I
fully endorse President Buhari’s commitment to initiate a probe into
the past administration of President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan. He would
of course require the legislature to commence this probe, because by
law, the legislative arm of government, that is the National Assembly,
specifically the senate, is the arm empowered, through its various
committees, to investigate the activities of the government, following
which the president may be compelled to establish or initiate, through
the Attorney-General, prosecutorial remediation.
Presumably,
there is established in the Nigerian senate (since the Nigerian
constitution is modeled after the US constitution), a Senate
Investigations Committee, equivalent to the powerful US senate permanent
investigation committee, which has subpoena authority over all homeland
and government affairs.
It will be the duty of
this powerful committee, following a letter from the president, to
probe the past president, and suspend his immunity in the event that he
might be required as key witness in the investigations.
The
incumbent president does not have the power or authority to tamper with
the immunity, or any act of his predecessor covered by his immunity
until such is overridden or vacated by the National Assembly and
affirmed by the Supreme Court.
The checks and balances as a
principle established by the rule of law under constitutional
governments forbids one arm, that is, the executive arm of government,
from being judge, jury, and witness, in matters such as this. In effect
while President Buhari’s move to investigate the past administration is
welcome news to all supporters and advocates of transparent governance,
it too must follow the rule of law. And speaking about the grounds on
which this president wishes to probe his predecessor, President Buhari
said very poignantly of the decay: “A lot of institutions are
compromised.
We have people, educated and experienced people,
but everybody seems to have been working for himself, on how much they
could get away with as soon as possible.” And reaffirming the shocking
details of massive looting and alleged endemic corruption of the last
administration, Mr. Adams Oshiomole, former Labour Leader and current
governor of Edo State with whom the president recently toured the US
told journalists who accosted him at the Presidential villa in Abuja:
“the PDP destroyed this country.
I mean from the lips of
American officials; senior officials in the State Department said one
minister under PDP cornered as much as $6 billion. The man said even by
Washington standards this is earth shattering.” Oshiomole was quoting
Johnny Carson, who is no Johnny-just-come to Nigerian affairs. A number
of issues rise out of these statements from both the president and the
Edo state governor.
One issue certainly is, how did Nigeria’s
money “walk” from its shores? It would take a complex network of civil
servants, banks, handlers, and mules, including the collusion of key
officers of the Central Bank to “disappear” this money. It will also
take the failure, collusion, or incompetence of Nigeria’s National
Intelligence Services as well indeed as the Criminals Investigation
Department of the Nigerian Police to stash Nigeria’s looted funds in
foreign banks without early detection and deterrence.
These
institutions dropped the ball. Will the president also probe them? If it
takes US officials to know which of Nigeria’s public officials have
money stashed away in foreign nest eggs, then it means that the entire
national bureaucracy is compromised and everyone is in on the game. It
is a frightening picture indeed. It means that the entire fabric of
Nigeria’s national security has been compromised, in ways that make it
vulnerable to instability and destabilization; and makes possible the
destruction of its capacities as a functioning state.
But
history is a bitch. The collapse of the Nigerian state did not happen
today. This decay did not begin with President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan;
nor was his regime the most corrupt, from all the indices available.
Nigeria has been hemorrhaging since 1966. Every regime since the end of
the Nigerian civil war in 1970, the beginning of the oil boom, has a
case to answer. The military era in Nigerian politics, of which
President Muhammadu Buhari was a key participant, was an extremely
corrupt and lawless era in Nigeria. The looting of Nigeria’s wealth by
the Generals gave the term, “lootocracy” its most signifying metaphor.
President Buhari himself, if he wants to be taken seriously on this
issue, must account for his own years as minister for oil and chairman
of the Nigerian National Oil Company. In 1980, a Nigerian senate
investigations concluded that $2.8 billion was missing under his watch
from Nigeria’s oil accounts, which compelled President Shagari to
empanel the Ayo Irikefe judicial inquiry. President Buhari must also
account for his years as chairman, under General Abacha, of the
Petroleum Trust Fund. As a matter of fact, he defied the invitations of
the late Justice Oputa to appear before it, and the heavens did not
fall.
I draw upon all these to justify my argument that another
toothless judicial panel of inquiry will not serve the current need to
expose the depth of malfeasance in Nigeria’s public affairs. If this
president is serious about probing Jonathan, he must seek serious
legislative teeth that will give bite to judicial sanction, fairness, as
well as transparency to the process. It must not be seen as a
witch-hunt. At the moment that is how a vast section of Nigerians is
likely to see any selective probing of the administration of Dr.
Jonathan. To establish the credibility of the process, the president
must back a probe of the last fifteen years of the PDP government in
Nigeria, including the period under the watch of President Olusegun
Obasanjo. For eight years, president Obasanjo was sole imperator of
Nigeria’s Ministry of Petroleum and the NNPC.
I endorse the
assertion by Professor Nwabueze, the distinguished constitutional lawyer
that to probe Jonathan’s administration alone will scratch only on the
surface of things. There must eventually be a probe of Nigeria’s past
leadership, at least from 1983-1999, including the era of military rule,
which introduced the impunity that now characterizes public governance
in Nigeria. Buhari’s excuse that going further beyond Jonathan would be a
distraction, is in fact, groundless. Finally, corruption is not just a
feature of the central government: the states were also massively
looted, and all parties were involved. Indeed, the highest level of
corruption in Nigeria happens in the states which have very weak
legislative oversights and enforcement. Right now, state governors owe
arrears of salaries to public servants, going up sometimes to five
months.
There is no society in which this happens without
consequence, because non-remuneration of workers in government signifies
the highest failure of government. It amounts to a security breach.
Nigerian states are bankrupt, in spite of the massive allocations they
have received in the last fifteen years as revenue from the federation
account. The APC governor in Imo state, a key ally of the current
president, allegedly illegally appropriated the accounts of the local
governments in the past four years and has not accounted for it. He is
threatening to sack state workers who are striking because they have not
been paid.
To probe Jonathan is a task that must be done. But
who will probe the states, where many in the president’s party have
looted their states? And what sense does it make to probe Jonathan and
his ministers alone, when the roots of the problem goes deep and further
back, and continues still?
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