By Ikechukwu Amaechi
Dr Betta Edu, the vivacious and chirpy politician from Cross River State, must be introspecting now. Just yesterday, she had the world at her feet, literally, and Nigeria was her oyster, where, it seemed, she could achieve anything she wished.
*Betta Edu and Bola TinubuAnd she achieved a lot. Born October 27, 1986, Betta chalked up incredible attainments in only 37 years. Right from the time she completed her secondary education in 2001 at the Federal Government Girls College, Calabar and obtained her first degree in medicine and surgery from the University of Calabar in 2009, her rise to super stardom has been incredible.
In 2015, Governor Ben Ayade appointed her Special
Adviser on Community and Primary Healthcare. Since then, she has been on a
helluva of a journey. Shortly after, she became Commissioner for Health and in
2020, she also doubled as the chairman of the Cross River State COVID-19
Taskforce. It was a measure of her charisma that in August 2020, she became
national chairperson of the Nigeria Health Commissioners Forum.
A Fellow of the African
Institute of Public Health Professionals, in March 2022, Betta Edu,
transcending state politics, became the youngest national Woman Leader of the
All Progressives Congress (APC).
She became a role model of sorts
for not only young people but women, so much so that in July 2023, the
Asabe Bashir-led Maryam Babangida National Centre for Women Development, in
collaboration with the Ministry of Women Affairs and Social Development,
bestowed on her an award of excellence in leadership for gender inclusion and
women empowerment in recognition of her “commitment to championing the cause of
empowering women, children and other vulnerable groups in Nigeria.” Three years
before then, the same Federal Ministry of Women Affairs and Social Development
gifted her the Nigeria Quintessential Woman Award, and the National
Youth Council of Nigeria gave her another award of excellence.
Then, as an icing on her cake of
accomplishments, President Bola Tinubu nominated her minister. She was promptly
cleared by the Senate and in August 2023, she was sworn in as Minister of
Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Alleviation, making her the first female
minister from Cross River State and the youngest in the Fourth Republic.
But like the Evil Forest in
Chinua Achebe’s magnum opus, Things Fall Apart, that kills a man on the
day that his life is sweetest to him, Betta Edu has fallen from grace to grass,
becoming in the process the butt of all asinine jokes and ridiculed as the
poster girl of corruption in Nigeria.
She has been shoved off her high
perch, suspended by Tinubu, who denied her access at the presidential villa,
and handed over to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for
probe. Her travel documents have been seized, laying her utterly bare.
Meanwhile, the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs and
Poverty Alleviation, Abel Olumuyiwa Enitan, has taken over the leadership of
the ministry.
For all intents and purposes, Betta Edu’s roller coaster trajectory in the corridors of power has come to a dramatic end. The only thing that could equal her spectacular fall from grace to grass is her equally meteoric rise from grass to grace. She has been thoroughly humiliated. In some climes where self-esteem is still considered priceless, she should be on the suicide watch list.
But this is Nigeria. Those who have committed worse crimes are in higher offices right now. No-matter what the outcome of the EFCC probe is – and I don’t see how she will be exonerated of financial malfeasance having owned up to the vexatious memo seeking to transfer N585 million of public funds into private account contrary to statutory regulations – Betta Edu will not return to the Tinubu cabinet.
Chapter 7 of the Federal Government Financial
Regulations, section 713, which unequivocally warns that public and personal
money should not intermingle, states: “Personal money shall in no way
circumstances be paid into a government bank account, nor shall any public
money be paid into a private bank account. An officer who pays public money
into a private account is deemed to have done so with fraudulent intention.”
And that is exactly what Ms Edu
did. Did she not know about that regulation? I bet she did. If she knew, why
did she flout it so whimsically? Impunity, knowing full well that the act of
public officials paying public money into private accounts is the norm.
To be sure, this is not the
first time Betta Edu will be entangled in a scandal. Her stewardship as
the chairperson of the Cross River State COVID-19 Taskforce was not
without reproach. The Cross River State chapter of the Nigerian Medical
Association (NMA) passed a vote of no confidence in her, alleging professional
misconduct bordering on fraud in her handling of the COVID-19 assignment.
In other climes, such baggage
would have been an issue during her ministerial screening. Not in Nigeria. Both
the security agencies and the Senate never bothered. The Imperial President, on
whose mandate everyone stands, wanted her to be a minister, so, a minister she must
be.
But I am not worried about Edu.
Her goose is cooked. She will be lucky not to be jailed. President Tinubu will
milk to the fullest any mileage her humpty-dumpty fall will give him as a
leader not in bed with corruption. Already, for taking action against the
minister, many Nigerians have festooned him in anti-corruption robes. That is
his luck.
But if anything, the Edugate, as
the Betta Edu scandal has been dubbed, has confirmed the fact that Nigeria is a
huge crime scene. It is an embarrassing systemic failure and though Tinubu has,
no doubt, ticked all the right boxes with the actions he has taken so far, the
spectre of corruption is not about to be exorcised primarily because the
president does not have the capacity to champion that cause.
The reason why the Betta Edu
scandal blew open was not because the system flagged it but because aggrieved
insiders who have an axe to grind with her for contesting their sole
proprietorship of the stealing franchise in the Humanitarian Affairs Ministry
leaked the memo.
The trouble in the Humanitarian
Affairs Ministry started last October when Ms. Halima Shehu was appointed the
National Coordinator and CEO of the National Social Investment Programme Agency
(NSIPA), a parastatal in the ministry. Edu, apparently would have preferred
Dele Yakubu, now Senior Special Assistant to Tinubu on Humanitarian Affairs and
Poverty Alleviation, for the job. She lost out in the power game.
The minister, who is a signatory
to the NSIPA account, either out of greed or spite for the coordinator, started
making withdrawals to the tune of about N3 billion without the knowledge of the
NSIPA coordinator. On finding out, Ms Shehu, in a desperate bid to retain
control over the agency and its finances, transferred the remaining money out of
the accounts that Edu had access to.
The suspended minister moved
against her and the EFCC hauled her in. Not wanting to go down alone and aware
of what Edu had done with the money she unilaterally pulled out of the NSIPA
account, memos that were hitherto safely tucked away, started flying around.
But there is nothing new. Since
its creation by the Muhammadu Buhari presidency, the Humanitarian Affairs
Ministry has been a cesspit of corruption with no accountability whatsoever. It
is good that Edu’s predecessor, Sadiya Umar-Farouq, is in the law’s
crosshairs now over allegations of corruption in the handling of N37.1 billion
social intervention funds during her tenure.
The rot in the Humanitarian
Ministry goes round and every well-meaning Nigerian should be worried. The
Edugate is only a tip of the axiomatic iceberg. Ours is a country where people
pay millions of Naira to secure ministerial appointments and committee
chairmanship is offered to the highest bidders in the National Assembly. Those
orchestrating these heists are high priests on the presidential altar.
Nobody borrows money to secure
ministerial appointment in the name of service. That is why Nigeria has become
a huge crime scene. While Betta Edu’s fall from grace to grass is gratifying,
those squawking that Tinubu has turned the corner on the anti-corruption fight
are mistaken. It is still a steep climb to sanity.
*Amaechi is the publisher of TheNiche newspaper
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