By Paul Onomuakpokpo
Aside from the tragedy
of the monumental failure of the President Muhammadu Buhari government, there
is also that of the barefacedly audacious attempts to still project him as
glowing in the halo of incorruptibility that some have associated him with. To
his diehard loyalists, it is not Buhari who has betrayed the high ideals of
transparency he has espoused before the public but only those whom he has given
responsibilities who are prevented by their greed from living up to the
expectations of their high offices.
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*President Buhari |
This is the trajectory we are confronted with
again as the public is scandalised by the heist and remorselessness of the
former Chairman of the Presidential Task Force on Pension Reforms, Abdullahi
Abdulrasheed Maina, and the complicity of high-profile officials of the Buhari
government. In the administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan, Maina
was given the responsibility of bringing reform into the pension system to
break the cycle of pensioners dying broke in their post-service years because
of their inability to access their pensions. But the reformer soon turned away
from his official assignment and became preoccupied with the looting of the
billions that he was supposed to guard against pecuniary predators. Before he
was caught, Maina had already allegedly stolen N100 billion. Maina was not at a
loss as regards how to avail himself of this haul. He launched into a splurge
and this civil servant who was an assistant director before he was made to
manage the pension system became the owner of posh houses and companies in
choice areas of Abuja
and other parts of the country. Yes, Maina is presumed innocent until he is
declared guilty by a competent law court. But he declared himself guilty before
the public. Instead of making himself available to the Senate and the Economic
and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to clear himself of the charges of
egregious corruption he fled abroad.