Ad Clicks : Ad Views : Ad Clicks : Ad Views : Ad Clicks : Ad Views : Ad Clicks : Ad Views : Ad Clicks : Ad Views : Ad Clicks : Ad Views : Ad Clicks : Ad Views : Ad Clicks : Ad Views : Ad Clicks : Ad Views :
Oh Snap!

Please turnoff your ad blocking mode for viewing your site content

Whistle Blowers Nigeria

Best Source of Breaking News in Nigeria

img

Shittu, Adeosun and the NYSC

/
/
/
363 Views

NYSCFrom the look of things, the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) may kick-start the redemption in public service integrity that Nigerians have always craved for. Beginning with the whistle blown by the highly-respected news medium, Premium Times, on the dud NYSC certificate of former Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun and the latest revelation about the failure to undergo the compulsory one-year national service by the Minister of Communications, Mr. Adebayo Shittu, a purifying revolution may have begun with NYSC certificate as a flag-off.

Forgive this very harsh submission – we lack a sense of shame. We are a people who traded off our ability to be ashamed a very long time ago. As a student of history, I will draw the graph of this shamelessness from the time of the military strike of 1966. Ostensibly because they belonged to a feared and dreaded class, the military that came into power held the civil populace with great disdain. It was not accountable to the “bloody civilians” and went on a binge with public money. The rise of public administration and the discovery of cruide oil and natural gas are two major events which many analysts attribute to sudden increment in the level of corruption at this time in the life of the country and the gradual death of integrity. There was so much petro dollars accruable to Nigeria during the post-war era that she could not manage. Military Generals owned secret accounts in Chase bank, Midland Bank, among sundry other offshore accounts. By the time they left government in 1979, sleaze and corruption was their bequeathals to the incoming civilian government.

With free petro dollars, the individual hand, which the Yoruba figuratively refer to as his savior from lack and poverty, became literally useless. Farmers began a migration from rural areas to the urban center in pursuit of the petro dollars they said could be plucked freely on the streets of the city; armed robbers were on the increase, prompting the military to begin their execution at the bar beach; forgery and stealing of public funds assumed ascendant position, down till today when individual Nigerians walk on the streets with trinkets made of the most well-fed army of maggots on their necks.

Pre the1966 putsch, an accusation of certificate forgery or impersonation of a certificate holder was enough for the accused to commit suicide. I remember the libel case instituted against the Tribune by Dr. Okechekwu Ikejiani, who by then was an ally of Nnamdi Azikiwe and a former Chairman of the Ibadan University College. The Tribune had culled a letter-to-the-editor opinion piece earlier published in the Daily Service of October 13, 1951. In the letter, the writer, one Aina Adetokun, writing from Ekotedo, Ibadan, had castigated Ikejiani thus: “In fairness to Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, bearing one or two occasions in which he collected public money without rendering any accounts, he has been trying to make an honest living. He is on the whole earning his keep. One of the things that vitiate Dr. Azikiwe’s leadership is the type of noisy and dishonest colleagues who proclaim him ‘god of Africa’. And who are these disciples? One Dr. Okechukwu Ikejiani, former Chairman of the Ibadan University College, returned to Nigeria about three years ago with a lot of fanfare. He claimed to have obtained a doctorate degree in medicine. It was later proved that the degree was a fake. Consequently the quack expert was kicked out of the University.”

Irked by this report, which he viewed as “ethnic consciousness and reproductive symbolism” Ikejiani had asked the newspaper for retraction or else, he would file a libel suit against it. A rebuttal it published on June 19, 1952 would not pacify Ikejiani.

Apparently dissatisfied with this ‘apology’, Ikejiani sued at the Supreme Court of Nigeria, the Ibadan Judicial Division, under Mr. Justice Miles Abbott. Judgment was given on September 12, 1952 and the court held that Dr. Ikejiani had been disparaged by the article. He was awarded “the sum of 750 pounds in damages and 10 pounds for costs, plus 30 pounds for disbursements.”

The military putsch gradually took off such sense of shame. Hard work became very unpopular. Just like in Osun State where someone who had a single F9 result in his school leaving certificate rose to the topmost level of seeking gubernatorial slot, studying hard or working hard lost its shine. Prostitutes tendering the flesh of military big epaulettes acquired more money than the civil servant. Circumventing or short-circuiting the route to success became rampant. Forgers reigned and society looked the other way. Oluwole – code name for forgery – assumed a life-long dimension. Fathers dragged their kids to where they would falsify results and miracle centers – euphemism for results forgery – rose in leaps and bounds.

The Minister of Communications, Shittu, is the most recent in this collapse of values mirrored by the elite. Premium Times investigation proved that he did not participate in the NYSC scheme, even though he graduated from the then University of Ife at age 25. In his defence, Shittu claimed that he deliberately dodged participating in the youth service, having been elected into the Oyo State House of Assembly in 1979. He claimed that, a stint at the parliament approximates service to the country. In its reaction however, the NYSC stated that political office is not equivalent to the one year compulsory youth service. Earlier, Adeosun, ex-minister of finance, had been accused of forging her NYSC certificate and in the thick of condemnations, resigned her appointment. Her alibi was that upon her arrival in Nigeria, she had delegated the process of acquisition of an exemption certificate. If you have ever fallen into the hands of visa, passport or vehicle registration racketeers, the plausibility of her claim would ring a bell.

My take is that Adeosun’s resignation is a great development for our country. I have heard so many economic strides she was said to have brought to Nigeria on account of her brilliant financial wizardry as minister. But the integrity of fatherland in the eyes of a watchful world was at stake. And her integrity as well. The fact that Shittu’s claim is alien to the NYSC Act makes it necessary that he should also tow the path of honour of the Adeosun kind. Already, there is an underground crusade in Nigeria to do things right, certificate-wise.

The Adeosun example has woken Nigerians up to the need not to delegate such consequential assignments. NYSC, as it is currently structured, is hostile to a faithful service to fatherland. It is an interregnum before the stark reality of unemployment hits the new graduate, which should not be. Children of the rich dodge the service and certificates are brought to them at home. Those who serve barely scoop any lesson from it that is within the projection of the framers of the scheme. The case of singer, Davido, who reportedly arrived the orientation camp with trousers rolled up and para-military officials looking the other way and who, the next day, was in America to honour a musical engagement, in defiance of the stipulated time for being at the orientation camp, is a good example. Government officials’ children who school abroad should be asked where their children performed the mandatory service. Where, for instance, did President Muhammadu Buhari’s children, whom we were told graduated recently, do their NYSC service? Who were their colleagues?

We can bring sanity to public service integrity by making the one-year NYSC indeed mandatory. The way to do this is to ferret for more public officials in government – local, states and federal – who ran foul of the NYSC Act. Making public examples of them would be enough deterrent and a wake-up call to all to return to the path of rectitude.

Re – Tinubu the Ap’ejalodo and his strange fish friend

Wow!!! I just read through your Ap’ejalodo exciting & didactic story. It is sad that human beings don’t learn from history until history disgraces them. The Ataoja palace gaffe and the Ambode dilemma might as well be the beginning of the end of our current day Ap’ejalodo the Asiwaju.
Ayodeji Ajiboye


How beautiful, apt and prophetic your piece entitled above is! God bless you and your writings. To start with, it is most unfortunate that this type of didactic stories and anecdotes are not told to our children in our schools and our homes these days. Now, to answer your heart-piercing question at the end of the write-up, the strange fish would say to Ap’ejalodo:  “Aseju ni baba asete”; because you have now climbed the tree beyond the leaves, you will experience a big fall and thereby break your neck.”

But, by the way, why do African leaders usually fail to learn from history? Why do they always refuse to remember that despite their perceived lofty positions, they are still (mere) mortals, in the last analysis? Powerful persons of the past have gone and history is unsparingly hostile to them and their posterity. From what we are witnessing now, it means we don’t learn from the mistakes of those before us. And we still delude ourselves that the African race will not continue to be the butts of injurious (defaming) jokes by the rest of the world till Kingdom comes?

Olaitan Makanju, olaitanmakanju@gmail.com


Your piece, with the above title made good and interesting reading. I want to commend you for bringing to the fore forgotten fables we read in literature books like Alawiye and Akomolede, among others. May God increase your knowledge. I want to point it out that you were looking at a strictly business issue from the point of view of morality. Nigerian politics post-2003 is business, no more, no less. Those who came to offices through military transition programme were the last batch of real democrats and politicians. They were sponsored by godfathers but not merchants as we have it today. The then godfathers required not monetary gains per se, but deference to them as political cum socio-cultural leaders and fulfilment of promises made to the electorate.

This was the case with Afenifere. However, with the coming of the 2003-2007 set of political office holders across board, politics became real business. Godfathers expend their fortune on political office seekers’ elections and are bent on recouping their capital with profit. To forestall betrayal of trust, occultism was introduced like swearing before Okija shrine. Mr Chris Uba and Dr Chris Ngige, Adedibu versus Senator Rashidi Ladoja, Modu Sherif versus Mala Kachala are few that come to mind.

The Tinubu/Ambode saga should best be viewed from the point of view of a merchant who invested in Ambode and wants to recoup his investment, including absolute loyalty. Readers can misjudge the issue from the moral point of view you tow. Honestly, those godsons who turn around to betray the trust that the leader reposes in them should be reprimanded, not the other way round. We equally have to commend Tinubu for foisting on Lagos performers. Another thing is that, the governor has to be blamed because he knew quite sure that strings were attached to the coveted seat and did not travel out during Fashola era. If he accepted the seat with the strings, he must fulfil the conditions to the letter or be booted out. Moreover, we were witnesses to the war fought by Tinubu among his closest and equally qualified proteges before Ambode scaled through. Somebody who will dine with the devil must have a long spoon. This is my position. Tinubu is an empire builder and a lot of resources is needed to maintain and sustain the empire which produced Ambode among others. Without the empire, there cannot be Ambode. The empire is large and the hierarchy has to be oiled from the top to the bottom. I pray that reason prevails and Ambode is given a second term.

Adewuyi Adegbite, Ogbomoso, Oyo State. 


Re – The Buhari/Punch tango

I have just read your column. As usual, and as on all other occasions when you have to say your mind to this Fulani-contraption of a federal government that got elected into office due to the gullibility of Nigerians in 2015, you were fearless and courageous in reading the riot act to this modern day Mussolini and those who always attempt to clean him up as he constantly excretes his blood-stained mindset in public. Keep up the good work. It’s only him, and those as conscienceless as he is, that would not admit the fact that he tacitly supports and approves the genocide his Fulani kinsmen are carrying out all over this country. Has he ever condemned or asked them to stop the killings? No, apart from giving the world excuses and explanations that don’t make sense.  Fellow Omo Ekùn, God be with you jare and all of us.

Ayorinde Abiola <ayorabiola@gmail.com


I am a 70-year old regular reader of the Punch newspaper.  I am writing this brief to suggest to you to stop addressing the President of Nigeria with such disrespect. Also to let you know that you can communicate your views more effectively by not referring to the herdsmen and Fulanis as the President’s kinsmen. We know that they are. You destroy your sound arguments by being too personal and petty, almost creating the impression that he supports the killings.  It shows your bias and hatred for the tribe.  Please, keep that to yourself and spare us the headache and thoughts that the Punch newspaper is working as a destabilizing agent. Please be more professional and mature in your writing. I wish you and the Editorial Board of the Punch all the best.

Prof Mrs. Iyabo Mabawonku, imabawonku@gmail.com

The post Shittu, Adeosun and the NYSC appeared first on Tribune.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google+
  • Linkedin
  • Pinterest

Leave a Comment

This div height required for enabling the sticky sidebar