Sorry Atiku, You Can’t Buy Integrity, What Is Rotten Is Rotten - Churchill Okonkwo
21:04
In the masterpiece, satiric comedy, The
Trials of Brother Jero, Nobel laureate Prof. Wole Soyinka, captured
religious hypocrisy in the form of a con, or fraud, named Brother Jero,
who preaches to his followers on Bar Beach in Lagos. Brother Jero was an
energetic rascal that mastered the art of manipulating his followers in
an obedient position by simply convincing them that their quest for
money, social status and power will be fulfilled “now”. This play that
goes back to 1960s captured the exact replica that is being played out
by the fraud and con politician named Atiku Abubakar.
The
political rascal Atiku have been attempting to convince Nigerians that
if elected President, he will feed us from the nose while we relax at
the foot of Adamawa mountain. After his selection as the PDP
presidential candidate, the con artist wasted no time scouting for
endorsement to boost his tattered integrity. His attempt to woo Soyinka
and get an endorsement failed. The fraud politician quickly conned Rev
Kukah and Sherik Gumi in the “reconciliation” with another rogue,
Obasanjo where he manipulated them to be seen to have endorsed the
presidential bid.
[b]As to Bishop David Oyedepo’s role, I don’t
believe he was conned. His appearance was out of pure desperation and
corruption. After watching the pictures of David Oyedepo celebrating the
reunification of dangerously corrupt men, I wept for Nigeria. It is
corruption when Bishops surrenders their integrity, a sense of wholeness
and moral character, and basic humanity for the sake of money and
power. Bishop David Oyedepo in desperation to regain influence of
Nigerian Presidency embraced corrupt Atiku. This demonstration of crude
acceptance of corruption should be a source of concern to every Nigerian
that is interested in this fight against corruption.
Atiku
Abubakar’s campaign strategy is to conjure up images of a man who after
corruptly enriching himself, invested the embezzled public resources to
create jobs. Take, for example, Atiku recently claimed that unlike
Buhari, he is “an expert job creator who has founded many successful and
thriving businesses including the American University of Nigeria,
Yola.” What Atiku intentionally left out was that the reason he cannot
go to America is the millions of Dollars he laundered to America for a
direct license to use the franchise of the American University. [/b] Under
Atiku and Obasanjo’s watch, public universities collapsed. Atiku,
Obasanjo and the likes of Bishop Oyedepo quickly filled the vacuum by
establishing private universities that are beyond the reach of poor
Nigerians. Corrupt, short-term gains might be huge, but the human costs
of this corruption emerged later when children of rich parents started
sending their kids to private schools following the near collapse of
public schools. Sadly, the resulting poverty and uneven educational
development between the rich and the poor has sharpened the incentives
for further corruption.
The greatness of a man is not in
how much wealth he acquires but in his integrity. Atiku knows clearly
well that his integrity is rotten. As a con artist, therefore, he
attempted to buy integrity by appointing Peter Obi as his VP. The
problem with Peter Obi is that he is a hypocrite that lies with
sincerity, but that’s a matter for another day. The unfortunate thing is
that many Nigerians, especially the youths that have been lamenting
bitterly about the endemic corruption in our polity are suddenly willing
to excuse the con artist Atiku from a test of integrity. Their
reasoning, all politicians are the same (corrupt) so let’s make sure our
side wins. Atiku might be a corrupt idiot, but he’s our corrupt idiot. Ndigbo
have a saying that not asking questions before eating causes death
without illness. Some Nigerians might reason, why should all this
corruption matter to me? One reason is that corruption's connections to
poverty are far more numerous and pervasive. Beyond the effect on
incomes, corruption undermines outcomes in education, health, public
investment, and income equality. It thwarts development, including
undermining public finances.
So, how bad will the effect of
Atiku-era corruption be if elected president? The best guess is worse
than you can possibly think. If Atiku and his Intels can withhold
billion of Naira of revenue from Nigerian Port Authority (NPA) under
Buhari, imagine, just imagine what Atiku will do to one of the biggest
non-oil revenue agency in the country. And who’s going to check the
established greed of Atiku when his Intels, as expected, starts
defrauding NPA? Peter Obi? Don’t be silly. To the extent that
corruption undermines revenue, it adversely affects government efforts
to reduce poverty. Money that leaks out of the budget because of
corruption will not be available to lighten the burden of the poor.
Corruption damages society. Corruption matters because corrupt people
corrupt other people. Corrupt Bishops and pastors corrupt the
congregation and the entire society. Corruption breeds mistrust. And
when citizens don’t trust their government, they stop being interested
in it, stop participating in it, stop voting and stop demanding that it
get better. And that makes government less efficient, less responsive
and less effective for all of us.
A strategic and sustainable
response to corruption is public integrity. Integrity is one of the key
pillars of political, economic and social structures and thus essential
to the economic and social well-being and prosperity of individuals and
societies. Atiku has been facing serious credibility problems especially
in relation to integrity. He knows that his corrupt past and lack of
integrity is harmful to a country’s economy, society, politics, and the
overall environment. A President like Atiku Abubakar who lack this basic
sense of integrity will undermine the fabric of our society and do
great damage to our democracy.
Yesterday, a primary school
social studies teacher decided to test his students’ awareness of
political development in the country. What is 1 +1? The teacher asked
Aisha. Two, responded Aisha. Good, said the teacher. What is the sum of
Buhari + Osinbajo? Slow but steady, responded the student. The teacher
then asked, what of Atiku + Peter Obi? Corrupt dude trying to buy
integrity said Aisha. What? Asked the teacher. What is rotten is
rotten, you can’t buy integrity, Aisha said, without a flinch. The moral
of this exchange is that even primary school pupils know that if you
don't have integrity, you have nothing. They know that integrity cannot
be bought. As adults, eligible to vote in the 2019 election, we should
not let these kids down.
So, as a Nigerian, I cannot in good
conscience support Atiku even if he adds David Oyedepo and Apostle Peter
as his VPs. Atiku is terribly corrosive and a master in the
democratization of corruption that inclusion of Peter Obi in his ticket
is irrelevant and deceptive. Do you believe Peter Obi can do what
Obasanjo and the United States government could not? Think about it,
deeply. You see, even “Saint” Peter Obi cannot restore Atiku’s battered
integrity. What is rotten is rotten.
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