All of a sudden, the Buhari administration
that is given to shouting anti-corruption from the rooftop has adjusted to the
inviolate, otherworldly quiet of a Buddhist monastery. The dubious 9 trillion
naira contract fraud exploded by Ibe Kachikwu’s ‘leaked’ memo has forced them
into preternatural speechlessness.
President Buhari, who cornered the position
of the Minister of Petroleum Resources, on the pretext that he was the only
Nigerian qualified in integrity and experience to transform the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation from a den of thieves to a sane institution
governed by global best practices, is hiding behind the veil of silence.
He is unwilling to publicly acknowledge the mindboggling scam within his zone
of supervision and field of vision, one which represents the criminal hijack of
the equivalent of Nigeria’s 2017 budget and its opportunity costs in
infrastructure.
Buhari's aides, likewise, have offered no
comment, cryptic or revealing. And Kachikwu, the Minister of State for
Petroleum Resources, who after being repeatedly frustrated by a Gaza-grade
blockade mounted to scuttle his many attempts to meet with Buhari to table the
matter before him, was summoned to a hurriedly arranged audience, eventually
walked out the president’s office, saying no more than "no
comment" to the pressmen who had been waiting for one hour
to hear from the horse’s mouth.
The NNPC contracts and the leaked memo that
burst it like a gigantic balloon of pus are the issues of the day in Nigeria.
But the Buhari presidency is acting like it is the scandal rocking the
government of a distant banana republic. They have kept mum, as if it were an
imported rumor they could not to afford to be interested in. They are
secure in their shell of indifference, in their distance of uppermost caste
snobbery, in their scorn of the right of the people to answers.
The most President Buhari has done is try to
calm the scandal as a baby screaming in the midnight. He invited Kachikwu
to Aso Rock to discuss the memo he had ignored before it leaked. He appeased
the junior minister and "ordered" a truce, a return to
"sanity."
On the same day, in a related effort at
damage control, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo sat down for a chat with
Maikanti Baru, the Director General of NNPC, the man who singlehandedly signed
away a contract figure that could effectively run the federal government of
Nigeria for a whole year. Osinbajo relayed Buhari's message to Baru: end
the turf war with Kachikwu, stop the bickering, let sleeping dogs lie.
With Kachikwu placated and sworn to silence
by President Buhari and Baru given a homily on peace by Pastor Osinbajo, the
presidency has answered the 9 trillion naira question, "settling" it
like an incident of sibling rivalry. A tiny brotherly squabble. A family
misunderstanding that slipped through the crack on the wall and escaped into
the public square.
Buhari resolved the issue with avuncular
politesse. He addressed the monumental fraud as though it were a mere battle of
supremacy between two of his appointees. He presumed on the powers of his
office to whitewash a criminal act and foreclose the materialization of the
appropriate consequences. He obstructed justice in the guise of peacemaking.
There was no outrage from the self-styled
avenging angel of corruption. He condoned the fraud. He excused it.
Buhari defined corruption downwards. He said
the award of the 9 trillion naira contract in violation of statutory rules was
not corruption. It’s not a big deal. It’s a quarrel.
Most Nigerians nursed the hope that the
reproach of the casual disappearance of billions of petrodollars from the NNPC
has passed away with President Goodluck Jonathan and his covetous Oil Minister,
Diezani Alison-Madueke. That NNPC would not be the ever-spitting ATM that
serves the avarice of the few in the Buhari era. That he will not abide the
crazy looting of public funds.
Today, they see that Buhari they had placed
on a pedestal perpetuating the corruption he was elected to stop. They see him
cover up the $25 billion fraud in NNPC the selfsame Jonathan waffled
on the missing of $20
billion from the NNPC.
What’s even worrisome is that the curious
concatenation of "coincidences" - Buhari’s avoidance of a facetime
with Kachikwu, his neglect of the minister’s memo, and his insistence that the
"juicy" oil contracts that are apparently not kosher stand as
awarded- suggests that Buhari may have personally benefited from deals.
Analysts are agreed that the highly consequential contracts could not have
happened without his imprimatur. He signed off on them.
Buhari’s government recently launched a whistleblower
policy, established a token reward for whistleblowers and gleefully
celebrated receiving over 5000 tips and 365
"actionable" ones from Nigerians. It’s very suspicious that when
Buhari’s own minister sent him a whistleblowing memo talking about public money
in the order of $25 billion, he saw it as anything but an opportunity to fight
corruption. Rather, he tucked away the note like the scrap of a forgettable
diary. He hid it like a bad gift, an ugly keepsake; willing it to rot till thy
kingdom come.
Buhari often talks about "corruption
fighting back." His burial of the memo was corruption fighting front. It
was putting corruption in the lead.
Many people have expressed concern that the
plot of the contracts bears the hallmarks of a typical Nigerian pre-election
heist. Normally, the incumbent president, as a matter of precedence, begins to
build his second term campaign war chest midway into his first term. He gives
himself a head start by looting the cash cow federal agencies by dashing out
outrageous contracts to his cronies. That way, he "empowers" them to
help him buy the vote.
Buhari’s allies have already started laying
the groundwork for his second term bid. And he appears to have turned to NNPC,
the good old money tree that he can shake slightly and have cascades of
windfall. This is probably why he can’t recognize corruption in the 9 trillion
naira contracts.
Buhari bequeathed Nigerians the aphorism,
"If Nigeria does
not kill corruption, corruption will Nigeria." He calls
himself as the commander of Nigeria's first ever serious war against
corruption. He is quick to pounce on former officials for corruptly enriching
themselves. But when confronted with the facts of his own corruption, he
legitimized the wrongdoing and called it proper.
Buhari asked Kachikwu and Baru to let
"sanity" prevail. Don’t duel in such a manner as to invite public
scrutiny to the NNPC. Get along well and make our regime of the underhand
contracts peaceful.
He sued for a return to "sanity."
If 9 trillion naira fraud occurred in an atmosphere of "sanity," what
could the climate of insanity possibly produce? Is "sanity" the new
name of insanity?
Without doubt, if Buhari were not involved in
the 9 trillion naira fraud, he would surely have regarded it as a heinous crime
and treated it as such. But money laundering is clean business when he
participates. Wrongdoing loses the quality of a vice if he is the doer. He is
exceptional.
In Buhari’s world of moralism, the corruption
of the other is criminal while his corruption is legal. Your corruption is evil
and his corruption, good. Your corruption is guilty and his corruption,
innocent.
You can reach Emmanuel at immaugwu@gmail.com and
follow him on Twitter @EmmaUgwuTheMan.
Source: saharareporters.com
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