One
of the oldest newspapers in Nigeria, The Punch has taken a look at the
revelations of a publicized book about the political affairs of Nigeria
surrounding former President Goodluck Jonathan.
Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan
Former President Goodluck Jonathan, reflecting on his elect0ral
defeat two years ago, shunned deep introspection and remorse for his
five-year reign of impunity.
What comes out from him from excerpts of a new book is a potpourri
of falsehoods, hypocrisy, lame excuses and blame for everyone but
himself. But before Nigerians fall once more for his favourite tactic of
playing the victim, they would do well to remember the devastating
impact of his bad government.
Words attributed to him in a book, Against the Run of Play, by
Olusegun Adeniyi, a well-known journalist, and billed for public
presentation in Lagos on Friday, were vintage Jonathan. Posing yet again
as the perpetual victim, he blamed former world leaders − Barack Obama
of the United States, Britain’s David Cameron, and French president,
Francois Hollande − for desperately wanting a change of government in
Nigeria. He blamed Attahiru Jega, the former Chairman of the Independent
National Elect0ral Commission, for allegedly working with the Americans
by insisting on the initial February 2015 date set for the presidential
election; he blamed his own former party chairman, Adamu Mu’azu, whom
he accused of working against him, and he carpeted the press and civil
society for highlighting the pervasive corruption that flourished on his
watch.
First, the context: As he left a limping economy and widescale
corruption behind, Jonathan’s five years at the helm were an unmitigated
disaster for Nigeria, the effects of which 170 million Nigerians are
experiencing today. He ran the economy aground, failing like his
predecessors to diversify effectively and entrenching what The Economist
of London labelled “a rentier state.” His government despoiled all
fiscal buffers − foreign reserves hardly rose despite persistently high
oil prices until August 2014. In its defence, his finance minister
claimed that it was $43.13 billion that was inherited, yet, despite oil
prices averaging $90-$103 per barrel up till mid-2014, reserves moved
barely perceptively, while the Excess Crude Account had crashed from $22
billion to only $2.2 billion when Muhammadu Buhari took over by
mid-2015. Jonathan left no major new signature infrastructure project;
only inflated repair projects which are mired in controversy.
Arguably his greatest disservice that ought to have been his major
triumph was the badly managed privatisation of power assets that
transferred most of the generation and distribution companies to
untested, incompetent domestic consortia that have saddled Nigeria with a
legal quagmire. But it is in the areas of corruption and security that
Nigerians were mostly badly done in by that terrible government.
Jonathan’s denial that he dismissed corruption allegations as “mere
stealing” is false. He declared this on local and international TV.
Corruption ran riot on his watch, as attested to by the latest scandals
involving his wife, the suspended spy chief who stashed away $43 million
in a Lagos apartment, the missing oil receipts being probed in
parliament, as well as the $2.1 billion arms purchase fund that ended up
in private hands.
While he is whining that Obama and other world leaders, civil
society, the media and the opposition alleged corruption “without
proof,” the world is still aghast at a sprawling corruption scandal
centred on the abuse of N2.53 trillion petrol subsidy in 2011 when only
N248 billion was approved in the budget. His government also signed away
N603 billion in less than a year for dubious import duty waivers,
exemptions and concessions, according to Customs. The fraud associated
with oil swap agreements is still unfolding. Hypocritically, he claimed
to have dropped Stella Oduah as Aviation minister when evidence emerged,
but said he retained Diezani Alison-Madueke as oil minister “because
there was no foolproof evidence.”
This same ex-minister is alleged to have withdrawn millions of
dollars to finance his re-election bid for which she and many others,
including elect0ral officials, are being tried. He disingenuously
discredited the Nuhu Ribadu panel report on the grounds of disagreement
among some members, but failed to say that he had appointed Steve
Oronsaye and Bernard Otti to the board of the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation in an obvious move of brinksmanship.
It is not too late for Jonathan to grow up. He may think Nigerians
have forgotten and that it is time to move on. This is fantasy. All the
colossal scandals that defined his time in government will live on in
the minds of the people who bear the burdens of his misrule. Former
president Olusegun Obasanjo, who broke all party rules to make him
deputy to the late President Umaru Yar’Adua, is quoted in the same book
as admitting that from his first days in office, “…he showed that he was
too small for the office.” He demonstrated this in his mishandling of
the Boko Haram terrorist insurgency. Boko Haram has killed over 25,000
people, displaced over two million and once held 27 local government
areas as its “caliphate.” Rather than take full charge, he allowed his
generals to turn it into a gold mine for corrupt enrichment, an ATM,
according to Obasanjo, for taking money from the treasury.
The influential The Economist once declared that Jonathan ran the
most corrupt, most clueless government in Nigeria’s history. We can’t
agree more. Indeed, we hold him and his corrupt generals responsible for
the failure to rescue the 276 Chibok girls in 2014. His false narrative
that he did try to rescue them contradicts reports that he failed to
act when initially informed, continuing to view terrorism as a personal
conspiracy against him.
Surprisingly, Jonathan has not changed, falsely asserting and
boorishly claiming that Boko Haram is being defeated because Buhari is a
Muslim, not viewed as an “infidel’’ like he was. But salafist militants
view all existing governments as infidels to be violently overthrown.
They target the Muslim leaders of Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Egypt, Tunisia,
Jordan, Afghanistan, Yemen, Libya, Somalia, Chechnya, Algeria and
Bahrain. Boko Haram has killed emirs and has vowed to kill Buhari, the
Emir of Kano and the Sultan of Sokoto, the nominal head of Nigerian
Muslims.
Jonathan incorrigibly blamed the media for his elect0ral defeat. We
insist he lost the election because he was a total failure. He cites
high figures of votes for Buhari in Kano, but was silent on equally
suspicious figures for him from the South-South states, from Rivers or
from Akwa Ibom and Delta states where votes recorded for him doubled the
number of accredited voters.
But we hold President Muhammadu Buhari and the Nigerian people
culpable for providing the leeway for Jonathan to trample on our
collective memory. While the Buhari government has demonstrated lack of
courage to bring Jonathan to justice, many Nigerians celebrate, instead
of rising against corruption. Across the world, people of conscience are
marching in their thousands to protest against corruption; in broken,
dysfunctional Nigeria, hundreds are, for a few wads of naira, marching,
vandalising property, and preaching hate in defence of the corrupt. The
officials on trial who have claimed to have been obeying Jonathan’s
orders by collecting and distributing public funds provide enough
grounds to put him also on trial. The anti-corruption war cannot go far
unless Jonathan is confronted in court with his misdeeds. Past rulers
who break the law are put in the dock. South Korea, Guatemala, Brazil,
Peru, Zambia, Italy, France are ready examples. No one should be above
the law.


No comments:
Post a Comment