we are trying to civilianis­e our processes, unsettling alternativ­es like Pinheiro's exist. Many were shocked at the military option.

Please remember that it took less than the time EFCC has attempted to arrest Bello to arrest Bobrisky, bring him to court and throw him into jail. Bobrisky is not a former Governor.

Bello is breathing better. Human rights groups have rallied round him. e Kogi State House of Assembly also passed a resolution asking EFFC to stay o their Bello. As the matter progresses in the resort to court orders and counter orders, the House could upgrade the resolution to a law. National Assembly legislator­s of Kogi origin could also make a law restrainin­g EFFC or whosoever from interferin­g with Bello's liberty.

ings are so bad for EFCC that it has eaten a humble pie of withdrawin­g an appeal it led to arrest Bello. e letter of withdrawal was pliant and slightly short of an apology. " e appellant herein intends to and do hereby wholly withdraw her appeal against the respondent in the above-mentioned appeal.

“is notice of withdrawal is predicated on the fact that; on the 17th of April 2024, the applicatio­n led by the appellant herein was overtaken by the decision of the same high court of Kogi State in the case of Alhaji

Yahaya Bello Vs EFCC- Suit No: HCL/68M/2024, per A. I. Jamil.

“e orders made ex parte by Jamil on the 9th of February 2024 in said suit which is the subject of this appeal, was made to last pending the hearing and determinat­ion of the originatin­g motion on notice which was nally determined by Jamil J. on the 17th April 2024.

“Furthermor­e, the notice of appeal was led out of time and we, therefore, pray that the appeal be struck out for being led out of time and incompeten­t."

ere was no reasonable attempt to arrest Bello. You cannot know a suspect is on Benghazi Street or holed up in Government House, Lokoja, and you are tasking security to watch for him at border posts. What a waste of public attention and resources! EFFC will not see any light because it is looking away from the light. ere is no tunnel either. At best, EFCC has tunnel vision. Pastor Olukoyede is the proof that a national assignment can be personalis­ed to nothingnes­s. I hope that he realises that getting Bello to court would not be hassle free as was Bobrisky.

Olukoyede failed to give a time frame within which he would prosecute Bello. He has a case that cannot be resolved with "it is well".

It is not well. Nigerians are entitled to know why all the sudden noise about Bello who had a veneer of legality to delay his appearance in court. Did EFCC not know that the matter was pending at a Kogi High Court?

What informed EFCC'S hurry to disobey the court order? How many economic and nancial crime suspects has EFFC arrested or brought to court with such unbecoming haste? Many of these suspects do not have a court cover to wave at EFCC yet they are unshackled.

Nigerians should not permit themselves to be distracted by these illustrate­d images of sanitising the country. Nigeria has no tunnel. ere is no light to expect until we create it.

Finally...

IS Nigeria at war with Nigerians? Incidents of mal-treatment of travellers and passengers have continued unabated. Security agent create check points on road with the main intention to extort money from people. ose who refuse to pay are harassed, delayed, and in some cases shot. In some locations, sheer cruelty has been added to the burden of travellers who the security agents humiliate for their pleasure. e Nigeria Air Force in Owerri has for years manned a check point near the road that forks into Sam Mbakwe Internatio­nal Cargo Airport. Vehicles can stretch for kilometres to be cleared. Something worse happens. All passengers in buses are asked to disembark and walk across to meet their empty buses. It does not matter if it is raining. Whether the passengers are pregnant, elderly, on crutches, crippled, mangled or carried across is none of the business of these Air Force personnel. If the matter is brought to the attention of the authoritie­s, the cruelties are stopped only for a few days. Nothing in this additional hardship created for travellers has improved security. e authoritie­s should see to the end of this obnoxious practice, not only near the Owerri airport, but anywhere else, it obtains.

WHAT do our banks do? A lot, some would answer, from their experience. What is certain is that our banks make money, tonnes of money. e humongous pro t in their annual reports takes one back to the question. How can banks that do not lend to the productive sector make so much money every year in an economy that is on its belly? Experts on money making can sh out the skills that banks use in making trillions of Naira in a year. e skills should be harvested, interrogat­ed, and applied to other areas that need turn around. We should note that banks are sacking sta , while all that money, invest more on short-term loans, and most of them are involved in unethical conducts like insider informatio­n infraction­s.

FOR those who still praise the economic sagacity of people who play with the Naira as economic policy, they hopefully will be impressed by the latest yo-yo of the Naira. Non-economic subject matter experts like us think that no magic wand exists that can strengthen the value of the Naira. Production is low, electricit­y costs keep rising, insecurity and energy costs make all travels more expensive, limit food production and its transporta­tion to where it is needed. ese hit the Naira badly. Nobody should forget that crude oil, our main national revenue source, is stolen wantonly at several points - during exploratio­n, at export terminals, as revenue in the national till, and padded budgets which are treated like comedy. If we can take care of these economic and security crimes, the value of the Naira would rise.

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