By
Phillip Agbese
We are a nation of people that
easily forget. We may, however, not be a nation that easily forgive. If it
seems we forgive grievous sins of past, serving and future public office
holders it is down to the collective amnesia that allows those who serially raped
the country to get away with their crimes. Oftentimes we end up rewarding such
persons with greater responsibilities because we simply cannot recall the
enormity of their transgressions against the rest of us.
We
forget so we endure darkness when the power sectors has gulped billions of
dollars without results.
We bemoan the high cost of
lighting our homes as well as keep gadgets and equipment running irrespective
of whether we are on post paid metering, pre-paid extortion or estimated
robbery. But we forget that we are now being billed for the overpriced
investment in electricity infrastructure, including the inflated value for
components that were never bought.
Only
recently the Pharaoh of Benin Electricity Distribution Company, Mrs Olufunke
Osibodu told Nigerians with glee that we have no right to expect stable
electricity for another five years. We have forgotten why but we easily ignored
and even immediately forgave the spewing of such poison. Afterall, this was a
self styled undertaker of a commercial bank talking so we may not immediately
become alarmed that Osibodu has a mandate to finally kill off a sector that
years of theft has not seen off.
The
venue of Osibodu's dark prophecy is what should trigger the alarm bells for us.
She spoke at the 11th Annual Founder’s Day event of the American
University of Nigeria in
Yola, which happens to be one of the many investments of a former Vice
President, Alhaji Atiku Abukakar. He happens to have been the one that oversaw
the privatization exercise, which had rehabilitation of electricity
infrastructure before their sale as a mantra that played so continuously that
it sounded worse than a broken record.
What
happened under Atiku Abubakar's watch set the tone for whatever brigandage was
to follow under subsequent administrations. This of course is not counting any
other shady dealings that were explained away as former President Olusegun
Obasanjo being heavy handed on his over ambitious deputy.
The
cost of the prevailing darkness stands at about N6.35 trillions. Obasanjo's
government in which Atiku Abubakar was basically in charge of the electricity
business reportedly burnt $16bn (N3.52 trn), late President Umaru Musa
Yar’Adua, who succeeded that administration spent $5.375bn (N1.183trn) while
former President Goodluck Jonathan blew $8.26bn (N1.817 trn). It is instructive
that the larger portion of the amount went to the Obasanjo/Atiku era.
Several
parliamentary probes aired on live television later, we all agree on one thing.
That we have been scammed. The so called investment in the power sector only
yielded darkness and the noise power generators competing with the toxic fumes
they release in damaging our health and the environment. The depressing
testimonies before the various probe panels may make for sensational television
and dramatic headlines but we would have merely chased shadows or even worse if
there are no conclusive reports that will name those who stole from us.
Even
if we are unable to jail the thieves that stole the money meant for creating a
vibrant power sector, we would at last have reports that will name them and
place their names on records. When we have records they would help us not to
forget ever again what the power sector thieves did to us. With records there
will be something to dust up and show to them whenever any of them try to stage
a comeback.
Having
reports that document the way our power sector was mismanaged into the current
disaster would prevent the likes of Osibodu from mounting a podium
provided by a key player in the destruction of the electricity sector to hurl
insults at Nigerians. She could have used the opportunity at that event to ask
the founder what happened to the over three trillion naira reportedly spent in
his time without result, instead she deemed it more important to accuse
Nigerians of theft when they were the ones that were robbed and still being
robbed.
The
line must therefore be drawn at this latest insult. We must be able to tell
those who put us in this mess that we have awoken to an uncanny capacity for
recall, in fact total recall as opposed to the forgetful nation they once
knew. We must therefore demand from the present government that it must dredge
up the various reports into the power sector probes. All the reports must be
harmonized with a view to producing a compendium as opposed to having multiple
documents. For any other probes whose reports are still outstanding, those
working on them should be put under the appropriate pressure to conclude and
present their reports.
The
recommendations of those reports – from since we first having power sector
probes - must be implemented to the highest level of compliance possible.
Non-implementation of the reports would amount to Nigerians losing multiple
times. We lost money from the public treasury, we lost more when we continue to
subsidize darkness in our homes, we lost emotionally from the trauma we
experienced watching and reading about those probes and we will lose
again if those behind these thefts are not called to account for their crimes.
It
is for this reason we must dispense with the meekness with which we had
expected successive administration to be self propelling in dealing with the
power sector thieves. Recent history teaches us the government would be
perpetually bogged down by political considerations. The solution is to
coalesce into groups, network as individuals or groups, or amalgamate existing
groups into a critical mass that will march on the government of the day to
take action. Our demands is simple. It is to ask a question. Where are the
various power probe reports?
*Agbese
writes from the United
Kingdom .
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