19th February, 2018
PRESS RELEASE:
VITAL
CORRUPTION LESSON FROM SOUTH AFRICA
Former South African president,
Jacob Zuma, was forced out of office last week for corruption charges. The
South African Supreme Court had in October 2017 upheld about 800 corruption
charges against Zuma before his party, the African National Congress (ANC)
ordered him to quit. Although Zuma defied the order ab initio, he
resigned on the eve of a parliamentary vote of no confidence.
Zuma’s
exit from power is very didactic. It reveals South Africa’s mature democratic
practice where a president is booted out for being corrupt whereas in Nigeria, our
own president is being pressurized to leave office for fighting corruption.
Here lies the
monumental paradox. The outside world must be laughing at Nigeria as they watch
the unfolding drama. Two former heads of state have openly asked President
Muhammadu Buhari not to seek a second term. The National Assembly (NASS) is also
fighting tooth and nail to get rid of the president as many of its members are
enmeshed in corruption cases.
But Buhari’s major selling point has been his
incorruptibility. He has no house in London. None in Paris or any foreign
country for that matter. Neither has any stolen fund been traced to him before
and during his tenure. He has succeeded in blocking leakages through which our
common patrimony has been siphoned into the private pockets of greedy
politicians. Foreign countries endorse him as a leader of unassailable
integrity and the naira is getting back its lost glory as a result of all
these. Prices of goods are falling.
Diversification of the
economy is turning other sectors into veritable sources of income. The railways
are roaring back. Agriculture is once again taking its prime of place,
electricity supply is witnessing unprecedented improvement while macadam roads
are fast replacing the death traps which claimed hundreds of lives on a regular
basis. Buhari’s social welfare scheme is already taking care of thousands of Nigerian
youths.
The Muslim Rights
Concern (MURIC) urges Nigerians to open their eyes very wide. Those who stole
Nigeria’s money have become very powerful and they are using their stolen money
to spread false propaganda to de-market Buhari. All the allegations of
nepotism, religious bias and incompetence are tales from moonlight concocted by
corrupt elements who want to bring back corruption.
For blocking their access to easy money, they wished Buhari
dead. Based on their knowledge of the potency of the alleged gas poison
conspiracy theory, they said Buhari was on life-support machine. They claimed
he was dead and secretly buried. They made the claims with so much vehemence
and total confidence that, with hindsight, we are constrained to believe that
only those involved in the alleged attempt could have made such strong claims.
But when all that
failed they are now trying to incite the populace against him. They claimed that
herdsmen were killing travelers on Lagos-Ibadan expressway. They also claimed
that the same herdsmen were slaughtering people like rams on Shagamu-Ore expressway.
Now they are claiming that herdsmen have attacked workers in Ondo council
office. But police debunked all these false alarms within hours.
We reaffirm our conviction that it was corruption that brought
poverty and disease to the Nigerian nation. Corruption was responsible for the
bad roads. Corruption robbed us of a reliable public health and transport system.
Corruption brought death in the air via frequent plane crashes. Corruption
wrecked the Nigerian Airways and the Nigerian Railway Corporation. Corruption is
responsible for insecurity. Corruption caused mass unemployment. Corruption turned
the education sector into a comatose environment. This enemy numero uno is now
being tackled by the Buhari administration. Who wants all these evils to come
back?
To cap the edifice, we
testify that we have seen signs that corruption is receiving deadly blows from
the Buhari administration and it may eventually die for our great country to survive
if we give Buhari the chance to consolidate on the present gains. If it is true
that South Africa expelled its corrupt president for the sake of South Africa, Nigeria
must retain its incorruptible leader for the sake of Nigeria.
Professor Ishaq
Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern
(MURIC)
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