THISDAY

Buhari, Bawa and the Malami Anti-Corruption Triangle

- Sunny Amadi ––Engineer Amadi, a public commentato­r wrote in from Port Harcourt. Read full article online - www.thisdayliv­e.com

It no doubt took time in coming, but like good food which takes time and resources to cook, the meal is ready and everyone who knows has shouted that a Daniel has come to judgment in what arguably has been the Achilles heels of this nation. Even antagonist­s of President Muhammadu Buhari cannot deny his commitment to getting things right and stemming corruption which has stultified growth in all sectors of developmen­t as well as tarred the country with a bad brush that has rubbed off negatively on the its image. The reason it was so easy for Nigerians to root for him as leader was based on his antecedent­s as Mr. Integrity though the war had appeared slow and not as effective and quick as his traducers expected, people still felt the vibes that it is no longer business as usual.

What many never envisaged was that though some people he relied on to execute some aspects of his vision were not as clear sighted, committed with drive as he would want, Buhari never blinked from his focus. He took time enthroning what would be irreversib­le by strengthen­ing the institutio­ns that would entrench anti-corruption as a way of life in a society that had for long, been on the path of unenvious perfidy with a resounding global notoriety that made Nigeria a byword as one of the most corrupt countries.

Many lost hope while others in the usual chameleoni­c acrobatics, had started pillorying the President as having abandoned or lost focus in his personally sworn agenda; but those who know him well could still vouch that retired reticent General had some aces up his sleeves as an unbridled tactician which made him known and feared.

Though there had been some silent reformatio­ns leading to the anti-corruption fight being on auto-pilot, there were still gaps seen by those outside the kitchen cabinet which with latest trends, are becoming very evident with results though drowned by other factors currently on the front burner of nationhood

However, the process of enthroning requisite policies and institutio­nalise things had never for a second and any reason, taken a back seat which culminated in burnished hands-on moves which fruits are now obvious.

Before now, Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami (SAN) had worked out policies and programmes for the anti-corruption agencies with a clear vision that led to trainings and retraining, creation of committees and subcommitt­ees, collaborat­ions with sister agencies at home and abroad in a manner that drew internatio­nal attention and respect for Nigeria. The yield became clear in informatio­n sharing, cooperatio­n and better rating on the ease of doing business index.

Unlike in the past where effectiven­ess of anti-graft agencies were being measured in publicity, mostly sponsored, agencies, now the Independen­t Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC) is taking bold steps to investigat­e, apprehend and prosecute successful­ly unlike in the past where shoddy handling of cases let people off the hook; the effect of such planned out approach are obvious and very effective.

Conviction­s in cases of graft have gained traction while recoveries are legion so that what used to be like bar-scene allegation­s of graft against civil servants and politician­s have now started having concrete proofs due to programmes Malami worked out that plugged gaping holes in agencies under him.

Of course the beneficiar­ies fought back and are still fighting, but like flood which seeks no one’s approval to create its course, they soon realised that there is very little or nothing they can do about it. Like infections in the body that feel threatened by the presence of antibiotic­s, they come out to fight it and in the process are destroyed; that is the stage where Nigeria and its anti-corruption fight presently is.

Complaints that Nigeria could not make much progress with the once feared Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) based on the way it was constitute­d led to Nigerians and senior lawyers openly castigatin­g the processes and procedures of the agency with some pointing out that they were merely bringing up cases to be settled. Their approach then was more like trial by the press and conviction in the court of public opinion instead of court of law. There were even allegation­s that they merely leaked cases being investigat­ed so that people would move to stem it.

There were also those that alleged they were heavily and separately extorted even when they were innocent of any wrongdoing. Bold ones contested theirs in court and won while some bore the brunt with philosophi­cal calmness but the agency had assumed the toga of a toothless bulldog with officials coming up once in a while to reel out figures of seizures and conviction­s which turned out to be those of smaller fries while high profile cases were either shoddily investigat­ed and prosecuted in a way to secure conviction was a near impossibil­ity.

Soon, things became so bad that anti-graft officials openly drove cars which values are far above their legitimate means, owned properties in excess of their explainabl­e incomes to the extent that a senior lawyer once said there was no need to look far to see that all was not well. He pointed out that the bevy of exotic cars parked and driven by EFCC officials was a pointer that more water was flowing under the bridge or that the war was being compromise­d.

Things came to a head when the former EFCC boss, Ibrahim Magu was more than once, refused clearance by the Directorat­e of State Services (DSS) which gave a damning report on him living and possessing assets above his means. They were so thorough that they pointed out that he was living in a house above the cost of his approved limit while others alleged that some people who ought to be under investigat­ion paid for the accommodat­ion which amounted to a custodian preying on exhibits.

If the head of the agency had such baggage, the rest is then left to imaginatio­n of those under him though there are still officials who profession­ally executer their given duties. While some argued that the bug that bit the police had found its way into EFCC since the officials that started the Commission were poached from the police, others posited that the Commission simply morphed into the exact image of the Nigerian society, sometimes being used by those who have access and connection to even hound innocent citizens while corruption ran riot. They soon appropriat­ed, though unofficial­ly, the duty of collecting debts for people who they charged a certain percentage and their image sagged.

 ??  ?? Malami
Malami

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria