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Written By Yushau A. Shuaib
Most Corrupt: Between
politicians and civil servants in Nigeria
The article appeared in the following print media in
December 2010: Economic Confidential,
New
Nigerian, Champion, Daily Trust, Leadership, Thisday, People
Daily and Nigerian Tribune
The debate about corruption comes to the fore again at two
different academic environments. Guest speakers at the
separate universities are young personalities, key players
in policy formulation and household names that hold
sensitive public positions. Due to their backgrounds,
utterances made by them at such fora are not only
authoritative, but can become guides for development of
national policies.
They are Governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi of the Central Bank
of Nigeria (CBN), who at the 8th Convocation Lecture of
Igbinedion University, Okada, disclosed that the National
Assembly (NASS) collects 25 per cent of the overheads of the
Federal Government and the Speaker of the House of
Representatives, Mr. Dimeji Bankole, who at the
pre-convocation lecture held at University of Lagos (UNILAG)
Auditorium, stated that “civil servants are the most corrupt
in the country”.
Majority of Nigerians agree with Sanusi’s assertion, which
he stuck to even when he was summoned by the legislators to
the National Assembly for obvious facts on how politicians
have continued to milk the nation dry with their excessive
expenditures and outlandish life-styles in the name of jumbo
packages.
Nothing is more worrisome than the allegation of the
Speaker, who, in an attempt to pick holes in Sanusi’s
argument, went on to transfer his aggression by describing
Nigeria’s civil servants as most corrupt in the country.
In his argument, which was quoted in the media, Bankole said
corruption in Nigeria was perpetuated by corrupt and inept
civil servants and not the political class. According to
him, “in the past five years, an estimated N1 trillion was
taken from the budget annually by civil servants and not
returned to the treasury”. He went further to add that in
2008, when he became the Speaker, N21 billion was returned
to the treasury from ministries. After probing and
threatening of different people, they returned N350 billion
as the unspent budget. The following year, he added, “they
returned N350 billion and [in] 2010, they returned over N200
billion even though we extended the accounting year to
March.”
Mr. Bankole probably forgot to realise that the heads of
those agencies were not civil servants, but political office
holders who were tenured and could be handpicked for such
positions. He may also need to confirm how much the
legislators returned within the same period since the
alleged civil servants in the said ministries were at least
magnanimous enough to return their unspent allocations.
While we all acknowledge the
fact that corruption has permeated all sectors, including
the traditional institutions, the media, spiritual houses
and even schools, the most corrupt institution remains the
legislative tier of government and by extension, the
political class, which manipulates the electoral process and
appointments of various officers.
We must try to define the role of players that guide and
operate the public service. Civil servants are usually the
best candidates employed in the service after going through
rigorous screening exercises, even though those processes,
in some cases have been bastardised by the political class
which forces its candidates into public institutions by all
means. Most of the civil servants including even drivers,
messengers, clerks, and middle cadre officers, pass the
screening for their competence. Some of them reach the level
of directors through deserved promotions and just a fraction
of that (about one percent), are promoted to the top level
as Permanent Secretaries. A civil servant works on
instruction and makes recommendations but the ultimate
approval still lies with the political office holder.
One of the major criteria for selections or appointments
into political/public offices is for the candidate to have
an influential godfather or enough wealth to manipulate the
process in order to achieve the desired positions. Apart
from cases of certificate forgeries, some legislators got to
the National assembly by being ‘Papa’s pikin’, and some got
to their principal positions after the removal of their
predecessors for corrupt practices. Check the National
Assembly list.
The public is now aware of how elections are rigged and how
unqualified and unscrupulous candidates are given political
appointments, while the fate of civil servants is left in
the hands of this calibre of public officers to determine
who gets what in terms of political and financial patronage.
Corruption in the civil service is influenced by the
political class. Bankole, probably
needs to be reminded that the major suspects and culprits
being prosecuted for financial and economic crimes are not
the submissive civil servants but the political office
holders that include members of the legislative and
executive arms. Reeling out the names of such high-flying
corrupt officers would not be possible due to space
limitation.
The Speaker and those who look down on civil servants as
nonentities and describe them in derogatory remarks, need to
visit either, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)
and Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC) to see
the records. It is well known how the oversight functions by
legislators are turned into money-spinning ventures. We also
cannot forget in a hurry, the antics of rabble rousers like
former Chairman of the House Committee on Power, Ndudi
Elumelu and his counterpart in the Senate, Senator Nicholas
Ugbane, and other legislators who stage-managed a public
hearing on the Independent Power Projects (IPP) probes, only
to be involved in multi-billion Naira scam.
While this writer is not attempting to exonerate the civil
service of corruption, those that soil the name of the
institution are those that form the political class in
collaboration with disgruntled, few corrupt officers in the
service who are either cowed to submission for fear of
losing their jobs and the greedy ones who could tolerate
temptation to get a share of the national cake.
Is it not strange to every right thinking person that the
same National Assembly that recently queried Nigerian
Communications Commission (NCC) for proposing an unnecessary
and outrageous bill of N6 billion for SIM card registration
approved same? The reversal of the rejection is not
uncommon: it is just their usual threat meant for
socio-political and economic extortions. By the way, have we
forgotten serious allegations against principal officers of
Bankole- House of Representatives by the Progressive group
of the chamber led by Dino Melaye, who alleged that the
Speaker, “Bankole, had not only ran a corrupt leadership
since he assumed office in 2007, but through his style of
leadership, generated a rift between the House and the
Senate; displayed high-handedness and disrespect for
members; and frequently breached the rules of the House”, as
quoted?
We are eagerly hoping for the period to do away with leaders
who are power- arrogant, and entice young ladies with their
ill-gotten wealth into immoral affairs and executive
prostitution. It is regrettable that not only are some of
those officers engaged in treasury abuse, but also
responsible for the bastardising of public infrastructures,
including health and educational facilities by cunningly
privatising our collective patrimonies to their cronies and
providing private alternatives as latest investments.
The condition in Nigeria may force the cray-fish to bend,
but not to the level of everyone losing semblance of
integrity as most civil servants who are patiently looking
forward to brighter future would never sell their conscience
for pots of porridge.
A similar article by the author from this link:
EFCC, Corruption and the Rest of Us
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TRIBUTES
*Zahradeen of BUK
*Prince is Gone
*Gone not Forgotten
*Bola
Ige
*Acadamic governor
*A Plane Crashes
*Haba Governor Lawal
*OBJ, Buhari, Gani and Others
*Nzeribe for Senate President?
*Hamman Tukur and Honours
*Voice
of Nigeria
*In Memory of Gen. Idiagbon
*Sesebo
& Business Reporting
*Aliko Dangote of Nigeria
*Waziri and Plane Crash
*An
Incorruptible Minister
*Jimoh Ibrahim @40
GLOBAL
*In Defence of Saudi
*419
and the Rest of Us
*America: A Muslim Perception
*Miss World: Between the
Queen and Child
*A Trip to London
*FIFA: Faith and Fanaticism
*Obasanjo's Foreign Trip
*A Visit to Mecca
*Letter to Muslims on US-Iraq War
*Foreign and Our Legislators
*Saddam and Arab's Humiliation
BOOK REVIEWS
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Abacha Politicians Again
* A Nation Corrupted by Oil?
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*Re: Oil Windfall Palaver
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*RE: Killing in the Name of Devil
*RE:
An Incorruptible Minister
*RE:
Privatising Education
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Abuja@ 30
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