“We have got the leaders of some fantastically corrupt countries
coming to Britain… Nigeria and Afghanistan, possibly the two most corrupt
countries in the world”, UK Prime Minister David Cameron was caught on tape
telling the Queen ahead of the anti-corruption summit organized by the UK
Government, this week,
which was attended by Nigerian President, Muhammadu
Buhari. This diplomatic gaffe rubbed many Nigerians on the wrong side, but most
of the responses, coloured by overtly emotional love of country and a certain
defensiveness is downright hypocritical.
We all know that indeed Nigeria is “fantastically corrupt”, and
that is why the most profound reaction, the most honest also, is the statement
by President Muhammadu Buhari who admitted that indeed Nigerians are
“fantastically corrupt” and that Cameron is right, but the clincher was the
rider added by President Buhari, when he said he would not ask for an apology
but he would be glad if Great Britain can release all the stolen loot in its
custody. I know President Buhari is often criticized for condemning his own
people offshore, but no one can fault his sharp honesty, certainly not in the
present instance. His reply to the Cameron statement is absolutely brilliant,
diplomatic and loaded with a meaningful sarcasm that is yet to be properly
defined.
Nigeria is “fantastically corrupt.” Yes, our President says. The
dictionary defines the word fantastic to mean something so extreme as to be
unbelievable, strange, most unlikely, extra-ordinary. Can any Nigerian in good
conscience really claim that this is not true? We are probably one of the few
countries in the world where corruption is the reality we grapple with, from
cradle to grave. You go and try to have a baby delivered in a Nigerian
hospital. You can’t escape the nurses, matrons and the security men at the gate
who upon hearing that your wife had been delivered of a baby would start
greeting you: “Oga we go wash am oh.” The really smart ones among them will
even poke your ego a little: “Oga, this one wey Madam deliver bom boy, na big
celebration. Oga you sef na sharp shooter. You just do am, hit am, commot bom
boy”.
You’d be in serious trouble if your wife is fertile enough to
give birth to twins. Meanwhile, this has nothing to do with your hospital
bills, and the aggressive solicitation is beyond culture. Where else in the
world do people have to pay bribe just because their wives have given birth? If
giving birth invites corruption, dying has even become more expensive around
here. If you have to bury anyone in Nigeria, there must be a special budget for
officials and sympathizers whose palms have to be greased.
I attended a funeral recently where a dignified beggar insisted
that since the deceased was his benefactor, he would really love to die too,
and jump into the grave, but everyone at the funeral would do well to keep him
alive by putting something in his pocket. People laughed and obliged. Every
funeral in Nigeria is a source of income for all kinds of scammers and no
matter how sad you may be, you are not expected to complain. When you go for a
funeral in Nigeria, you have to hold your pockets, monitor your phones, and
even watch yourself, otherwise your personal items could be stolen and you may
yourself be kidnapped. The children of the deceased are usually special
targets. What kind of human beings would go to a birthplace or a funeral only
to add to the burden of the people involved. Fantastic? Of course, Mr. Cameron
is right.
Between birth and death is a significant polarity. When you live
in Nigeria or you visit, or you have anything to do with Nigeria, including
something as harmless as just passing through, you would feel the air of
corruption. You will be touched by it. And if you stay long enough, you will
imbibe it. There is corruption in other parts of the world, of course.
Corruption is an English word, not so? And it defines all human beings, doesn’t
it? But in Nigeria and some other countries, there have been very fantastic
manifestations.
Every foreigner or traveller who has walked through any Nigerian
port in the last, say 40 years, would most certainly have been asked for a
bribe, not clandestinely, but openly and frontally: “Oga wey the dollar for the
boys? Oyinbo, correct oyinbo, we dey here for you oh. Anything. Nigeria na your
own. If you wan be Governor sef, just call us, or this my oga.” If the visitor
is one of those difficult ones who do not know that a passport in Nigeria is
supposed to be a sandwich at the point of entry and he is busy claiming that he
has one funny visa, before he knows it, he will be detained. Uniformed
officials will ask him: who is this bomboclat who is trying to teach us our
job? Such officials don’t allow stingy bomboclats to cross the border, any
border at all.
Bomboclats can’t access government institutions either. You have
to bribe every government official in sight: to move a file, to get anything
done, to have your rights respected. And you can’t hold government positions.
You are expected to steal government funds and make returns to the community
otherwise you are considered a bad or stupid person, who can’t eat national
cake. Fantastic? Yes. America knows. David Cameron knows. Public and private
Nigerian institutions are fully compromised. Petty corruption is encountered in
ordinary places on a daily basis, grand corruption has also badly affected
Nigeria as a state, country, and nation. President Buhari wants to deal with
the latter, but he is overlooking the former
Right under his watch, that other sphere is thriving. But the
challenge of corruption is not just about grand corruption: the big money that
is stolen, the mad men and women who turn elections into opportunities for
theft and primitive accumulation, the greedy officials who manipulate the books
big time and run away with the national patrimony or the civil servants who
help to cook the books and later play holier-than-thou; it is certainly not
about one particular administration, it is not about making examples and
demonizing some people while bigger thieves prosper within and outside the
system. What is it about? It is about the Nigerian reality in which everyone is
involved from servants to lords. It is the reason why Nigerians, living in an
oil producing country now have to buy fuel at a “minimum” pump price of N145
per litre. It is about the collapse of institutions and societal values.
President Buhari has declared a zero tolerance for corruption.
How does he define and secure that legacy? His strategists don’t seem to
understand the implications of that question: that is what this is also all
about. And it is why almost one year after President Buhari assumed office,
David Cameron, the Prime Minister of Britain, would still say Nigeria is
“fantastically corrupt”. It wasn’t an innocent remark, it may be wrong to
describe it as a gaffe. And I also don’t think the leakage of that privileged
and classified conversation with the Queen was innocent or accidental either. I
imagine that Prime Minister Cameron despite the subsequent diplomatic
fine-tuning was passing across a message. It should be noted that it was also
at that supposedly confidential meeting that Her Majesty made a snide remark
about the Chinese, our good friends, the Chinese whose economic expertise is
supposed to help Nigeria, and who President Buhari visited recently.
International diplomacy is a game. It is high wire politics. The
President’s team must step back from the recent trip to the anti-corruption
summit in London and properly decode the signals. One signal is that Britain is
probably not too pleased with the projected long-term impact of President
Buhari’s anti-corruption campaign, and there may well be a lot that they know
that they are not talking about in the open. Note the timing of that
“caught-on-camera” comment. Note also that it is coming close to the first
anniversary of the administration. The Archbishop of Canterbury reportedly
smuggled in an aside in President Buhari’s favour but did either the Queen or
the Prime Minister respond to that priestly, consolatory aside? The only
response by Speaker John Bercow was even worse: “They are coming at their
expense, one assumes?” Classic Britishism! Every nuance, every gesture, every
inflection in diplomacy is to be taken seriously – what is said, or mentioned
often has deeper meanings than what is not said. If it is not important, the
subject will not be broached at all.
But I commend President Buhari for his confidence. He got the
message from Cameron. Old age and experience can be an advantage sometimes. And
he gave it back to the Prime Minister in full measure. Rather than accuse our
President of putting his own country down, Nigerians should actually applaud his
understanding of the game of international intrigue. By telling Britain to
return the stolen loot hidden in Britain and its tax havens, President Buhari
was actually asking Cameron to shut up and walk the talk. In other words,
Britain cannot organize an anti-corruption summit and spend time bad-mouthing
other countries whereas it is a principal destination for stolen funds. It is a
trite point in law that the receiver of stolen goods is also a thief. Nigerians
are fantastically corrupt, yes, but they take the proceeds to countries like
Britain where they are fantastically, and corruptly received.
The onus is on Prime Minister David Cameron who has not shown
enough commitment to ridding Britain of stolen wealth, to take concrete steps
to help fight international corruption. We do not expect that he will lie to
the Queen, the sovereign whose Government he heads. He knows certainly that
there is so much Nigerian wealth inside Britain, money stolen from both the
government and the private sector and translated into acquisitions in Britain.
Nigerians own some of the most expensive houses in London and elsewhere in
Britain, on the best streets even; they also have fat bank accounts and they
have investments that are fantastically alarming. But Britain and its Prime
Minister cannot just laugh over that when they too are complicit in an “ole
gbe, ole gba (you thief am, I collect, help you keep am) arrangement. Prime
Minister Cameron has all the records of our stolen wealth and all the Nigerian
thieves hiding in Great Britain. Let him listen to our President and begin to
show, beyond condescending gossip at the palace, and the rhetoric of talk
shops, that Britain is indeed committed to the ideals of transparency,
integrity and accountability.
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