Quote: Entrenched poor leadership, impunity,
corruption and nepotism are more dangerous in the long run than terrorism – Don
Okereke
Preamble: Before
doing justice to this essay, a caveat, and clarification suffices. Granted he
is a politically conscious ‘change agent’, a devoted advocate of security and social
equality, writer has zero political or parish-pump affiliation, at least for
now. Don’t dissipate your energy trying to figure out where he belongs; whether
or not he is anti or pro status quo. Born across the River Niger, writer
relates with our brothers on the other side of the Niger. As someone that has ‘served
with the Colours’, traversed the country with a stint across the Atlantic, he
is unapologetically eclectic, broadminded, abhors injustice and bootlicking.
This essay is not about individuals; it stems from unflinching passion, a bent
to speak truth to power, hold leadership responsible and to proffer solutions
to societal malaise inherent in our clime. Superior argument and tolerance are
the hallmarks of civilized societies. We all don’t have to see things the same
way, if you disagree with the writer, do a rejoinder with sophisticated arguments
rather than troll or take to stereotyping. By the way, to the uninitiated, ‘na mu ne’ is Hausa for ‘our own’,
nepotism if you want to be blunt while rankadede,
more appropriately put, ranka ya dade
is also Hausa expression which reads ‘may you live long’, sort of sycophancy
meted out to eulogize more often than not, affluent folks.
Connecting The Dots: Youth
Unemployment in Nigeria and Insecurity
Aside
the wanton insecurity – indiscriminate kidnappings, armed robbery attacks, the
unrelenting Boko Haram miasma, amongst others ravaging Nigeria, one more
time-bomb with latent national security consequences is the unprecedented level
of youth UNEMPLOYMENT and restlessness in Nigeria. Latest ‘guesstimate’ by the
National Bureau of Statistics says the number of unemployed
and under-employed persons in Nigeria surged to 22.45 million in the fourth
quarter, Q4, 2015, about 1.75 million higher than 20.7 million recorded in the
third quarter. At the risk of been simplistic, some of the aforesaid challenges
are multiplier-effects of youth unemployment. Tertiary institutions in Nigeria fork
out scores of graduates annually and there are very few new job openings.
Simply put, supply dwarfs demand. The few jobs out there, especially those in
government establishments are exclusive preserve of well-connected and ‘quota
system’ candidates who sometimes lack the prerequisites. Devoid of some
cushioning handouts like food stamps, unemployment, housing allowance or benefits,
the situation in Nigeria is comparable to a jungle where only the strongest
(well-connected) survives.
Enter The CBN: Now A Quintessential Club
of Affluent Kids
From
one tiring and uninspiring script to the other, the Nigerian public space is
currently awash with revelations that the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)
secretly allotted employments to some children of affluent Nigerians and the
beneficiaries were allegedly asked to choose any department in the CBN they
wished seconded to, in flagrant disregard for extant provisions of the law and
best practice. The list is a roll call of the sons and daughters of the crème
de la crème of the Nigerian establishment, past and present. Conspicuous in the
scandalous list are the Dambazzau’s, Arase’s, Ibe Kachikwu’s, Atiku’s, Mamman
Daura’s (nephew of President Buhari), Ghali Na’aba’s amongst others. The
Transition Monitoring Group (TMG), a coalition of over 400 Civil Society groups
recently described the shady recruitment of affluent kids by the Central Bank
of Nigeria (CBN) as a ‘grand betrayal of the change mantra of the Buhari’s
administration’.
Don’t Sacrifice Excellence At The
Altar of Nepotism, Mediocrity!
Though
the United Kingdom is way sophisticated and imbued with technocrats in all
field of human endeavor yet the Governor of the Bank of England – Mr. Mark
Carney was headhunted from Canada because of his know-how. Inter alia, Carney was also a former Governor of the Central Bank
of Canada before his recent appointment. The British government wanted someone
that can get the job sorted out and they traversed continents to fetch him. In
Nigeria, the yardstick for employment is who you know, nepotism and how well
you can kowtow to the powers that be. It’s high time we overstepped such
primordial mentality. This culture of ‘na mu ne’ (nepotism), ‘rankadede’, ingrained
fondness for perpetual servility, is our bane in this part of the world. Please
let’s put square pegs in square holes and round pegs in round holes. There are
better ways you can ‘look after’ one of your own than making him say, an M.D when
there is a better qualified candidate. In the words of Dele Momodu, ‘a nation that fails to consult and use its
best brains is doomed and may be permanently jinxed like we seem to have been
forever’.
How Not To Sweep An Elephant Under The
Carpet
The
extremely lame alibi, hogwash that the CBN dissipates energy bandying, is to
say the least, an invitation to ridicule, an insult to our collective
intelligence. The ensuing outrage that greeted the #CBNGate stems from people’s
expectation that such brazen influence peddling will be lacking in President
Buhari’s administration. Nigerians are watching how this #CBNGate illegal
employment bazaar will be handled by President Buhari, whether he will order
the redeployment of the beneficiaries within the CBN or to other government
MDA’s (Ministries, Departments and Agencies)? It won’t be surprising given that
Nigerian elites are adept at entrenching impunity, exonerating their own and
sweeping even an elephant under the carpet. Under erstwhile President Jonathan,
a whopping N104 million was reportedly
seized from one Nancy Ebere Nwosu who allegedly deposed to an affidavit to the
EFCC to the effect that she was laundering the said amount for Dame Patience
Jonathan. Till date, nothing came out this matter and nothing happened.
A Culture of Employment Racketeering,
Nepotism and Bootlicking
It
is so brazen, an open secret that employment racketeering is deep-rooted in
Nigeria. Federal and State vacancies are for the highest bidders, reserved for
affluent Nigerians. Do a census of cadets at the Nigerian Defence Academy or
those in the pay roll of the National Intelligence Agency (NIA), Office of the
National Security Adviser, Department of State Security (DSS), the EFCC, ICPC
and so on and so forth and tell us how many got there by merit. A friend of
mine, a Christian who served in the intelligence corps of the Nigerian Army
narrated how he was routinely bypassed for deployment to critical and ‘juicy’
positions because of his name, religion and refusal to convert to Islam at the
behest of his boss who was a Muslim. There are environments, situations too where
a Muslim is expected to alter his/her names, religion, to fit in. Who does not
know that to be considered for some roles, appointments or to be awarded
certain privileges, contracts in Nigeria, you must ‘belong’? This may entail kowtowing,
belonging to the same cult as the powers-that-be, switching religion, name
change, mode of dressing. While President Jonathan held sway, the Ijaw or
Bayelsa attire was popular amongst politicians in and around Aso Rock. Now
under President Buhari, politicians, power brokers, and hangers-on have swapped
Ijaw dress codes for babanriga, danchiki with a cap to match.
Punch
Newspaper of November 7, 2012, Page 9, recounts, ‘’the Federal Character
Commission says it has started investigations into 16 federal government
agencies for secretly employing people in violation of the Federal Civil
Service guidelines’’. As usual, nothing came out of the so-called
‘investigation’. Recall that a while ago, the Nigeria Customs reportedly
smashed a fake job syndicate in its fold. ‘’An audit committee in the Nigeria
Custom discovered that 44 Cadets on training got their appointment letters by
bribing corrupt officers of the Service’’. Multiple employment racketeering
scandals came to the fore in the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) - during the
tenures of erstwhile Comptrollers-general Mrs. Uzoma and Mr. David Parradang.
Similar to the #CBNGate, the aforementioned recruitments were shrouded in
secrecy with employment slots appropriated to powerful politicians and their
cronies. Mrs. Uzoma was sacked by President Jonathan; the latter was suspended
and later sacked by President Buhari over
alleged recruitment of 1,000 immigration officers by the NIS in clear
violation of due process. Then Minister of Interior – Abba Moro is currently
been prosecuted for the ill-fated NIS recruitment exercise that claimed the
lives of young Nigerians. Also bring to mind that citing cronyism, upon
assuming office in 2015; President Buhari’s administration terminated the
recruitment of about 65 Cadet Officers of Basic Course 28 of the Department of
State Security (DSS) who were already ten months into their training at the
State Services Academy (SSA) in Lagos.
The Bane of Nigeria
Nigeria
is satiated with disingenuous rulers, people who benefitted and continue to
benefit from the country. They are not ready to make sacrifices but implore the
citizenry to make sacrifices. Nigeria has been and continues good to be good to
the OBJ’s, Gowon’s, Buhari’s, IBB’s, Abdulsalami’s, TY Danjuma’s, Dambazzau’s,
Atiku’s and the rest of them. They owe their material possessions and academic
attainments to Nigerian tax payers. No wonder they and their ilks are
profoundly evangelical about project ‘One Nigeria’. From enlisting to the
Nigerian Defence Academy (NDA), paying zilch tuition fees to automatic
employment in the military and subsequently holding plum national assignments
through deft maneuverings. Upon retirement, they are entitled to mouth-watering
benefits, pecks extended to their family. It’s very plausible that none of
these geezers have ever sat for a job aptitude test their entire life nor do
they appreciate the anxiety that comes with applying for a job and praying, waiting
endlessly for a feedback. While these affluent Nigerians are busy embedding
their spoilt wards in strategic and sensitive positions across government and
private sectors, they order savvy, ambitious but hapless Nigerian graduates,
youths to embrace agriculture, artisanship. They tell us foreign education is not
for everybody, that it is the exclusive preserve of those that can afford it,
forgetting the tax payer took care of their own education and still paying (indirectly)
for that of their wards. They tell us to make sacrifices for the country, to
think what we can do for our country and not what our country can do for us but
their flamboyant lifestyle and disposition reflects the opposite of their
preachments. My father – Ochiriozuo reiterates an aphorism, ‘’onye aghogburu ka
agbara’’.
End Impunity and slap-on-the-wrist-punishments!
Nigeria
must not compete or condescend to the level of a banana republic with segregated
laws depending on one’s social status – for the rich and another for the poor
for similar offences. A 31 year old man was jailed 45 years for stealing a
fifty thousand naira phone belonging Governor Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State while
one Yakubu Yusuf who stole more than N23
billion from the Nigeria police pension fund was jailed two years or an option
of seven hundred and fifty thousand naira (N750,
000.00) fine which he promptly paid within the court premises and walked away a
free man. This is an insult to common sense and jurisprudence. A review of
Nigeria’s penal code, judiciary is exigent.
Please click on this link to read part 2, concluding tranche of the essay:
Better still, copy and paste the link below on your browser:
http://donokereke.blogspot.com.ng/2016/03/cbngate-arrest-practice-of-na-mu-ne_22.html
Better still, copy and paste the link below on your browser:
http://donokereke.blogspot.com.ng/2016/03/cbngate-arrest-practice-of-na-mu-ne_22.html
Written by: Don Okereke
Follow Don on Twitter: @DonOkereke
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