By Ikechukwu Amaechi
Clapping back at the former Minister of Justice, Mohammed Adoke, who recently criticised former President Muhammadu Buhari for running “the most incompetent government we have ever seen in this country,” Mallam Garba Shehu dismissed him as corruption personified.
*Buhari and TinubuAdoke was scathing in his criticism, not only labelling Buhari the most incompetent president Nigeria ever had and will never have again, but also said his ruination of Nigeria was enabled by a set of political morons he personally assembled. That was a total take down.
Expectedly Shehu, Buhari’s
Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, fired back: “The fact that
this character (Adoke) is a free man, walking away from the industrial
corruption their administration foisted on the 200 million-plus Nigerians is an
Eighth Wonder.” Had he stopped there, Nigerians wouldn’t have bothered because
it would be, to borrow a cliché, “two fighting”.
Many Nigerians are of the opinion that Buhari and Adoke are two sides of
the same corruption coin. But if there is a debate as to which government is
more corrupt – the one Adoke served in or Buhari’s government, not a few will
agree that Buhari takes the cake, the very point that the intrepid Bishop of
the Catholic Diocese of Sokoto, Matthew Kukah, made recently when he said that
Nigeria “saw the ugliest phase of corruption whether in moral terms, financial
terms, and other terms” under Buhari.
So, the joke is on Garba Shehu
and his diminished principal when he insults the sensibilities of Nigerians by
claiming that “the success of the Buhari administration in the direction of the
fight against corruption is unprecedented”. But I don’t blame him for such
egregious insult. I blame President Bola Tinubu for giving Buhari a free life
rather than being in jail where he rightly belongs after ruining Nigeria for
eight years. Rather than pulling Buhari in, Tinubu is waging his own phantom
war against corruption by arresting the suspended Central Bank governor, Godwin
Emefiele, and chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC,
Abdulrasheed Bawa, even as the Speaker of the Lagos State House of Assembly,
Mudashiru Obasa, has been let off the EFCC corruption hook.
In September 2020, the Federal
High Court in Lagos froze the bank accounts of Obasa, a political ally of
Tinubu, following an application made by the EFCC but on August 16, 2023,
Justice Nicholas Oweibo, granted a request from Obasa’s lawyers to unfreeze his
three accounts domiciled at Standard Chartered Bank without any opposition from
the EFCC. The EFCC claimed only three years ago that these same accounts were
being investigated “for the offences of conspiracy, diversion of funds, abuse
of office, and money laundering.” So, what happened? Has the investigation been
concluded and nothing untoward discovered? But I digress. Back to Buhari.
Nobody is surprised at the game
of musical chairs. Nigeria is in a mess. But the bigger tragedy is that the man
who brought us to this sorry pass – Buhari – is enjoying an undeserved rest in
Daura even as his successor is continuing from where he stopped in the
pretentious anti-corruption waffle. But no one is deceived. But the nemo
dat principle transcends the legalese.
As good as the Emefiele
incarceration optics may be for the Tinubu administration, discerning Nigerians
are neither impressed nor fooled. And they won’t be until the master puppeteer,
the man who ruined Nigeria – its economy, politics and even social
cohesion almost irredeemably – accounts for his stewardship. Under Buhari’s
watch, everything that could possibly go wrong for Nigeria went awry, not
because of the inevitability of the decay, but because he wilfully put Nigeria
on a slippery slope, the very point that Muhammadu Sanusi, former Emir of Kano,
made recently when he said Nigeria led a false life under Buhari.
Sanusi said: “They treated the
economy the way they wanted and refused to listen to experts. In the last eight
years, only sycophancy succeeded. The sycophants bought dollars at N400 and
sold N540… An inexperienced boy who has no record of service has a private jet
and owns houses in Dubai and England just because he is buying dollars at such
a rate and selling them at another… About N30 trillion was borrowed from the
Central Bank.”
Former President Olusegun Obasanjo calls it irresponsibility. In an interview with TheCable, Obasanjo said Buhari was reckless with Nigeria’s economy. “Buhari was spending money recklessly. I know Buhari didn’t understand economics. I put that in my book. But that he could also be so reckless, I didn’t know,” he said.
Even Tinubu’s
Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Olawale Edun,
accused Buhari of superintending over an economy characterised by slow growth,
double-digit inflation, weak and depreciating exchange rate. “If we think back
to the last time when the economy was stable, when it was growing, when
inflation was low, and the interest rate was affordable, that period was about
a decade ago. Growth was about six per cent in 2013 and 2014,” he said at his
maiden press conference.
Even former Ekiti State
governor, Kayode Fayemi, admitted penultimate week that the last time Nigeria
experienced economic development was during Jonathan’s administration. Fayemi,
who was Buhari’s Minister of Solid Minerals for four years, also admitted that
the protest which trailed the fuel subsidy removal during the administration of
President Goodluck Jonathan in 2012 was politically-motivated. Before now, Vice
President Kashim Shettima had admitted that Nigeria’s economy was in a big
mess, no credit to the idiocy of the Buhari administration that chained an
otherwise great nation with poor governance.
As the Minister of Petroleum,
corruption became so endemic in the oil sector that whatever crimes his
predecessor, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, was accused of became a child’s play.
Under Buhari’s watch, Nigeria effectively became a criminal enterprise and he
was at the centre of the organised heist that went on at the Central Bank,
Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited and all the other ministries,
departments and agencies of government run by his minions.
Nigerians need to know what
happened under the Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and
Social Development under Sadiya Umar Farouq’s watch. Nigerians need to know
what Hadi Sirika did with the Nigeria Air project. It is not enough for Festus
Keyamo, the new Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, to suspend the
project, Nigerians need to know what happened.
What about Abubakar Malami,
former Minister of Justice, and the various controversial transactions he
allegedly orchestrated including his handling of the sale of assets worth
billions of naira forfeited to the EFCC by politically exposed persons? While the
CBN officials are being quizzed, Tinubu must go the whole hog. Buhari must be
quizzed. He ran that government. The question that must be on the lips of every
well-meaning Nigerian now should be: when will the Tinubu government quizz
Buhari and those in his inner circle over their crime against the Nigerian
state?
For those who may argue that it
is too early, my question is: why is it not too early to go after CBN
officials? When will the same forensic investigation going on right now at the
CBN be extended to the oil industry where Buhari was the de-facto Petroleum
Minister for eight years? These questions are germane because any
anti-corruption war in the post-Buhari era that excludes the Daura herdsman
will be a farce.
*Amaechi
is the publisher of TheNiche newspaper
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