The Fight against
Corruption and Labour’s Perfect Rally of Alibi
By Jude Ndukwe
The recent rally
of labour unions nationwide against corruption as led by the Nigeria Labour
Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) was an idea meant to support
the fight against corruption as being championed by the administration of
President Muhammadu Buhari. At least, that was what it was termed and that was
what Nigerians were made to believe. But beyond the fanfare and generous media
coverage the nationwide rally received, there seems, to the discerning mind, a
ploy by the labour leaders to distract Nigerians from focusing on the real and
most guilty perpetrators of corruption.
In other
sincerer climes, labour unions are a catalyst and partners with government in
moving a nation’s economy forward. Civil servants are usually the vehicle
through which governments achieve their set objectives. No matter how good a
government’s policies are, if they do not have the cooperation of civil
servants, implementation of such policies would suffer or would even be dead on
arrival. That is how important labour is to any nation.
Furthermore,
labour has played very critical roles in the history of our nation, sometimes
leading nationwide protests against draconian and anti-people government
policies like the several arbitrary hikes in the prices of petroleum products.
Even in the darkest days of military dictatorship when most activists
compromised their stance and abandoned the struggle, Labour stood by the people
especially during the Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida and Abacha era when labour
unions like NUPENG and PENGASSAN stood by the people against some of the most
brutal conditions we have ever experienced in this country.
However, the
same cannot be said of Labour when it comes to service delivery and integrity.
It is no longer a hidden fact that our civil service stinks. Even President
Buhari stated this much recently at the inauguration of a capacity building
programme for public servants when he declared that “Nigeria’s civil service
has a reputation for inefficiency, low productivity and corruption”.
This declaration
coming from the president himself with his avowed determination to kill
corruption no matter who is involved could have put the labour unions in panic
mode, hence, the hurriedly arranged nationwide rally against corruption was
embarked upon to make them look innocent and probably escape the searchlight of
Mr President. In fact, if President Buhari wants to be successful in the fight
against corruption, he would need to beam his searchlight intensely and
immensely on the civil service just as much as the politicians. Concentrating
on politicians alone in this fight would amount to just scratching the problem
on its surface. The real corruption goes on in the civil service and among
civil servants. It is an open secret that without the active participation of
civil servants, no political office holder would be able to fritter away
government funds for purposes other than they are meant for.
It is also
widely believed that civil servants are even the ones who introduce political
office holders to ways funds can be embezzled without being tracked. Most
times, these politicians who are mostly ministers are new to the system but the
civil servants are always the ones who prod and encourage them to be corrupt as
they would always have their “cut” from whatever “deal” is done. Is that not
why
we have “super
rich” civil servants with properties worth hundreds of millions of naira both
at home and abroad?
Those who do not
allow allocations to federal government colleges to get to them but share them among
themselves are the civil servants. Those who do not allow the funds allocated
to our hospitals after being approved by the ministers/president are civil
servants. Those who arrange ghost workers and ripped off our nation of a
staggering N160bn in a short period leading to 2013 were civil servants. But
thanks to the introduction of the Integrated Personnel and Payroll Information
System (IPPIS) introduced by the Jonathan administration, the ugly trend would
have continued till today. The same thing applies to the pension system. What
about the agricultural sector? Before the introduction of reforms during the
Jonathan administration, several billions of naira were carted away by some
civil servants especially through the distribution of fertilizer. It is the
civil servants who threaten our sports men and women with dropping them from
contingents to international tournaments if they do not agree to sharing some
of their allowances with ministry or commission officials. We might not need to
talk about the several dirty deals that go on in the Federal Capital
Development Authority (FCDA) amounting to humongous amounts running into
billions of naira and other areas too numerous to mention here.
It is therefore,
most surprising that NLC and TUC are marching against corruption. In as much as
that march is laudable the intention is laughable. President Buhari must not be
distracted by it. The fight against corruption must sweep through all cadres of
the civil service. Rather than embark on such a needless superfluous show of jejune
ingenuity, the labour unions should embark on a massive and aggressive
reorientation of civil servants for a more honest and productive labour force
that would be a check on political office holders rather than a willing and
abetting accomplice in addition to being actual perpetrators of brazen corrupt
practices.
Until this is
done, millions of such rallies as recently embarked upon by NLC and TUC would
continue to be an attempt at hoodwinking unsuspecting Nigerians; it would be
seen, and rightly so, too, by discerning minds, as an attempt to shield civil
servants, throw a decoy at anti-corruption agencies while the real perpetrators
keep smiling to the bank with loots from our common wealth. This is why that
nationwide rally is nothing but the puerile invention of a perfect alibi to
escape from the looming clampdown on corrupt persons.
Jude Ndukwe,
Abuja
08023140065
J r n d u k w e
@ y a h o o . c o . u k
Tweet @stjudendukwe
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