BARELY 100 days after President Muhammadu Buhari assumed office, some
ministers under the previous administration of ex-President Goodluck
Jonathan, last Sunday, declared war against the incumbent over a
perceived lack of “due respect.”
The ministers, who were said to
be acting at the behest of Jonathan, accused Buhari and members of the
ruling All Progressives Congress of condemning, ridiculing and
undermining the achievements of the ex-President. According to them, the
vilification amounted to rubbishing the integrity of the individual
members of the past administration.
Jonathan’s ministers, in a
statement by a former Minister of National Planning, Dr. Abubakar
Suleiman, said the efforts of the Buhari government was to portray all
members of the previous administration “as corrupt and irresponsible, in
an orchestrated and vicious trial by the media,” which they said had
created “a lynch mentality that discredits our honest contributions to
the growth and development of our beloved nation.”
In addition to
citing a list of accomplishments by the previous administration, the
ministers explained that they had been silent on the accusations of the
current government in the hope that “the euphoria that inspired the
various attacks on the past administration would wear off and that
reason would prevail.”
The statement added, “We are constrained
to speak up in defence of the legacy of the Jonathan administration, and
shall do so again, for as long as those who are determined to rubbish
that legacy are unrelenting in their usual deployment of blackmail,
persecution and similar tactics.”
But the Presidency, in its reaction on the same day, described Buhari’s war against corruption as non-negotiable.
The
Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Garba
Shehu, asked Jonathan’s ministers, who he described as ‘members of the
country’s latest trade union formation, the Association of Ex-Jonathan
Ministers’, to do a bit of self-reflection on the sort of government
they handed over to Buhari on May 29. He said such self-reflection would
make the former ministers decide for themselves if it would have been
right for any incoming government to ignore the issue of the ‘brazen
theft’ of public assets, which he said appeared to be the first of its
kind in the country.
In a telephone interview with SUNDAY PUNCH,
Dr. Idowu Johnson of the Department of Political Science, University of
Ibadan, described the counterattack by Jonathan’s men as a futile
attempt to prevent punitive action against them by the Buhari
administration. According to the political scientist, Jonathan’s
government was in power for about six years, which led to the
destruction of the educational, financial and petroleum institutions to
the extent that the government could no longer pay salaries.
“Now,
they are saying the new government has nothing to do. In the past
administration, they were trying to cover their atrocities so that it
would look as if they had something to offer us. Unfortunately, it has
been revealed that they could not even produce the goods that the people
needed. They simply want to distract the present government so that
Nigerians would view them as if they have something to offer.”
Jonathan
had first foreshadowed his travails on May 10, during a farewell
service at the Cathedral Church of the Advent, Abuja, when he warned
that the incoming government of the then President-elect Buhari would
persecute him and his ministers, as well as other aides who served under
him.
The former President said, “If you take certain decisions,
it might be good for the generality of the people, but it might affect
people differently. So, for ministers and aides, who served with me, I
sympathise with them, they will be persecuted. And they must be ready
for that persecution.”
Again on May 27, during the valedictory
session of the outgoing Federal Executive Council at the Presidential
Villa, Abuja, Jonathan said all those advising Buhari to probe his
administration must also advise him to extend the probe beyond his
regime in order for it not to be seen as a witch-hunt, adding that the
probe should also cover the way oil wells and fields were allocated in
the past.
On June 22, barely three weeks after his swearing-in,
Buhari told journalists in the Villa that he had inherited a country
with a virtually empty treasury and that his administration was weighed
down by debts running into millions of dollars, though he did not state
how much the debt amounted to.
But Jonathan’s Peoples Democratic
Party asked Buhari to live up to his electoral promises and stop
offering excuses. The PDP National Publicity Secretary, Olisa Metuh, in a
statement on June 23, said his party noted with dismay Buhari’s
statement that Nigerians should not expect much from his first 100 days
in office on claims that he met “a virtually empty treasury and huge
debts.”
Metuh added that the President’s comments could be an
admission of “his poor knowledge of national and international economics
affairs,” and that it proved the present administration was not really
equipped to face the challenges of governance.
Similarly, Buhari,
on July 8, while receiving members of a pressure group, Bring Back Our
Girls, described Jonathan’s government as incompetent for its slow
response to reports of the kidnapping of over 200 schoolgirls by Boko
Haram in Chibok, Borno State, last year.
Again on July 23, during
an interactive session with Nigerians in the Diaspora at the Nigerian
Embassy in Washington DC, as part of a four-day official visit to the
United States, Buhari said he had started receiving some documents,
which showed that some unnamed former ministers and top government
officials were thieves.
The President, while disclosing that the
documents at his disposal indicted the officials of oil theft and other
acts of “massive fraud,” vowed that the ex-ministers would be prosecuted
based on the findings, while the proceeds of their fraud would be
repatriated to government coffers from their multiple foreign accounts,
which he alleged were opened for the purpose of laundering money.
The following day, the PDP reacted by asking Buhari to also probe past administrations preceding the Jonathan administration.
The
Ondo State chapter of the party, in a statement by its Director of
Publicity, Mr. Ayo Fadaka, alleged that Buhari was selective in his
plans to recover looted funds and prosecute corrupt public officials and
warned the President to desist from an alleged witch-hunt of PDP
members.
In the same vein, Shehu, on August 16, confirmed to
journalists that plans had been concluded to recover all government
property, including vehicles, buildings and generator sets, which were
still in possession of government officials that served under Jonathan.
Buhari
was said to be irked by the development and therefore set up a
committee made up of civil servants and security agencies to identify
and recover the unreturned public assets from the former political
appointees.
The identities of the said former government officials were however not disclosed.
But
Head of the Department of Political Science, University of Lagos, Prof.
Solomon Akinboye, told SUNDAY PUNCH that it would be wrong for Buhari
to probe Jonathan’s government without transparency.
According to
the political scientist, everything must be done openly, saying there
should be no witch-hunt by the government. He believed that if anyone
was found guilty or otherwise, the process and outcome should be made
public.
“For instance, they have accused the former Finance
Minister and the lady said she has her facts. If she has her facts and
she is exonerated, then fine. Jonathan has done his bit and left. The
man on board should be allowed to do his bit.
“If Jonathan’s men
have done something wrong, they have to pay for it. Let’s wait for the
investigations. For example, (Sambo) Dasuki is under investigation.
Let’s see the result of the investigation. Nobody will accuse someone of
something they have not done. Even if one is accused and the charge is
investigated, if he is found not guilty, the person is a free man,”
Akinboye said.
But Johnson argued that Jonathan was trying to
prove to the current government that his ministers were on their own.
According to him, the ex-President wants his men to take the fall by
making them account for their ministries independently.
“The most
important thing (to Jonathan) is that they can see that he is
disappointed in the people he appointed. He doesn’t want to share in the
blame,” the political scientist added.
Speaking with SUNDAY
PUNCH, the Executive Director of Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, Mr.
Debo Adeniran, likened the complaints by Jonathan’s ministers to a
drowning person reaching for any available straw. According to the
activist, the act is all in a bid to intimidate the government to
soft-pedal their punitive actions.
Adeniran added, “There are
occasions when this kind of attack is used to intimidate, as a form of
defence. But it is for the government to resist such attempts at
intimidation by these people. They also know that they have a lot of
skeletons in their cupboard and they don’t want anyone to go near that
cupboard.
“Jonathan was the chief accounting officer of that
administration and he knew that every crime his ministers committed
during his tenure would implicate him. That might be the reason why he
thinks that he should use the ministers to intimidate the government out
of probing the culprits in the previous administration.
The
Buhari-Jonathan camps’ face-off might not have collided but the stage
appears to be set for such confrontation, especially on the unfolding
probe of the immediate past administration. While allegations have been
bandied about, especially in the media, the tension may be doused until
the principal actors are called upon to account for their deeds or
misdeeds in days to come.
PUNCHNG.COM
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