By Ikechukwu Amaechi
Nigeria is an interesting
country. All you need do to have fun is sit back and watch the unbelievable
drama in this theatre of the absurd.
Despite the very difficult times, you cannot but be amused. It is one day, one
drama. The dramatis personae, the cast, are as interesting as their art.
|
Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu |
So, when
the news broke on Tuesday, April 19 that the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission (EFCC) named Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu, its Anti
Corruption Ambassador and went to his lair, the National Assembly (NASS), to do
the investiture, I knew that a new drama was in the offing and it would be a
long running series.
Ekwere
who? was the first question on my mind.
I was nonplussed, not because I adjudged him unworthy of the award, but knowing
the character of this administration and the belief of President Muhammadu
Buhari that all Nigerian politicians are corrupt, particularly those in the
opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), and the overt endorsement of his
sentiment by the EFCC, my first reaction was that some smart Alecs had conned
Ekweremadu.
That was even before the drama unfolded fully and the facts became clearer.
Now we know that Ekweremadu was not fleeced by con artists. The visit and
investiture were carried out by the EFCC’s NASS Liaison Officer, Suleiman
Bakari, who led a team of officials of the anti-graft agency.
The EFCC team officially applied to visit Ekweremadu for the sole purpose of
giving him the award.
On the appointed date, Bakari and his team went to his office clutching a
plaque with a picture of Buhari bearing the inscription: “If we don’t kill
corruption, corruption will kill Nigeria.”
Conferring the award, Bakari said to Ekweremadu: “It is, therefore, my honour,
your excellency, to, on behalf of my acting Chairman, Ibrahim Mustafa Magu, and
the entire management and staff of the EFCC, decorate you as an Anti Corruption
Ambassador and formally present this frame as a token of our appreciation to
your person and office, and as a symbol of institutional partnership between
the EFCC and the National Assembly.”
The EFCC, thereafter, solicited the support of the NASS in the anti-corruption crusade of the Buhari administration.
An elated Ekweremadu responded in kind, calling for the establishment of Special Anti Corruption Courts to reduce the burden on regular courts and fast-track trial of corruption cases.
He thanked the EFCC for the honour and promised that the bills before the NASS aimed at strengthening the fight against corruption would get speedy attention.
But 24 hours later, all hell was let loose at the EFCC. It issued a statement rejecting Ekweremadu as its ambassador and disowned Bakari.
A statement issued on Wednesday, April 20 by EFCC Head of Media and Publicity, Wilson Uwujaren, said: “The EFCC totally dissociates itself from the purported action of Bakari as he acted entirely on his own and clearly outside his liaison officer brief as he was never instructed by [Magu] nor mandated by the management and staff of the Commission to decorate Ekweremadu or any officer of the National Assembly as ‘Anti Corruption Ambassador.”
The investiture and the disclaimer are interesting scenes in the EFCC-Ekweremadu drama series.