Sunday, 29 September 2024

Of Alan Garcia and demon of corruption in Nigeria, By Okechukwu Keshi Ukegbu


•Okechukwu Keshi Ukegbu

 
 
 
 
 
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Few years back, Alan García, the former two-time president of Peru, journeyed home to meet to his ancestors, albeit ignobly. He committed a grave crime before God and humanity. Garcia died after shooting himself as police attempted to arrest him over the wide-ranging corruption scandal that has implicated scores of leaders in Peru and Latin America. The 69-year-old was alleged to have taken bribes from the Brazilian construction giant, Odebrecht, in return for massive public work contracts. He denied receiving money from the company.

The corruption allegedly took place during his second term, from 2006 to 2011. When police arrived at García’s home in Lima, officials said, he told officers he was going to call his lawyer, and went into his bedroom. But a few minutes later, a gunshot was heard, and the police forced their way into the room and found Mr García in a sitting position with a wound on his head.

If mortals have the will to dictate where to be born, Garcia would have chosen Nigeria. The calamity that befell him could have been averted. After all, receiving kick-backs as gratifications for awarding contracts is now a norm rather than a vice in Nigeria. Even governors are allegedly caught on camera receiving kick-backs. Kick-backs are so glaring here that you do not need proxies to facilitate them. More worrisome is that cronies of governors and other political office-holders are feeding fat on kick-backs, and these are done with grave impunity. They own choice houses and cars that are not hidden from the public. Their display of affluence calls for the scramble to join the league.

If Garcia were to be a Nigerian, he didn’t need to bother. What he ought to have done is to play the ball; at worst, he joins the ruling party. After all, those who have corruption charges hanging on their necks like the sword of Damocles are majestically walking the streets of Nigeria free. Some of them are even current political office-holders.

Poor Garcia, you were unlucky to have chosen Peru as your country.

Please, don’t commit that mistake next time. Even if the worse comes to worst, pay your way through to become a Nigerian. After all, it is alleged that you were good in taking bribes. Therefore, you were also good in giving bribes.

Though Garcia ended his life ingloriously in a show of remorse for the offence he committed, corrupt Nigerian officials should show remorse by, at least, resigning their positions when their corrupt practices are uncovered. The boldness is not only exhibited by corrupt public officials but their kith and kin, their communities, church members and other institutions who sing their praises and organise home-coming events; even when they have been let off the prison, they are awarded chieftaincy titles and are ordained the highest titles in the church. This is why corruption has become epidemic in the country.

Corruption in Nigeria has been a nagging issue. The phenomenon has defied any known definition. It is as recalcitrant as the character abiku or ogbanje girl – in Wole Soyinka’s popular Abiku – which keeps reincarnating. Corruption has also defied every effort by successive governments to put it at bay.

It is either that corruption is as old as Nigeria or it predates the nation’s independence. Corruption has been cited by perpetrators of coups d’etat in the country for justification for ousting governments. A typical example are the reasons advanced by the leader of the January 15, 1966 coup, Major Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu, thus: “Our enemies are the political profiteers, the swindlers, the men in high and low places that seek bribes and demand 10 per cent, those that have corrupted our society and put the Nigerian calendar back by words and deeds.”

It was also reported that the country’s total foreign asset at independence was $174.2 million, and by March 1964, less than four years after, the assets depleted to a deplorable £76.8 million: a figure grossly lower than that of 1948.

The war against corruption has been a continuous exercise. It will be recalled that the General Yakubu Gowon regime witnessed an unprecedented oil boom. Gowon boasted that the problem of the country was not poverty, rather how to spend the abundant resources accrued to the country occasioned by the Arab-Israeli war of 1973, when the prices of oil rose to the high heavens; as high as 400 per cent, due to the boycott of Western oil market by Arab nations that protested the alleged connivance between Israel and the West.

•Okechukwu Keshi Ukegbu, a public policy analyst, writes from Aba, via This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it." rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" style="box-sizing: border-box; color: rgb(0, 123, 255); background-color: transparent;" target="_blank">This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

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