Bukola Saraki still has a
bright future ahead of him. But that future depends on how he handles the
moment. The moment calls on him to realise that the ‘clean hands’ maxim readily
holds in the doctrine of equity. The point is that Senator Saraki no longer has
the moral grandeur and audacity to head a Legislature vested to lead the war
against corruption…how plausible is it for the Senate President to look the
prospective ministers in the eye during screening? The thought or sight of such
phenomenon has failed to register.
The election of Muhammadu
Buhari on March 28, 2015 came with much hope. The euphoria continued to breeze
until June 9, 2015.
June 9 was the day Bukola
Abubakar Saraki emerged the President of Nigeria’s Senate. Since then, the
masses have continued to yearn endlessly for meaningful change in their
well-being. But the major changes witnessed thus far from the Legislature have
been different shades of controversies—all bordering on the venal travails of
Bukola Saraki.
The drama began to unfold
when Saraki confessed he was able to assume the exalted position by disguising
himself to upstage the party that brought him to power. As if that was not
enough, the Nigerian Police declared that the Standing Order used to elect him
to the leadership of the law-making body was forged. While the Ministry of
Justice was reviewing the police report, another bomb shell erupted: The wife
of the Senate President was charged by the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission (EFCC) for corruption and money laundering. In utter show of
supremacy, the Saraki-led Senate was set to tame the EFCC by stoking the most
infantile form of vindictive impunity. The law-making body brashly violated its
Standing Rules in a hasty attempt to probe the anti-graft body on alleged
diversion of funds recovered from corrupt people and, in the process, put
Buhari’s war against corruption in disrepute.
But the fire in the
moulds of smoke beclouding Bukola Saraki is no longer in doubt. The Nigeria’s
Code of Conduct Bureau has revealed that the Senate President had falsified the
declaration of his assets as a governor a decade earlier. Accordingly, he was
invited to the Code of Conduct Tribunal to clear himself of any wrongdoing.
Instead of responding in a civilised and democratic manner befitting a chief
lawmaker of a country, Saraki engaged in series of clandestine schemes to
obstruct justice.
Though he would finally
surrender to the authorities after being declared wanted, his attitude in the
court house has given a black eye to Nigeria’s Legislature. Worst still, an
asinine entourage of about 50 legislators, most of who are equally guilty of
all sorts of corrupt practices, exhibited unprecedented show of shame by
accosting Saraki with pomp and pageantry to the tribunal.
Clearly, the whole Saraki
saga is no longer funny. The matter has become a serious threat not only to the
much anticipated change under President Buhari but also the country’s nascent
democracy. Something has to give. It is either Nigeria gives in or Saraki gives
in. But nonsense must give way to common sense. It is time the Senate President
recognises that his current maneuver against the masses is an exercise in futility.
It is time to consider the nation before self and quietly go away.
Of course, Saraki has an
army of stooges whose argument revolves around the archaic cliché: presumed
innocent until proven guilty. However, they should be able to discern that law and
leadership are two different things. Nigeria cannot afford to allow its war on
corruption to be undermined—at the cruelest expense of the masses—all in name
of borrowed theories. It is rather mystifying that the strict interpretation of
the rule of law is only sacrosanct in Nigeria when it advances criminal
ingenuity in favour of those in position of power. The current change movement
must not allow one person to hold the country hostage with legal moonwalk.
Nigeria is more than one man. Besides, Bukola Saraki is not the first public
official accused of wrongdoing but who opted to place the nation before self.
The current Fourth
Republic opened with a former governor and a man of Spartan values in Evans
Enwerem as a Senate President. Yet, Enwerem had to resign in 1999 due to
trumped-up allegations that he falsified his name from Evan to Evans. Following
him was Chuba Okadigbo, a doyen of intellectual-cum-legislative acumen. Once
charged with wrongdoing as a senate president, the Fourth Senate rose to impeach
Okadigbo in 2000. In 2005, then Senate President Adolphus Wabara honourably
resigned in midst of bribery allegations.
Expecting Bukola Saraki
to go away quietly is nothing but wishful thinking. His inordinate ambition has
already placed his political party in shambles. Moreover, he has failed since
June 9 to heed private as well as public calls to resign honourably. In short,
it has become abundantly clear that Saraki does not give a hoot about what
becomes of Nigeria insofar he clings on to the post of Senate President. Thus,
it is incumbent upon the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria to do the
needful and remedy the fast fading image of the legislative body.
The House of
Representatives also promoted nation before self. Salisu Buhari was the first
Speaker of the Lower House in 1999. Similar to Saraki, Salisu Buhari played a
measurable role in his party before it gained power. Nonetheless, the speaker
was relieved of his position less than two months after assuming office due to
accusations of forging a university certificate and false declaration of age.
Patricia Etteh made history when she became the first female speaker in 2007.
Muddled with claims that she authorised huge sums of money to renovate her
official residence, Etteh stepped down less than five months on seat.
Perhaps Nigeria is not
the only country where public office holders have stepped aside while they are
being proven innocent or guilty. A cursory look at United States of America, a
nation commonly viewed as a model democracy, helps make this case.
Jim Wright, US Speaker of
the House of Representatives, was one of the most humble Congressmen ever to
grace the Capitol Hill. However, he swiftly resigned from the Congress in 1989
when he became the target of a probe. What was the offence? Wright was accused
of using the bulk of the funds raised from his own book to earn speaking
royalties in excess of the maximum amount allowed under law. Not long after,
Newt Gingrich ceased from being the House Speaker in 1998 mainly because he was
reprimanded for mere ethics violation. That was the same story for Tom DeLay,
the Majority Leader of US House of Representatives. DeLay stepped down from his
position in 2005 following a House indictment and the cloud emanating from
charges of illegal campaign funds.
It is worthy of note,
however, that some of the public officials cited above—both from Nigeria and
the United States—were later acquitted of the charges and went on to enjoy
decent political future. Nigeria’s Chuba Okadigbo, for instance, ran for
president not long after—before serving as the running mate to Muhammadu Buhari
in the presidential election of 2003. Former Speaker Salisu Buhari recovered to
become a member of Governing Council of University of Nigeria by 2013.
Similarly, former US Speaker Gingrich eventually redeemed himself to emerge the
leading Republican presidential candidate in 2012 before dropping out due to
new revelations of unethical behaviours.
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