By Louis Odion, FNGE
Though isolated, the recent budget-padding comedy inAbuja and
lately the Ese scandal in Kano invariably
underscore one acute elite affliction in contemporary Nigeria : an
obsession to exercise power and the unwillingness to bear its responsibility.
Though isolated, the recent budget-padding comedy in
The pathology is what manifests today whenever
President Buhari goes about issuing threat to deal ruthlessly with the
"budget mafia" believed to have sexed up figures in the 2016
appropriation bill in view of the dust raised at the National Assembly. But a
more honest response should have been an acceptance of responsibility ab initio
by Mr. president on whose desk the buck stops.
Apparently
following their principal's odd footsteps, ministers have, in turn, made a huge
theatre of publicly disowning the numbers ascribed to their respective
ministries, departments and agencies as if vetting the figures was not part of
their briefs as CEOs of the MDAs to begin with. Health minister, for instance,
swore "budget rats" ate up the documents he originally submitted. No
one is ready to defend the allocation of N3.87b for capital projects at the
Abuja State House Clinic while all the nation's teaching hospitals individually
got peanuts. Or why a whopping N576m was earmarked for the construction of the
residences of the Vice President's ADC and CSO among other outlandish entries.
*Ese Oruru |
Taken together,
the impression thus created is that whereas the government is exhorting the
citizens with evangelical fervor to tighten their belts for an exceedingly lean
year ahead, its own hierarchs are ironically busy loosening theirs to take more
fat in their mid-sections. Not surprising, various conspiracy theories have
since been mushrooming around the budget fiasco. Perhaps the most outlandish is
the suggestion that the whistle was blown at the Senate by forces sympathetic
to the embattled Bukola Saraki as a fight-back over his unfinished business at
the Code of Conduct Tribunal.
If true, that
only begs the issue. In case the Buhari handlers don't know, they should be
enlightened that the signature the president appended to the document before
its presentation to the National Assembly on December 22, 2015 is tantamount to
a proof of ownership and, therefore, a provisional claim of responsibility.
Much more compelling is the obligation to admit that the seed of the present
scandal was inadvertently sown with the inexplicable delay in constituting the
federal cabinet last year.
Hence, the
initiative was inadvertently ceded to bureaucrats who, from experience, are
hardly any different from buccaneers. In fact, Buhari unwittingly handed them
the rope to hang him the very moment he announced in faraway France that civil
servants were "the ones doing the real work" while ministers were
mere "noise-makers", in response to then growing public apprehension
over the delay in raising the federal cabinet.