It is not known to
this column how close Brigadier Sani Abacha was to Major General Muhammadu
Buhari by December 1983. It was Abacha who announced at the end of a few
minutes of martial music on New Year ’s Eve that the government of President
Shehu Shagari had been thrown into the dust bin of history. Buhari became the
fulcrum of that history as Nigeria ’s
head of state. On August 27, 1985, there was another game, the Revolving Doors’
game. Buhari was out, thrown out, while Ibrahim Babangida, was in, thrown into
the pinnacle of political power in Nigeria .
Babangida clamped
Buhari into the dungeon for some months where he cooled his feet, while his
colleagues were bestriding the Nigerian political and military firmament like
they owned the world. Babangida left or was forced to leave the throne after
eight years of dangerous foot work. He called Chief Ernest Shonekan, a
successful private sector entrepreneur, to come and take the baton of
leadership.He took it and as he was trying to hold it in his hand firmly, Abacha who had been eyeing the coveted prize greedily grabbed it in 1994. He immediately increased the price of petroleum products. The public rolled out a series of protests. As an appeasement measure, he set up the Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF) as an intervention development agency to bring succor to the people especially in the rural areas. He made Buhari the executive chairman of the Fund which he ran for five years (1994-1999).
Why did Abacha appoint Buhari the Executive
Chairman of PTF? Was it as an atonement for the sin of standing by while he was
overthrown by the Babangida Boys? Or was he just sympathetic seeing that the
man had been left in the cold by Babangida since his ouster on August 27, 1985?
Or was Abacha simply looking for a fabled disciplinarian who didn’t love money
too much or the dirty part of it? Buhari needed that rehabilitation, physical,
financial and reputational. He was eager to come in from the biting cold and be
seen as a man who, despite the overthrow and detention, had kept his dignity
and integrity such that Abacha who was Babangida’s man, could trust him with
the big-wallet job.
The Petroleum Trust Fund was to intervene in
such areas as roads and waterways, supply of educational materials,
rehabilitation of educational infrastructure, food supply, health, water
supply, etc. Buhari set up a capricious management structure and appointed
Afri-Project Consortium (APC) led by a 42 year old man, Salihijo Ahmad. This
Consortium was the sole manager of the PTF projects.
*Gen Abacha |
Ahmad had admitted to Newswatch
in an interview published by the magazine in its April 19, 1999 issue that it
was APC that wrote the proposal which defined the mandate of the PTF. It
suggested the criteria, procedure for selection and appointment of contractors,
consultants and suppliers. It also worked out the monitoring mechanism adopted
by the PTF. The APC had some 620 consulting firms reporting to it. It was the
sole management consultants to the PTF. Most Nigerians had no idea how the PTF
was run. It was when President Olusegun Obasanjo took over in 1999 and set up
an interim management committee (IMC) headed by Dr Haroun Adamu to wind down
the PTF that the worms crawled out of the can.
That Interim Management Committee appointed
three technical consultants to investigate various aspects of the PTF
management. Their findings conducted independently were damning. When I read
President Buhari’s remarks a few weeks ago in which he crowed about the
achievements of the PTF under his leadership, I decided to do a facts-check since
I knew that Newswatch had done a cover story titled “How Buhari Ran PTF”
which was published in its March 13, 2000 issue. This story was the product of
a thorough investigation into the mammoth fraud as discovered by the technical
consultants hired by the IMC. Details of the IMC report are distilled for you
here.
The findings: N144.51
billion had been given to PTF by the Federal Government during its lifetime; A
residential estate was to be built at Wuse, Abuja, for N703 million but the
technical consultants hired by IMC put the realistic valuation at about N328
million; Between July 1994 and July 1999, about N25 billion was either stolen
or improperly expended; Extension of PTF headquarters was to gulp N650 million;
Expired HIV/Aids drugs and kits worth N28 billion was supplied to several
hospitals nationwide. This was confirmed by the Nigerian Guild of Medical
Directors whose Secretary, Mr. Rowland Ogbonna, asked the Federal Government to
withdraw the drugs immediately from all hospitals in the country.
*Buhari and Obasanjo |
Many projects were
abandoned while the completion rate of other projects was put at 30%; the sum
of N500 million that the PTF deposited in a bank disappeared as soon as the IMC
was announced. The bank agreed to pay the money after President Obasanjo read
the Riot Act to the bank officials. On taking over, IMC discovered that there
were no contract documents, drawings or specifications relating to projects.
The APC could and did award contracts and vary the pricing without any
reference to the PTF. Mr. Ahmad had asked the IMC officials to come and collect
some documents in connection with all the transactions. On the day of the
appointment he collapsed and died. The other members of the APC team claimed
that they were not in a position to supply the documents.
There were more sordid revelations. The Afenifere did an analysis of the siting
of the projects. The consumption of petroleum products by the South was 70% while that
of the North was 30%. However, the distribution of the PTF projects was a
reversal of the consumption pattern: 70% to the north and 30% to the south.
All southern states had 4,440.43 kilometres of roads rehabilitated
(24%) while states in the north had 13,870.47 kilometres
rehabilitated (76%). Teaching Hospitals’ rehabilitation: South 38%, North 62%;
Specialist hospitals: South 29%, North 71%; Food supply: South 17%, North 83%;
National Health and Educational Rehabilitation Programme (NHERP): South 0% and
North 100%; Vocational Programme: South 3%, North 97%; Primary School rehabilitation:
South 12%, North 88%. Haroun Adamu acknowledged the gross imbalances in the
sharing of the projects but regretted that his committee could not do much to
remedy the situation since by the IMC mandate they could not embark on new
projects.
From the findings there was massive fraud in
PTF, fraudulently masquerading as achievements. The institution was a
government intervention agency but run without the regulatory checks and
balances that undergird the implementation of government projects. The Afri-Projects
Consortium was just on its own, a loose canon with no authority to check it.
Buhari was the Executive Chairman but he was absent-minded and had capriciously
surrendered the operational powers of the PTF to APC without diligent
supervision. The boys looted the place dry and there was no evidence that
Buhari had an inkling of the huge corruption under his feet. Sometime before
the IMC takeover, a newsmagazine, TheWeek, had interviewed him about
the swirling corruption allegations. He said allegations of corruption against
him were false. “My integrity is intact.” His friends said so too and even
insinuated that Dr. Adamu was going after Buhari because the former dictator
had detained him in 1994. Adamu told Newswatch: “I am not here to probe
Buhari, No, that is not our mandate. Whatever happened when he was head of
state is long forgotten. He is my friend.”
Buhari’s personal integrity was not soiled by the Petroleum Trust Fraud but he
displayed supreme incompetence as a manager. As an Executive Chairman the buck
stopped at his desk and no matter how you want to slice it he takes vicarious
responsibility for the humongous fraud that took place in that institution.
Secondly, the grossly lopsided distribution of the PTF projects between North
and South is an awful testimonial for a man of his national standing to whom
the nation through the coup makers had given the highest position in the land.
His lopsided appointments today constitute a déjà vu.
When I read what he said about Abacha I was
sorry for him. He said to a delegation, Buhari Support Group led by Comptroller
General of Customs, Hameed Ali. “I don’t
care about the opinion you have on Abacha but I agreed to work with him and we
constructed roads from Abuja to Port
Harcourt , Benin ,
Onitsha and so
on. We also touched education and health. One of the former Heads of State was
bragging that he spent $16 billion on power in Nigeria . Where is the power?”
The emerging
confrontation between the two former dictators, former friends and former
allies and now fierce foes, Obasanjo and Buhari, will receive the attention of
this column in due course. For now, I think President Buhari’s open veneration
of the kleptocratic and autocratic Abacha is a cause for nausea. At the 10th
anniversary of Abacha’s death Buhari had given the fantastically corrupt Abacha
a clean bill of integrity. Even at that time, Nigeria was running all over the
world trying to retrieve the billions Abacha had scattered in several banks in
several countries and several continents. The horrifying stories of the
elimination of prominent politicians and businessmen by Abacha constitute a
notorious portion of our national narrative. No matter how hard Buhari tries,
no matter what he thinks of the despicable, despotic Abacha, no matter why he thinks
the man was a saint he will never succeed in winning Nigerians to his side. He
will only wake up with fleas since he chooses to be in bed with dogs.
*Ray Ekpu was the
Chief Executive of Newswatch Communications, publishers of the defunct Newswatch magazine
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