Far
more than the touted failure of the Jonathan government to prosecute
people suspected of corruption in Nigeria, I hold the humble opinion
that the refusal by all of us to accept some degree of culpability is a
greater barrier to the eradication of the malaise in our dear country.
It is like hoping that a problem would go away when you have not even
agreed that it exists in the first place.
Nigerians complain
about corruption like it was some imported item which can only be taken
away by government fiat. But the problem is far more than that. It is
one thing in which a lot of us partake without the honesty to own up to
the fact that the other name for our indulgences is corruption.
I
agree that official corruption is at an all high in Nigeria but truth
be told, the volume of money that is stolen in government is only
commensurate to the extant purse of the country. Government officials
have always stolen in Nigeria with the same impunity and brazenness that
we have at the moment. It will help our situation to understand that we
have not just recently invented the boldness with which people steal.
More
than that, a first step to curbing the suffocating influence of
corruption on our polity will, to my mind, be realising that most
Nigerians contribute in some way to the perception and reality of
Nigeria as one of the most corrupt countries in the world. To
continually situate the plunging of Nigeria into this position in every
other person but ourselves amounts to total dishonesty which sometimes
equates to corruption
Transparency International, the global
civil society organisation that we rely on to gauge Nigeria’s corruption
status, classifies corruption under three broad categories namely:
Grand corruption which “consists of acts committed at a high level of
government that distort policies or the central functioning of the
state, enabling leaders to benefit at the expense of the public good”;
petty corruption which refers to everyday abuse of entrusted power by
low- and mid-level public officials in their interactions with ordinary
citizens, who often are trying to access basic goods or services in
places like hospitals, schools, police departments and other
agencies,”and; political corruption which “is a manipulation of
policies, institutions and rules of procedure in the allocation of
resources and financing by political decision makers, who abuse their
position to sustain their power, status and wealth.” But we limit most
of our discussions about corruption to the grand and political.
Of
course, we could go ahead and argue that nations suffer most from the
effects of political and grand corruption and that the two ultimately
breed the third form, it still does not obliterate the fact that petty
corruption is as dangerous a form of compromise as the former two. We
can extend this argument to say that petty corruption is actually the
training ground for perpetrators of grand and political corruption when
they are eventually tried with public office. It is therefore expedient
to tackle the petty abuse of office.
As a result, all of us –
the civil servants who will not move files without a greased palm; the
director who will not approve payment for a contract unless 10 per cent
is added; the company director who marks up a project budget by 30 per
cent; the clergy whose god is money; the doctor in a public facility who
demands money for appointments and diverts resources to his private
clinic; the immigration officer who manipulates procedures for
procurement of passports; the customs officer who allows contraband into
the country; the teacher who awards marks after “obtaining” the
student; the parent who purchases question papers for his child; the
student who cheats in examinations; the reporter who pushes his
conscience out of the way and sells his newspaper space to the highest
bidder in betrayer of public trust; the traditional ruler who sacrifices
the interest of his people for a mess of pottage and so on, all
contribute to the sorry state of our country.
Another important
reality that Nigerians fail to see about corruption is the subtle
cultural permissiveness that attends it. No matter how lowly the public
office a Nigerian attains is, there is a pile of family or community
members waiting to become his responsibility.
We deceive
ourselves that this society frowns on ill-gotten wealth but the communal
essence of existence makes mockery of this claim. When we send
relatives to our fairly well-placed relatives in the cities, we do not
realise that their monthly salaries may never be enough to cater to all
the demands that we make from them. It is the same situation when
society suddenly mounts pressure of expectations on people who are
elected or appointed into political offices.
If we borrow from
the research of American psychologist, Abraham Maslow, the esteem needs
of most human beings would make them strive to meet the expectations of
their families and friends, hence the exploitation of opportunities to
appropriate resources that do not belong to them. These are situations
that people contend with daily.
This is why I insist that
arresting people, trying them and sending them to jail in instalments,
even if our judicial system were efficient enough to ensure the speedy
disposal of all cases, will do little to solve the problem of corruption
in Nigeria.
If we are honest enough to accept that our society
puts immense pressure on those who seem to have any little access to
resources, we must find more creative ways to forestall corruption than
solely rely on the criminal justice system.
One of the things
that any government determined to fight corruption in Nigeria must do,
in my opinion, is to remove the incentives to engage in these practices,
plug the loopholes. When systems make it easy to steal, I bet that the
average human being would succumb to temptation even at the risk of a
jail term especially when very important needs are at stake. This is the
situation we have had in places like the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation where young people dream of careers even before they get
matriculated into universities. So, take business out of the hands of
government, unbundle unwieldy government and agencies. Digitalise
procedures that are manipulable and cut off wastes accruable from manual
processes. Back such reforms up with legislation like the Petroleum
Industry Bill which has stagnated at the National Assembly for two and a
half years.
The second thing to do is to create wealth and
reduce poverty. Statistics even from government quarters say that about
70 per cent of Nigerians are poor. So, when one person is promoted or
elected into some prominent office, his community swarms on him such
that there is nothing he earns that would take care of his needs and
that of multitude of hangers-on. He finds himself spending all his
earnings on his own subsistence and on supporting others.
Realising
that he might leave the office without having done anything remarkable
for himself and family, he finds a way to help himself with what doesn’t
really belong to him, the first time, again and then again. That is to
my mind the anatomy of the endemic corruption in Nigeria.
Of
course, there is the kleptomaniac tendencies of a lot of our leaders,
but I believe that this parasitic communal livelihood plays no small
role in the challenges that we face.
So, a proactive government
must provide social security for citizens. Initiate mortgage and health
insurance schemes for public and civil servants. Consider social welfare
scheme for the elderly and unemployed. Create employment opportunities,
let banks support the productive sector especially small businesses,
generally increase the capacity of people to take care of their needs
with government showing more than a passing interest in the welfare of
its people.
Unless government takes steps to redress the
depressing level of poverty in the country and we all stop those little
compromises that challenge the integrity of our institutions, I do not
see how a hundred anti-corruption agencies will impose sanity on us.
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