President Buhari, please stop this corruption
When some Nigerians including this writer accused President Muhammadu
Buhari of abetting corruption by giving the sum of N804.7b as a bailout
to governors of 19 states that were owing their workers, APC members and
some unformed Nigerians that were sympathetic to the APC-led federal
government considered those of us who were opposed to the bailout as
enemies of progress.
Some Nigerians opposed Buhari then because he came into power under the
mantra of change and promised to combat corruption but he didn’t bother
to probe the governors to ascertain why they owed their workers for as
much as 10 months before giving them the relief. In addition, Buhari
didn’t attach any conditions to the bailout; making it a handout. That
was a wrong precedent that will recur over time. Some of the governors
owing their workers last year were receiving their security votes,
salaries and allowances regularly.
The disturbing question on the minds of Nigerians then was, why were
the governors owing their workers when they were receiving their
security votes, salaries and allowances as at when due?
It is more disturbing that some of the debtor-governors have private
jets, numerous exotic cars and palatial buildings which they service
with tax payers’ money yet they blatantly refused to pay their workers’
miserly wage of N18,000 per month! A monthly wage that hardly takes the
workers home!
One would have expected President Buhari, the self-styled
anti-corruption czar to have probed the selfish and extravagant
governors in order to uncover the root cause of the indebtedness but he
chose to play the ostrich. It was believed then that with the emergence
of bailout, governors would thereinafter squander their allocation from
the Federal Government and later run to the same Federal Government to
ask for bailout.
If this action was taken by the immediate past PDP government, one
could imagine the torrent of unprintable words that would have been
uttered by the then Publicity Secretary of the APC! But PDP took the
bailout with equanimity.
As mentioned above, the bailout was indeed a wrong precedent which
shouldn’t have been set by the Buhari-led federal government. It was
said then that the act of begging for bailouts would recur and permeate
every layer of governance in this country.
Just like the governors, chairmen of local councils would misapply
their allocations from the governors and later return to the same
governors to ask for more bailouts. Ministers and commissioners would do
same with their budgets and return to the federal government and ask
for bailouts. Same would be replicated in the departments and agencies.
Today, the fears some Nigerians expressed last year as regard the
bailout have been confirmed with the demand for a fresh bailout.
With the emergence of bailout, a new door of corruption has just been
widely opened and it will remain with us. It is sad that this is
happening under the leadership of President Muhammadu Buhari; a man who
prides himself as a man of integrity; a man who prides himself as an
anti-corruption crusader; a man who prides himself as an agent of change
and also came to power with the message of change. Is this the change
he promised Nigerians? Certainly, this is not what Nigerians expected
from President Buhari. It is a big disappointment!
Just one year after the bailout, there are revelations that the
governors who received the bailout diverted same for other purposes!
Today, many governors are unable to pay their workers’ salaries and are
asking the federal government for additional bailout!
Again, without probing how the first bailout was utilised by the
governors, the federal government under Buhari has again earmarked N90b
as bailout for the states that are cash-strapped. The bailout is pegged
at 9% interest payable within 20 years while the states are expected to
publish their financial statements, budgets and the quarterly budgets
performance within nine months to the end of financial year, are some of
the conditions for obtaining the bailout.
Obviously, this new development of giving bailout to the governors to
pay their workers’ salaries after receiving their monthly allocation
from the federal government will not promote healthy competition among
the federating units.
*Anya, a public affairs analyst wrote in from Lagos.
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