By Godwin Onyeacholem
Following an initial setback caused by a purported security report
on which the senate relied for suspending Ibrahim Magu’s confirmation as the
substantive chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC),
President Muhammadu Buhari has rightly written back to the senate requesting
Magu’s confirmation, having been convinced of the futility of the so-called
report prepared by the Department of State Services (DSS).
*Magu |
Besides succumbing to wise counsel, Buhari’s decision aligns with
the popular expectation of a great majority of the people who want to see Magu
continue the excellent job he is doing in his acting role at the helm of the
country’s foremost anti-corruption agency. Indeed, the voice for his retention
has been so resounding that were Nigerians to cast a ballot regarding his
continuation, the result would be returned overwhelmingly in his favour.
Yet, for him and the success of the anti-corruption campaign, the
senate hurdle remains an albatross. Despite Buhari’s letter reiterating the crucial
importance of checking the corruption scourge and appealing for a favourable
acceptance of this nominee in view of the need to sustain the prevailing
momentum and capacity of the EFCC, the body language of the senators is
decidedly against this sentiment.
It does not matter to them that apart from the high integrity
quotient of Buhari, their party’s and indeed Buhari’s flagship campaign promise
of a frontal fight against corruption was the other major reason Nigerians
voted massively for the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the 2015
presidential election. Nor do they feel embarrassed that despite belonging to
the same APC party as President Buhari and being the majority in the upper
parliament, APC senators are unable to muster the required insight and unity of
purpose that would lead to a seamless confirmation of Buhari’s nominee as head
of a strategic agency primed to actualize a top agenda in their party’s
manifesto.
Understandably, some of them, including opposition PDP senators,
are already being vigorously prosecuted for all manner of crimes by the EFCC.
Thus, to them the nominee represents a creeping affliction that would
effectively checkmate not just their own relentless pursuit of unconscionable
excesses, but also that of similar selfish elite groups that have conspired to
hold down the development of this country. Therefore, the chairman of EFCC can
and should be anyone else but Magu, they must have resolved.
This is the ugly mindset that, in the first instance, arrogantly
shunned due process and brazenly embraced a totally ill-advised request to the
DSS for a security report on the acting EFCC Chair. In its entire history,
until the Magu case, the Nigerian senate never asked for a security report on
any nominee presented to it for confirmation by the presidency. Of course, the
reason is clear. Before the presidency sends the name of any nominee to the
senate, that nominee would have been vetted by the DSS. But this red chamber
took that route because Magu must be stopped anyhow. Hopefully, this
would be the first and the last time such an act would be carried out in
the National Assembly.
Conscious of the potency of the threat he poses, the senate
schemed for an alibi with which to nail Magu and found the DSS which came up
with a report whose ambiguity exposed the malevolent intent of its colluding
originators – a report containing preposterous allegations and recommendations
that formed the basis of the senate’s refusal to proceed with the confirmation.
The report was clearly aimed at achieving a predetermined goal.
This has left the politics of Magu’s confirmation, dirty and
ill-tempered as it is, with a few unanswered questions. For example, if there
was no evil agenda, what is the business of DSS in including recommendations in
its report? Why wouldn’t they just stop at what they perceive as Magu’s ‘sins’
and leave the rest to the senators? Why did the DSS issue two different
security reports and why did the senate discard the one that said Magu should
be confirmed based on his brilliant performance and instead choose to work with
the one that said Magu was not fit for confirmation? Could Buhari have
forwarded his nominee’s name to the senate without the was a security report by
the DSS? If the report was unfavourable, could Buhari have still gone ahead, at
the risk of his famed anti-corruption credential, to forward Magu’s name for
confirmation?
If there is any group that ought to be in the forefront of
supporting the President and the party to succeed in the crusade against the
monster called corruption, it should be the APC senators.
But they would be helping this country in a very significant way
if they shed all prejudices and summon their patriotic instinct to do the right
thing, by inviting Magu to the plenary with a view to confirming him as the
substantive chairman of EFCC.
Anything short of that is bound to seriously jeopardize the war
against corruption.
*Onyeacholem, a commentator on public issues, writes from Abuja .
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