I have always advocated for a full-scale socio-political
restructuring of Nigeria. The reason is simple. Unless we do, we will
daily, to our collective peril, be confronted with all the tragic
fallouts of a dysfunctional nation-state, be it the desire to
“#bringbackourgirls” or what Akin Osuntokun, writing in Thisdaylive.com
(6/4/2014), described as the “Akpabio Syndrome”.
Godswill Akpabio is executive governor of Akwa Ibom State, one of the
richest states in Nigeria. Akwa Ibom’s wealth and survival, like that
of all the states in the country, comes mainly from the quarterly
payment from the sale of crude oil that runs into billions of naira.
A notorious spendthrift, Mr. Akpabio has always been a newsmaker, and
lately, for his attempt to secure for himself and his family a
sumptuous retirement benefit.
Apart from the senseless carnage by Boko Haram and the inability of
government to confront the security challenge, nothing has attracted
greater public outcry in the last one month than Mr. Akpabio’s antics.
When the redoubtable investigative journalism site,
premiumtimesng.com broke the news that Mr. Akpabio had sent a bill – the
Akwa Ibom State Governors and Deputy Governors Pension Law
2014, which provides a generous pension and gratuity, including houses,
upkeep of aides, cars and N100m annual medical payment, for life, for a
former governor and his spouse – to the state house of assembly, my
initial reaction was that common sense would prevail considering the
current mood of the country.
For a moment, I forgot that our rulers are modern-day buccaneers;
that the oversight role of the national and state assemblies which our
brand of democracy purports to uphold is nothing but a ruse; that, as
one writer put it, our democracy is not a “government of the people, by
the people, for the people; but rather, a government by some people, for
some people and for the benefit of some people.
It didn’t take long before Akpabio’s bill was passed into law. Weeks
later, the governor was back at the state assembly, after much public
outrage, to instruct his lawmakers – yes his lawmakers, for whatever
Akpabio wants, Akpabio gets, no matter how odious – to expunge the
“obnoxious” sections of the new law.
There is really nothing “obnoxious” about Akapbio’s law. In fact,
Akwa Ibomites ought to be grateful to his Excellency. He has done them a
world of good.
As the governor’s chief press secretary, Mr. Anietie Ukpe, explained:
“The law has been there. What the Akwa Ibom State House of Assembly did
was just to create a ceiling. The law said former governors were
entitled to maids but did not add a ceiling, which meant that a former
governor could get a maid with a doctorate degree and be paying the individual N10m.”
“The former provision stipulated that the governor and deputy governor would be entitled to medical treatment; the bill did not specify the limit to the amount these individuals could access. The governor could access up to N1bn for his medical bill, but with the amended law of 2014, medical expenses have been restricted to N100m a year.”
Yes, we should be grateful to Mr. Akpabio. History will certainly
vindicate him as he rightly noted in a tawdry response to critics; after
all, “The ceiling, which was pegged at N100m per annum for former
governors and N50m per annum for former deputy governors, was never
meant to be given either in part or in whole to anybody at anytime for
any reason. It was meant to be paid to health institutions involved in
the treatment of the former governors or former deputy Governors and
their spouses.”
Mr. Akpabio has gone ahead to instruct that “a medical insurance
scheme be put in place for the authentic and proper management of the
medical treatment of former governors and deputy governors and their
spouses in order to ensure that the open-ended nature of the law is not
abused.”
Of course, Mr. Akpabio doesn’t get it. Because he is blinded by greed
and the feeling of entitlement, the common trait of our rulers, he
can’t understand why an executive governor would not retire to a life of
super comfort to the detriment of the mass of the people.
Regrettably, Mr. “Uncommon Transformation”, this is not about the "open ended” nature or placing a “ceiling” on a law. It is about an obnoxious, anti-people law. Consider how many schools and hospitals the N5m per month for domestic servants – never mind the N100m annual medical payment – would build in a year in a state where the minimum wage is officially N21,000 per month; that’s for those who are employed!
How many domestic servants does Mr. Akpabio feel he is entitled to at
the expense of Akwa Ibom taxpayers after he leaves office? Will these
domestic servants be expatriates? Is the N100m going to be paid to
health institutions in Germany or India where Mr. Akpabio will certainly
go to if he does fall sick?
If we strip Akpabio’s law of its legal veneer, what is left is barefaced banditry. Of course, Akpabio is not alone. Whether we are talking about the ruling People’s Democratic Party (PDP) or the main opposition party, the All Progressives Congress (APC); whether Akwa Ibom, Kwara, Lagos, Rivers, Borno, Gombe or Kano State, there is a collective desire by Nigeria’s ruling elite to mortgage the future of Nigerians.
And it’s not just about our executive governors. Not long ago, we
were regaled with tales of how the former governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria,
Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, doled out billions of naira to any cause he
fancied in the name of corporate social responsibility. Heads of
government agencies and other categories of public officers send their
girl friends, concubines and family members, including nannies and other
domestic aides, on vacation abroad, from their annual allocation.
We remember the case, a few years ago, of the “honourable” minister
of education, Sam Egwu, who hosted a birthday party in Abuja with the
“support” of the ministry of education,
reportedly for more than N120m, to celebrate his 55th birthday and 25th
wedding anniversary, at a time university teachers were on strike over
the scandalous neglect of our universities.
That public show of shame had rectors and vice chancellors of
universities in attendance. According to reports, they were not only
compelled to attend and contribute to the birthday bash, they were made
to take out full page adverts in national newspapers to congratulate the
minister and his spouse.
It is good that civil society is gearing up for legal action against Akpabio, other governors and public officials that have criminally set indiscriminate pension and out-of-office emoluments for themselves.
It is good that civil society is gearing up for legal action against Akpabio, other governors and public officials that have criminally set indiscriminate pension and out-of-office emoluments for themselves.
While we are at it, our outrage should go deeper; for a system that nourishes the Akpabio Syndrome is simply not sustainable!
conumah@hotmail.com; Twitter @conumah
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