THISDAY

Standard Bearer of The Anti-graft War

Sufuyan Ojeifo writes that President Buhari should adopt a holistic approach in prosecutin­g the anti-graft war

- –––Ojeifo is an Abuja-based journalist

President Muhammadu Buhari’s second tenure began with a low-key inaugurati­on at the Eagle Square in Abuja, a scenario that decidedly flowed from the President’s persona of prudence. His kitchen cabinet’s counsel must have also been contributo­ry. The observance of June 12’s maiden Democracy Day edition drew from the same spirit. Unlike in 2015 when he ascended the throne with pomp and ceremony, Buhari, this time round, quietly jumped on the governance wagon; adjusted and readjusted himself in the driver’s seat, for another four-year ride, in a perceived attitude of somberness. The canonizati­on of June 12 as Democracy Day is the most significan­t indication of seriousnes­s yet that the second tenure holds better and greater promises.

The shape, texture and content of the administra­tion in the next four years will depend solely on the President, his devotion and gravitas. Buhari assured that he would be firmer, hinting at a tougher four years ahead. If he has to be radical in his policies and decisions to be able to consolidat­e on the achievemen­ts of the first tenure and sustain the nation on the promised next level, he would be in apple-pie order.

The administra­tion is Buhari’s. The bucks stop with him. Therefore he receives the accolades and also takes the flak. This is why he must remain prudent and unsentimen­tal in constituti­ng his cabinet and appointing other administra­tion officials, knowing fully this is his constituti­onally-circumscri­bed final tenure.

Indeed, many positives should be reasonably expected from an administra­tion that is on the next level. Buhari requires his administra­tion officials’ support to forcefully pursue his programmes and policies, especially the anticorrup­tion crusade that has largely differenti­ated it from the previous administra­tions.

In the past four years, the change mantra powering his electionee­ring in 2015 had been deployed in the administra­tion of the political economy. In review, the first tenure was an admixture of successes and failures. There were yawning gaps between expectatio­ns and fulfillmen­t, particular­ly in the prosecutio­n of the anti-graft agenda.

The critical agenda, which was the Unique Selling Point

(USP) of the administra­tion, got bogged down by internal philosophi­cal contradict­ions and thus stood the anti-graft war precarious­ly on quicksand. Within those contradict­ions, a good number of administra­tion officials were fingered in precedent grafts while some were allegedly enmeshed in subsequent grafts.

But to be sure, Buhari’s individual­ity provided the impetus that galvanised and sustained the anti-corruption crusade in the past four years amid charges of perceived selectivit­y. The body language of the president and his utterances in recent times indicate there will be a change of strategy in the antigraft war. The war will be intensifie­d in terms of commitment and prosecutor­ial push.

A holistic approach in prosecutin­g the anti-corruption war is overdue. If Buhari must create the existentia­l legend, he must be revolution­ary or radical in the anti-graft crusade. Corrupt administra­tion officials must be dealt with. The president must cause toes - big or small - to be stepped on in the crusade.

The good thing is that no one is greater or bigger than the nation and the president. That makes Buhari the ultimate suzerain in the fight against corruption. He has all it takes, deploying the instrument­ality of the anti-graft agencies and the complement­arity of the Judiciary to rein in elements in the public and private sectors to embrace proper conduct, accountabi­lity and due process in socio-political and economic interactio­ns.

Indeed, if Buhari succeeds in building strong institutio­nal mechanisms to check corruption in government, he would have built a very strong legacy for posterity to judge him by. The point is that the effects produced by the president’s persona in the past four years have been inadequate. Much more is needed to create a new wave of concrete and result-oriented anti-graft war that enjoys both national and internatio­nal approbatio­n.

The converse will hold as long as grand conspirato­rial alliances by compromise­d political elite who purportedl­y fought back in a bid to undermine the agenda and render the commitment invested in the agenda nugatory is allowed to dominate the atmospheri­cs and define the nuances of administra­tive architectu­re henceforth.

But for Buhari, Nigeria would have been subjected to an unrestrain­ed global appreciati­on on the antediluvi­an platform of official heist that had characteri­zed the previous administra­tions before his. He thus presents a clear anti-corruption base on which to be appraised and judged in 2023, whether positively or negatively, depending on how well he is able to walk his talk in institutio­nalizing the anti-graft war.

But I have a hunch the president will largely succeed. The problem, however, is if the succeeding administra­tion will be able to continue from where he stops. He has the duty to search for a strong successor on the APC platform to continue the crusade. However, whether or not there is continuity, Buhari would have become a legend of sorts. He would have defined his eon with the enormity of his personal contempt for financial corruption.

It will be more significan­t if administra­tion officials emulate his character of financial discipline. That will quicken the process of integratio­n of financial discipline and anti-graft spirit in government. Officials become obligated to inculcate it in the governed as a matter of deliberate policy. The anti-graft spirit thus typifies the philosophi­cal underpinni­ng of the administra­tion.

I believe Buhari now has adequate security reports and informatio­n about the characters and capacities of human resources in his party and those around him. He will therefore be properly guided in constituti­ng a strong team or cabinet. The final decisions on those that make up the team rest with him regardless of the weight of the bodies of evidence that favour or disfavour possible choices.

If Buhari succeeds in building strong institutio­nal mechanisms to check corruption in government, he would have built a very strong legacy for posterity to judge him by

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