Afam Ogene: Not Worthy in Character & Learning?
A
Japanese adage holds, ‘If you want to harvest for a year, plant rice;
for a decade plant trees, and for a life time, plant education’. From
the foregoing, logical deduction finds solace that rice is harvested
annually, trees are harvested in decades, whereas the principles learnt
in education are eternal. It is this intrinsic deposits made by
education that stands it out from other human endeavors and
achievements. Hence, all over the world academic certificates are
awarded on the modest caveat ‘…found worthy in character and learning’.
It is no rocket science that the conduct of an educated mind is an
emblem. The current crisis rocking the Nigeria state is the dearth of
supposed educated minds to conduct themselves in like manner. Hence, we
are trapped in the mire conjectures of men and women who are perceived
as being educated; but are actually functional illiterates.
It is from this sea of inability to conduct themselves as educated
minds that the Hon. Afam Ogene, Deputy Chairman, House Committee on
Media and Publicity and his co travelers have embarrassed this nation
beyond human contemplation. Barely, weeks after Ogene, held press
conference on Tambuwal’s defection to defend the indefensible, he took
sarcasm to imaginary lanes, just to tell us that he’s Speaker’s Chief
Press Secretary. How a speaker who emerged from a majority party, from
where he garnered votes that made him speaker, suddenly jumped ship, to a
minority party in the House and still retain his position as speaker
only exists in Ogene’s sensory delusions. Part of what seem like Ogene’s
intellectual impairment, even as journalist is his limitations in
discerning that his support for a man who cannot be entrusted with
sensitive public office is a menace. Tambuwal’s claim that his people
have preference for his new party, smacks of his perfunctory status. So,
Sokoto matters more to Tambuwal, than Nigeria? The irony of the
applause is that as a typical Fulani man, Sokoto mattered to Tambuwal,
but the Ogbaru people and Ndi Igbo doesn’t matter to Ogene! It is this
blind and slavish followership that led Ogene into flying the National
Assembly gate to a world in awe; just to prove to his speaker that he is
loyal. Ogene, not only flew National Assembly fence, he supervised
other House members and aided the weaker ones like Femi Gbajagbiamila to
come over to Macedonia. This speaks volume of Victor Ogene’s lawless
nature and destabilizing tendencies. Again, like the big bang the
questions sounds, whose interest is Ogene serving in the House? His
overt hobnobs with APC indicates that he has elected to be leprous. And
should be treated like a leper. Perhaps, THE Inspector General of
Police, Abba Sulaiman’s refusal to recognize Tambuwal as the Speaker
before the House Committee on Police will open another chapter in the
unfolding the melodrama. Sahara Reporters, captured it thus, ‘The IG had
opened his statement explaining why the police invaded the house last
week by rehashing the initial police statement that they had credible
intelligence that some thugs had planned on causing mayhem at the
resumed sitting of the house. He said this intelligence led them to send
policemen to the house to confront the thugs.
He proceeded to say that one Alhaji Aminu Tambuwal led a group of
thugs to overpower the security at the first gate. A move he claimed led
the police to lock down the second gate and fire a canister of
teargases’.
‘However, his reference to the “Speaker of the House as “one Alhaji
Tambuwal” drew the ire of committee members who asked the IGP to
properly address the speaker of the house according to protocol. The
house committee members asked the IGP to revisit the way he addressed
the speaker, the IG then said the case of the speaker was in court and
as such he wouldn’t like to comment further on it’.
‘The committee member refused to proceed with the hearing until the IGP
properly addressed the speaker. They said as long as he refuses to do
so, they too would no longer recognize him as IG. The prolonged argument
brought the meeting to a standstill and eventually a rancorous end as
members walked out on the IGP’.
But, how far Tambuwal can go can truly be predicted as we all watched
Sanusi eat the humble pie. In my village, a common parlance holds,
those who want to battle with the gods had given their chosen ones’ must
first battle with their tears!
According to Ag CP Emmanuel Ojukwu at Police Press Briefing on 20th
November, 2014 on the incident at the National Assembly Abuja, alarmed
by APC’s threats at the rally at Eagle Square days earlier, the police
deployed their men to keep vigil on sensitive government properties
which Governor Amechi had ostensibly made reference to that will be
torched, to drive home their madness. Their agenda is to cow Nigerians
into bowing to their threats in 2015. The police adopted a stop and
check routine at the National Assembly complex, an exercise meant to
benefit all and sundry. Other House members arrived calmly, subjected
themselves to check and were allowed in. When Tambuwal and the likes of
Ogene who by the virtue of being Honorable members are above law and
order arrived, mayhem took over the scene as they refused to be checked
and of course, were denied access to a public edifice erected with tax
payers’ money. Unknown to the cursory reader, being an Honorable member
doesn’t guarantee access to the National Assembly. If there are security
issues likely to endanger the lives of Nigerians, the police reserve
the onus to seal of the place; in such a situation, National Assembly is
not an exception.
Let us also note that the police don’t owe anybody explanations or
seek permission to act when matters that pose threat to national
security stare them in the face.
In August, Anambra people led by their amiable governor Mr. Willie
Obiano under the APGA platform and declared their unassuming support for
President Jonathan. That exercise was to lend their unalloyed support
to a President who despite designed distractions by his detractors has
vested considerable energy in the making of a true African State. His
ability to have managed his temper, carriage and deployed his strength
towards national reconstruction makes Jonathan the ‘Most Important
Leader in 21st Century’.
It was on this same political platform of APGA that the people of
Ogbaru elected Hon. Afam Ogene to represent them at the Green Chambers.
In his bid to curry favor in opaque quarters, Ogene have abandoned the
ideals and manifesto of his party, references abound. As he throws his
feather weight behind his bosom friend from Sokoto, he should find out
what happened to Austin Nwachukwu and Dino Melaye, the circumstantial
human right activist as honorable members at the Green Chambers. As for
Tambuwal, studies have shown that Speakers of House of Representathieves
often don’t end well: Ghali Umar Naba, Bello Massari, Saliu Buhari,
Patricia Eteh and Dimeji Bankole. His will not be an exception.
by Emeka Odinammadu
Sunday, November 30, 2014
Thursday, November 20, 2014
The dynamism of corruption
The dynamism of corruption
- Written by Fry N. Ndubuisi
CORRUPTION has become a re-curing decimal in our quest for greatness and nationhood. It is here with us in every facet of our national life. No matter how much lies we want to tell about it, Nigeria is seen and rated as a very corrupt nation all over the world. We can call it ‘common stealing, ‘official dereliction of duties’ ‘embezzlement of public funds’ ‘favouritism’ ‘unfair treatment,’ ‘unjust treatment’ ‘dishonesty,’ corruption has not allowed this nation to move forward. It comes in different forms, but it is tragic that when we talk of corruption our mind goes only to misappropriation of public funds. That is part of the truth, definitely not the whole truth about corruption. From whatever perspective we view it, corruption revolves around dishonest use of opportunities to our advantage. The issue is how honest have we been in the running of the affairs of the nation. The world is now a global village, we can no longer hide our activities from the binocular of the international community. Thus Nigeria was ranked 144 out of the 177 most corrupt nations in the world, by Transparency International’s 2013 corruption perception index. We should be worried about this as it says a lot about us.
How much both in resources and development has the nation lost as a result of corruption. The public service is seen as a fertile ground for corruption. Nothing is done the way it ought to be done, even in recruitment of personnel; favouritism and considerations other than merit is the order thereby allowing wrong and incompetent hands to be in charge of very sensitive positions. It is an open secret that before you get hired in some establishment you must know key personnel there, or be ready to bribe your way through. I just remember an incident that took place sometime ago about a friend that told me he needed the services of a young accountant in his outfit. I recommended someone I was convinced would satisfy his need. After all the protocol and oral interviews, he decided to employ who was close to him, not who can serve the purpose he was after. That is the trend in Nigeria both in the private and public sectors. What gives you jobs now is who you know and not your competence and capacity to prove your worth.
The impact of corruption has hit this country most hard in infrastructural development. In spite of all the measures the government claimed to put in place: due process, and all that, it is a brute fact that contracts are not awarded to the best and the most competitive firms. Lobbying is more vital than competence, skill and experience. That explains why there are series of abandoned projects or half-heartedly executed projects all over the country. In some rural areas, boreholes only pump water the day they are commissioned. After that, the equipment is allowed to rust away until another politician decides to revisit them. It is sad, that the government wastes billions of naira and time to execute projects and such projects are either abandoned half way or cease from functioning a few months after they were commissioned. Doors and keys of public buildings become useless a few weeks after being fixed; painted halls washed away by rains few months after being commissioned. Yet there are designated officials that must certify such works before certificate of discharge is issued and final payment made.
Some have reasoned that there is overt official policy to promote corruption in the country. How do we make sense, out of government’s low cost housing project that sells for N50 million per unit and civil servants, that earn less than two million naira are meant to buy this. The mortgage banks are in business and they know who their funds go to. And really, Nigerians have been quite clever beating the government to its game. Imagine a city like Abuja that could be seen as civil servants city, what apartments go for, the people that live there and the wonder on wheels they cruise on.
Nobody asks question as those that are supposed to ask are more guilty of the offence that alleged. Some have argued that it is an herculean task to tackle corruption in an environment such as ours, where there is no social security, where public services such as public schools and hospitals are below standard. It is survival of the fittest, many have reasoned.
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