As the year 2016 drew to a close, Nigerians started looking forward to a
new year, trying to savour the joy and hope 2017 could usher into the
country in the midst of a devastating economic recession.
Expectant of a new beginning in their personal lives and in the
direction of governance, many Nigerians woke up to a rude shock on
Thursday 29th of December 2016, when the Nigerian media became awash
with reports that the Federal Government had recovered 40 new Sports
Utility Vehicles (SUVs) from a former permanent secretary.
The reports emanated from a statement personally signed and widely
distributed by the Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai
Mohammed. The report was silent on the ministry and the name of the
permanent secretary in question, leaving Nigerians to speculate wildly
about who the perpetrator of this very crooked and fraudulent act.
In the statement, Lai Mohammed went on to shower praises on the
anti-corruption campaign of President Buhari, crediting the government’s
anti-corruption war for the recovery of the 40 SUVs. The Minister’s
claims had gone viral until Leadership newspapers took the proper
initiative to investigate into the claims. For many Nigerians who have
become very familiar to the visceral propaganda template of governance
in Nigerian in recent times, the findings were neither shocking nor
remotely surprising.
Investigations by Leadership and Vanguard newspapers, some of the most
credible and professional national dailies around today, revealed that
no such vehicles were missing from the ministry of power's inventory of
cars.
According to Leadership newspapers, no single government vehicle was
missing! The vehicles in question were unallocated campaign vehicles for
the 2015 general elections. In all, there were six Landcruisers, three
Prado SUVs, some buses, some Hilux trucks, 200 motorcycles and some
fairly used vehicles leftover after the end of the campaign.
So how did Lai Mohammed arrive at his tale of 40 SUVs recovered from a
former permanent secretary? But what is more instructive at this point
is the emerging implication of the 40 SUVs hoax and its impact on the
polity and our national psyche as a people.
First, it is a major embarrassment to the image of Nigeria abroad that
the official spokesman and image maker of the Nigerian government would
issue an official statement that turned out to be nothing but mere
fiction. The implication of this hoax on the image of our country is
far-reaching, lending credence to claims abroad that Nigeria is one of
the most undesirable nations on earth to live in and that nothing really
good can come out of the country.
By extension, it also makes a mockery of our public institutions if the
custodians of such institutions who are paid with taxpayers’ money can
run to town with statements that are completely lacking in facts or
substance. A minister represents the highest level of the executive arm
of government and whatever he says should be taken seriously and
regarded as gospel.
Second, Nigerians are getting fed up with what appears the seeming
inability of our leaders to get a grasp of the responsibilities of
governance. Nigerians want to see real governance, not propaganda and
blame games calculated to misinform unsuspecting Nigerians or deflect
attention from the real issues of governance.
In all of these, the predominant narrative filtering out of Aso Rock is
the fact that a lot of atrocities are being committed in the name of
President Buhari without his approval. Close aides of the President who
wish him well should bring to his attention the critical situation of
things. Many of the President’s handlers may be fighting their personal
and selfish battles while using his name as a stamp of approval. At the
end of the day, it is President Buhari’s name and office that end up
being belittled, undermined and dragged into the mud.
Most of the current battles against corruption in Nigeria are largely
anchored on investigations that are inconclusive. Our government
officials must become more circumspect in their utterances and leave
room for the rule of law to prevail.
Under the current administration, the impunity of propaganda seems to be
gaining ground with the use of government institutions to settle
political scores. For political foes, that is. For friends of the
government with even more serious and salacious allegations of
corruption hanging around their necks, they are comfortably strolling in
and out of the inner recess of Aso Rock to tea.
While many Nigerians continue to marvel at the real agenda behind Lai
Mohammed’s propaganda approach to governance, one thing is sure; none of
it is in the interest of Nigeria.
Musa Abubakar writes from Kano
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