23rd
July, 2015
By:
Amir Abdulazeez
W
|
henever and wherever ‘corruption’ is
mentioned in Nigeria, what dominates and often overwhelms the thinking of many
citizens is the theft of public funds by those at the helm of the nation’s
affairs. Some consciously and subconsciously think corruption only involves
politicians who are mostly accused of stealing public funds while in office,
others think it’s the only corruption that really matters. We need to have a
critically broader and in-depth look at the larger Nigerian society, perhaps we
may find out that, there is much more to corruption than just stealing of
public funds.
When immediate past president, Dr.
Goodluck Jonathan was reported to have ‘gaffed’ that ‘ordinary stealing, we
call it corruption’, little did we bothered to digest his words beyond the goat
and yam theory. May be it wasn’t a gaffe, he probably meant what he said. There
is the possibility that he was trying to explain that there is more to
corruption in Nigeria than the stealing of public funds. However, his statement
wasn’t given any chance as whatever he said then was often ridiculed,
misinterpreted or not even given any chance for introspection at all. This is
what happens to you when you govern so woefully that you completely lose public
trust.
It may be true that in the last 35
years or so, the theft and mismanagement of public funds by Nigerian leaders
and government officials has been the single biggest and most critical
corruption that has negatively affected nation-building and retarded national prosperity.
This might be the primary reason why most Nigerians not only decided to be
corrupt themselves but also see public funds theft as the only corruption while
others see other corrupt practices as either not significant, less relevant or
virtually non-existent.
If we weigh public funds theft
against the totality of all other mostly overlooked corrupt practices going on
in our country, few will argue against the other corrupt practices far
outweighing the theft of public funds, if not economically but by the level
moral decadence they have inflicted on our society.
While our attention have been
fixated on theft of public funds by politicians and their agents, our secondary
schools across the country are gradually turning into exam malpractice centers;
our universities are turning into prostitution hallmarks; quackery has eaten
deep into almost every profession; our police force has turned into a crime-perpetrating
and encouraging agency; our cyberspace is been hijacked by fraudsters; our
entertainment industry is being milked dry by pirates; our researches are have
been overwhelmed by plagiarism and lack of content; our civil service is an
embodiment of nepotism; our political parties are turned into financial
parties; our judiciary is fast becoming the last misery of the common man and
the last hope of the highest bidder; our telecommunications networks are
becoming agents of customer exploitation; our private sector is turning into a
sector that help politicians disguise their corruption; our contractors
becoming partners in crime with those in power; our media becoming agents of
paid propaganda; etc. The list is endless. Corruption has eaten deep into every
nook and cranny of our social, economic and political life.
How much value does the Nigerian
education now has? How many candidates actually pass the West African
Examination Council (WAEC) and National Examination Council (NECO) mandatory
end of secondary school examinations based on merit without exam malpractice? Some
government secondary schools have been earmarked as SSCE must-pass centers. Many
examination bodies’ staffs are being compromised as exam malpractice take place
with their active connivance. The case is worse in private schools as they mostly
represent an institutionalized version of exam malpractice centers. Many people
including those in the government’s education sector are fully aware that no
proper Senior Secondary Certificate Examinations (SSCE) takes place in a
substantial number of our private secondary schools nationwide. In some private
schools, candidates are charged SSCE registration fees according to the number
of credits or distinctions they want to have across different subjects. This
does not stop with the regular May/June exams; even the much more independent
November/December GCE is being compromised in many of the examination centers.
Nowadays, even the Joint Admission Matriculation Board (JAMB) exam is not as
credible as it used to be.
How credible are our tertiary institutions
as sex-for-grades scandals continue to rock our universities and other higher
institutions of learning. Lecturers are busy turning female students into prostitutes
rather than mentoring them to become future academic role models. How many of
our private universities are really up to standard as we continue to issue
licenses for new ones? All these are happening as we look askance. How valuable
is education in Nigeria while it is highly unlikely to fetch you a job without
third party intervention? How much worse and wicked can corruption become?
How many ordinary citizens now rely
on the police force and judiciary for justice? Policemen who supposed to
discourage and prevent crime are the same people who seduce people into
committing such and then later ‘force’ them to bribe their way out. Any
corruption worse than this? How affordable is justice in Nigeria? Is the
Nigerian judiciary for the common man or is it for those who can afford the services
of a lawyer and in some cases the price of the presiding judge?
The Nigerian entertainment industry
which has been one of the most promising industries in the last 20 years and
which at a time looked set to rule the world is now being grounded by piracy. Entrepreneurs
in the industry look helpless as faceless pirates fraudulently smile to the
bank with the help of many corrupt-minded Nigerian public. Why would Nigerians
continue to buy pirated products and still expect the industry they so much
enjoy its services to survive and even grow? Are we also waiting for the
government to come and solve this? Pirates are mostly faceless; government
cannot significantly stop them no matter how much they crack down on them, only
the public can by refusing to buy their products. In another development, the continuous
activities of fraudsters on the internet have continued to threaten the smooth
running of our business online.
Many professionals in Nigeria, no
longer have a problem with violating the ethics of their profession in order to
make money. Consultant engineers connive with contractors to short-change their
clients and later you hear a building avoidably collapsing after few years of
construction, killing many innocent people.
Our telecommunication companies seem
to be no longer driven by consumer satisfaction but by making money out of him
at all cost and in some cases by deceit. As if they have not had enough by exchanging
their poor services with consumers hard earned money, they still go ahead to
rob him by seducing him into accepting some of their packages which they have
done well to make some of their terms and conditions ambiguous and anonymous;
upon accepting the package, he ends up finding out that he has been cheated.
In the 2015 general elections, many
people who contested and won primary elections under their political parties
had their candidacies sold to their co-contestants or even to those who never
joined the race in the first place. Political parties’ national secretariats
became venues where candidacies are traded and sold to the highest bidders.
This is the main reason why we had many scenarios where two or more people
thought they were their party nominees and by extension the actual winners of a
particular election and ended up jostling to receive one INEC certificate meant
for only the winner.
How about corruption in Nigerian
football? If not for some few improvements recently, in the Nigerian premier
football league, for many years, teams no matter how good never win away and no
matter how poor never lose at home, thanks to corrupt refereeing. A particular team
was alleged to have never lost at home in the entire history of the league
because of their ability to buy referees and fix matches without any sanction from the authorities.
If we continue, we will end up
attempting to discuss all the corruption in Nigeria which is not possible. This
is the corruption government alone cannot tackle, we have to join hands.
Government can only help to some extent, but we are the ones who must make up
our minds that we are tired of living a corrupt life. We must be tired of
letting in corruption into every part of the system. The problem with solely
relying on government to fight corruption is that even the government’s anti-corruption
mechanism is not immune to corruption. For instance, can we bet against bribery
and financial inducements influencing EFCC and ICPC’s investigations or a court’s
activities?
It is understandable that the
consequences of public theft by corrupt politicians have a ripple effect on the
general level of corruption in the society, but it must not be seen to be
responsible for all the corruption taking place in the country. By doing this,
corrupt people in our society will continue to have a free day as we look only
up to politicians to search for corruption.
Let us support the government to fight,
arrest and prosecute public thieves; let us ensure that what is stolen is being
returned into the public treasury, but let us rise up and fight moral and
social corruption in our society. Let us decide that we no longer want to pass
examinations through malpractice; let us decide not to buy pirated products;
let us resist quackery in every profession and insist on quality services; let
us stop trying to bribe policemen at the slightest opportunity; let us
understand the laws of our land and fight for our rights against anyone who
denies us; let us stop corruption from becoming our way of life.
©2015: abdulazeezamir@hotmail.com
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