ATIKU AND CORRUPTION ALLEGATIONS: FACT OR FICTION?
Monday, February 13, 2012
..the president created both the EFCC and the ICPC for the purpose of political witchunt......
For a wide majority of Nigerians, the subject-matter of
corruption has been the bane of development in the country.
It is also true that almost every government in the country,
especially since the return of democratic rule in 1999, had been
mouthing anti-corruption initiatives as a policy of
government.
It is in this direction, perhaps, that the administration of
former President Olusegun Obasanjo created two institutional
watchdogs in both the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission
(EFCC) and Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences
Commission (ICPC) to keep corruption under checks in the
country.
There is no doubt that the Obasanjo administration created the
framework for the fight against corruption in Nigeria, and it could
be well said, without prejudices to the succeeding administrations,
that there has not been any other government since 2007 that took
the demon of corruption by the horn like the Obasanjo
administration did.
But as much commendable the anti-corruption drive of the
Obasanjo's administration was, it fell short of credibility in the
public space as it appeared that the president created both the
EFCC and the ICPC for the purpose of political witchunt.
Indeed, it got to a point in the life of that adminstration that
any time either the ICPC or the EFCC bared its fangs against any
individual, it could be well percieved that such a person had had a
personal issue to grind with the president.
Examples of such situations abound in both the corporate and
political circles. In the corporate world, it would be recalled
that th EFCC stormed the private residence of Mr. Mike Adenuga, the
Chairman and Chief Executive Office of Globacom on phantom charges.
It was shortly after that incidence that Globacom relocated a great
percentage of its equity investment in the Nigerian
telecommunication industry to neighbouring Ghana, in the company's
bid to find a safe haven from the stranglehold of political
witch-hunt by the then government of the day.
It would also be recalled that operatives of the EFCC, in not less
than three different occasions, stormed the headquarters of the
Bank PHB, in search of incriminating documents or bank accounts
linked to some people in government.
In the political sphere too, a lot of gladiators fell to
Obasanjo's whimsical blows. It is absolutley true that a lot of
those captured in the anti-corruption war among the political class
were very guilty of the charges preferred against them. In fact,
but for the liniency in judicial pronouncements, many of the former
state governors accused of corruption, by now ought to be cooling
their feet in jails.
But if there is one individual who was falsely portrayed as
corrupt during the Obasanjo's presidency, that person is the former
vice-president, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar.
That President Obasanjo weilded all this might to push the former
vice-president down on allegations of corruption and had him tried
in several courts and legislature on several accounts, is now
history.
The whole nation was made to believe that Atiku had his hands
everywhere in the national economy, especaily as regards sleaze in
government business. From the sale of public enterprises by the
Bureau Public Enterprises (BPE) to illegal withdrawals from the
Petroleum Technology Development Fund (PTDF) and the Commonwealth
Games in 2004, the Obasanjo's government painted the vice-president
of that administration in bad light, in a manner of calling the dog
a bad name in other to hang it.
While the nation later got to know that the reason why the
government pictured Atiku as being corrupt was to deny him the
opportunity to contest the 2007 presidential election, no court or
independent probe panel has ever found the former vice-president
guilty of any corruption charge whatsoever.
Just recently, the Senate finalised its probe on the sale of some
public enterprises by the BPE. And, curiously, at no where in the
senate report was the name of Atiku mentioned as having done
anything wrong with the sale of NITEL or the Ajaokuta Steel Rolling
Company or any other parastatal for that matter.
Since leaving office five years ago, the former vice-president has
never been indicted by any probe panel, nor his name traced to any
discovery of fraud.
It therefore appears to me that the perception of the former
vice-president as being corrupt is more of a fiction than a fact.
At least, that perception is yet to be supported by any emperical
submission.
Titilope Kehinde wrote in from the Federal Capital
Territory.
http://thewillnigeria.com/opinion/11820-ATIKU-AND-CORRUPTION-ALLEGATIONS-FACT-FICTION.html