By Bamidele Aturu Esq
The allegation that a member or some
members of the House of Representatives Committee that investigated and exposed
the fraud in the downstream sector of the oil industry took bribe from an oil
magnate or marketer is part of the ever unfolding and nauseating story of the
pervasive grip of corruption among Nigeria’s thieving elite.
While we cannot as yet afford to jump
to any conclusion as to whether there is any substance in the allegation, we
can warn that the allegation must never under any guise be used as a basis to
jettison the Report of the Committee which has been adopted by the House. That
will not be acceptable and it will confirm the fear in some quarters that the
allegation itself, since we are being told it emanated from a sting operation,
might have been orchestrated (not necessarily concocted) to discredit the
report. Sting operations are always to be treated with utmost caution even by
courts of law as there may be other less than noble agenda behind them. The
EFCC and all the other law enforcement agencies should continue with their
investigation and speedily conclude same with a view to prosecuting whoever
must have been fraudulently collecting subsidies from our national treasury.
The allegation even when proven, in my
view, does not nullify the resolution of the whole House endorsing the Report.
The fact that a member or two of a Committee compromised themselves is not
sufficient to discredit the Report of the whole House. But having made this
point, the members of the Farouk Committee should also be invited by the EFCC
and thoroughly grilled so that any of them who misconducted himself or herself
can be thoroughly dealt with according to law and if it is not true that it was
a sting operation the offer of the bribe should know by now that he or she has
booked a ticket to the prison. It is now getting worrisome that each time we
probe a scandal another scandal emerges. What a shame!
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