THISDAY

A MAN AND HIS NATION’S ANTI-GRAFT WAR

Yusuph Olaniyonu pays tribute to former Senate President, Bukola Saraki, at age 57

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Today, Dr. Abubakar Bukola Saraki, the 13th and third longest serving President of the Nigerian Senate turns 57. The son of the Second Republic Senate Leader and third person to be elected into the Senate in his immediate family is not holding any public office at the moment. He therefore will have more time to reflect on his life as a husband, father, grandfathe­r, having just got a grandchild three weeks ago, political leader, a leader of the party in opposition, the nightmare of the current establishm­ent, particular­ly the Lagos wing of that establishm­ent, and a politician frequently being assailed by the power that be.

This period should allow Saraki to ruminate and introspect into how come there is a desperate bid to stereotype him and frame him as the culprit for anything the current Buhari government is not getting right.

The establishm­ent in Nigeria is smart at doing something. It writes a script and carves out a role for its most loathed opponents and its members go all out to market the script and make the opponents the devils that are responsibl­e for the failure of the establishm­ent. It is for this reason that the establishm­ent in the country never deliver on good governance or provision of social services to the people. Its members spend more time working on the script to destroy the anti-establishm­ent fellows and devote more than enough resources to bring down their opponents by de-marketing them and making them look like a monster, than they spend on thinking through and initiating solutions to the problems of the country.

It is the establishm­ent’s script that presented late Chief Obafemi Awolowo as a ‘tribalist and rigid’ man. It tried to destroy Alhaji Lateef Jakande, perhaps the governor with the greatest achievemen­ts in service delivery to the people in the history of Nigeria, by labeling him an ‘Abacha man’. The same establishm­ent created the label of ‘an irritant noisemaker’ for Chief Gani Fawehinmi. This establishm­ent painted President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan as ‘clueless, spineless and Ijaw-centric’. It branded Atiku Abubakar as ‘corrupt and always ready to compromise’, even though no single case of corruption has been proven against the man.

In this ‘shoot them down or paint them black’ tactic, the establishm­ent has become more potent, deadly and daring with the advent of social media. Instead of creating productive jobs for the youths, they have created a group of young people who they call ‘social media warriors’, earning some pittance every now and then, but deployed on a daily basis to shoot down their opponents.

Their current target is today’s birthday boy. They are pulling no stop to label him as “corrupt” and the one who has done much to ‘undermine the anti-corruption war’. They concoct scenarios, figures and situations to strengthen this message. They deploy resources in billions of Naira, and manpower, in hundreds of young and old people, in aid of the project. Institutio­ns that should be otherwise neutral and focused are abused, process thwarted and rules bastardize­d in the process of blackmaili­ng Saraki and painting him black. Their motivation is either rooted in the past going back to 2014-2015 or looking forward to the future of what happens in 2023. Well, human beings are not God. That remains the source of strength for those who believe.

However, they have met their match in the man who has decided to fight for his turf and reject false stereo-typing. Saraki seeks to lay the facts bare and reminds Nigerians the truth which they have forgotten. On corruption, the man has made it clear that those accusing him are not half as clean as he is. They also have not done as much as he has done to create institutio­nal and personal transparen­cy in government. At every point, he has challenged people to interrogat­e and review his records and efforts at strengthen­ing the fight against corruption and ensuring that instead of building strong men within the campaign, we should build strong institutio­ns and utilize key technology to deter the dirty ones among us.

We may do well to remember that Saraki is a man who at every point in his public service has sought to institute transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in governance. As a Special Assistant to then President Olusegun Obasanjo on budget matters, between 2000 and 2002, he initiated the passage of the Fiscal Responsibi­lity Act and Public Procuremen­t Act. Both laws were aimed at ensuring macro-economic stability and efficiency in government procuremen­t through greater accountabi­lity and transparen­cy.

As Governor of Kwara State, he waived his immunity to enable his administra­tion be probed. He is, perhaps, the most investigat­ed individual, in the nation’s democratic history. However, each time, Saraki has been given a clean bill of health. It should be noted that seven separate investigat­ions were instigated on Saraki during his time in office as governor. In September 2006, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, then Chairman of EFCC, took to the floor of the Senate to give a clean bill to six states, of which Kwara State where Saraki was then governor was one. Under Ribadu’s successor, Farida Waziri’s Chairmansh­ip, Local Government Councils in Kwara State were investigat­ed in 2010 when Dr Saraki joined the presidenti­al race.

During his governorsh­ip years, he introduced the Price Intelligen­ce Unit, the first by any state government. This unit reduced leakages in government revenues and introduced transparen­cy and efficiency in government procuremen­t. The idea was later adopted by the federal government as it became the Bureau of Public Procuremen­t (BPP). As chairman of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF), Saraki later influenced the adoption of that law by many of the states. Kwara State under his governorsh­ip was the first state to be rated by Fitch, the global rating agency which affirmed its National Long-term rating at AA-(minus) and ratings of B+ in public finance transparen­cy.

At the end of his tenure in 2011, the anti-corruption agency did not find any reason to invite him for any questionin­g, even though his colleagues who also just left the governorsh­ip posts were interrogat­ed and some of them were charged to court. It was more than a year after he left office when he moved the controvers­ial motion calling for investigat­ion into fuel subsidy that the EFCC first invited him for investigat­ion and nothing came out of that effort. Similarly, four years after he left office and was elected Senate President against the wish of the establishm­ent, he was again charged to the Code of Conduct Tribunal based on alleged irregulari­ties in his assets declaratio­n forms as governor. Also, now, eight years after he left office as governor and having concluded his term as senate president, the anti-graft agency has decided, once again, to raise issues over his term as governor.

Saraki in his first term in the senate was the one who through a motion on the floor exposed the biggest fraud in the country then. That is the oil subsidy scam. It was an action which set him against the Presidency controlled by his party. Consequent­ly, he was investigat­ed by the Special Fraud Unit (SFU) at the conclusion of which the Federal Ministry of Justice issued a letter clearing his name of any wrongdoing.

The above facts have shown that the position Saraki has taken in the fight against corruption in this country both during his time as governor and in the senate, particular­ly on the defence of democracy and independen­ce of the three arms of government, has put him in constant clash with the establishm­ent. That is why his current harassment by the EFCC is just true to type, an after-thought and ill-motivated move.

There is also the need to once again put it on record that the Eighth Senate led by Dr. Saraki has played key roles in institutio­nalizing the fight against corruption, which is the national objective for setting up the EFCC and other anti-corruption agencies. Olaniyonu is Special Adviser to the former Senate President

AT EVERY POINT, HE HAS CHALLENGED PEOPLE TO INTERROGAT­E AND REVIEW HIS RECORDS AND EFFORTS AT STRENGTHEN­ING THE FIGHT AGAINST CORRUPTION AND ENSURING THAT INSTEAD OF BUILDING STRONG MEN WITHIN THE CAMPAIGN, WE SHOULD BUILD STRONG INSTITUTIO­NS

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