By Chido Onumah
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Goodluck Jonathan
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Nigerians are justifiably outraged at the pardon
of Diepreye Solomon Peter Alamieyeseigha, ex-governor of Bayelsa State. Alamieyeseigha was governor from May 1999
until December 2005, three months after he was detained in London on charges of
money laundering. President Jonathan had served under Mr. Alamieyeseigha as deputy governor.
Instructively, in August 2005, a month before his
arrest, Alamieyeseigha delivered a message, through his deputy, Goodluck
Jonathan, at a seminar in Abuja on “Winning the War against Corruption”. The
self-styled Governor General of the Ijaw nation “commended government's stride
with the establishment of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)
and the Code of Conduct Bureau, and urged the bodies not to ignore the private
sector”.
According to Alamieyeseigha who called for those
with criminal records to be barred from elective office, “It is only in Nigeria
where people who looted banks to a distress situation are allowed to use such
loots to open their own banks or are given high political appointment".
Alamieyeseigha’s paper titled: “Corruption Reduction Through Government Policies:
The Bayelsa Experience”, highlighted “the various mechanism put in place by the
state government to check corruption as it was inimical to national growth and
development and as such, must be abhorred by all and sundry”.
By the time Alamieyeseigha was arrested a month
later in London, it was reported that the Metropolitan Police found about £1m
in cash in his London home and later a total of £1.8m in cash and bank
accounts. Alamieyeseigha jumped bail in December 2005
from the United Kingdom by allegedly disguising himself as a woman. He had
hoped to continue in office as governor.
Even though that hope did not materialise, it was a good judgement call.
Remaining in the UK would have been calamitous. Today, we know why.
On July 26,
2007, the fugitive governor pled guilty to six charges of making false declaration of assets
and 23 charges of money laundering by his companies. He
was sentenced to two years in prison. The following day, July 27, just hours
after being taken to prison, he walked home a free man. In our convoluted
justice system, the period he spent in detention had served to compensate for
the prison sentence.
Reuben Abati, then chair of the editorial board of
The Guardian and now presidential town crier had this to say about Alamieyeseigha
in a 2005 piece
titled, “Alami should go: It's over”: “By
running away from England under the cover of the night, away from the British
judiciary which was probing him on charges of money laundering, by taking
evasive action from the law and communicating with his feet, Alamiyeseigha, a
man who until now was known and addressed as His Excellency, has shown himself
to be a dishonourable fellow, unfit to rule, unfit to sit among men and women
of honour and integrity, unfit to preach to the people that he leads about
ideals and values...
“As for those persons who have
been packaging Alami as a victim and who have been mouthing the asinine line: ‘If
Ijaw man thief Ijaw money, wetin concern Tony Blair inside’, may the good Lord
forgive them for they do not know what they are saying. All Ijaw must feel
embarrassed for this is a difficult moment for them as a nation. They are being
blackmailed emotionally to defend not a principled fighter, not a spirit of
Ijawland, but an Ijaw leader who danced naked in a foreign land. The questions
that would be asked are: what do Ijaws stand for? Where is the ancient and
modern glory of the Ijaw nation? These are difficult questions. Alami must save
his own people the embarrassment by stepping aside. Let him return to England
and act like an honourable man”.
Eight years later, nothing has changed, except
that an Ijaw man is now President and Commander-in-Chief. “His Excellency, the
(former) executive fugitive of Bayelsa State”, as Abati once described
Alamiyeseigha remains a “dishonourable fellow, unfit to rule, unfit to sit
among men and women of honour and integrity, unfit to preach to the people that
he leads about ideals and values”. What a difference eight years make. Today, thanks
to his pardon, Alamiyeseigha is now “fit to rule, fit to sit among men and
women of honour and integrity, fit to preach to the people that he leads about
ideals and values”.
Astonishingly, it is now Abati’s job to repackage
“Alami” as a victim and condemn those who accuse him of being an ex-convict and
a danger to society. May the good Lord forgive all the idle Nigerians who are not
only exhibiting “sophisticated ignorance”, but want to destroy an Ijaw man for
pardoning another Ijaw man for stealing money belonging to Ijaws for they do
not know what they are saying.
To understand Alamieyeseigha’s
pardon is to understand the character of the Nigerian state. There is no case to make for his
pardon other than to say it is what the doctors ordered. And by
doctors, I do not mean the type our First Lady and sundry public officers
scurry to in foreign lands. I refer to the ubiquitous marabouts and native
doctors that have become an essential part of governance in Nigeria.
They are
the ones goading President Jonathan and have convinced him that to secure a
second term, he must of necessity pardon the Governor General of the Ijaw
nation. That is the only way he can
secure the support of the Ijaws. Evidently, in Nigeria leadership is not about
performance. What is uppermost now is that President Jonathan, the first
president from the oily Niger Delta, has to, by any means necessary, complete his
two terms of four years as the constitution stipulates.
A friend has likened President Jonathan’s dilemma,
if we can call it that, to that of a managing director of a failed company who
wants to remain MD even when his company is in the red. He will do whatever he
thinks will help him keep his job, including cooking the books and satisfying
every interest, no matter how vile. Of
course, President Jonathan is also a victim of the Nigerian tragedy. Alamieyeseigha was set free many years
ago when we had a certain Umaru Yar’Adua as president. The pardon on March 12,
2013, was just the icing on the cake.
I don’t
think those who pardoned Alamieyeseigha thought or imagined that the tag “ex-convict”
would ever leave him. Who cares really? Are we not witnesses to a senator
wining election while on trial? A few days after his pardon, there were feelers
signaling that Alamieyeseigha will run for senate in 2015. He doesn’t need to
do anything to emerge the next senator representing his district. Like that
other exemplar of perfidy in Akwa Ibom State, all the governor of Bayelsa
State, Seriake
Dickson, needs to do at the behest of the president, is to
remove the name of the winner and replace it with Alamieyeseigha’s, if
necessary, for his great service to Ijawland.
Alamieyeseigha
will be in good company when he joins the senate in 2015. For me, that is the really
troubling part of his pardon and why we must continue the quest to restructure
Nigeria. Like Tafa
Balogun, the rogue former Inspector General of Police, Alamieyeseigha
will no doubt make a case for the return of his property “confiscated” by the state.
Alamieyeseigha believes he is entitled to be
a senator and much more; after all, not many in the “hallowed” chamber can
boast of a superior résumé. Ours is a system that survives on cronyism. Alamieyeseigha may emerge as senate president
if he so desires. He may even return to Bayelsa State someday to complete his
second term as governor.
The structure of our country makes this unwholesome
atmosphere possible. That is why President Jonathan deserves our pardon for his
latest political blunder!

Great write up! I wish someone could read back to Abati one of his famous articles on live tv i would give a million bucks to see his face
ReplyDeleteNodoubt, the "Nigerian Project" is a fail one. Institutional values and integrity has given way to mediocrity,lip service,corruption and vague political promises among political class. The current political dispensation has lost political bearing. Let's Co-patriots especially we youths rise up to redeem our nation !
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