Nigeria’s president-elect is already making waves with his pledge to
attack corruption, starting with the missing 20 billion dollars
allegedly swiped from the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation during
the previous administration.Muhammadu
Buhari pledged to pursue the claim of former Central Bank governor,
Lamido Sanusi, who was suspended last year by former president Goodluck
Jonathan after he warned of massive mismanagement by the oil
corporation. His claim was never investigated by the ex-president.
“This
issue is not over yet,” declared Buhari, who will be sworn in on May
29. “Once we assume office we will order a fresh probe into the matter…
We will not allow people to steal money meant for Nigerians to buy
shares and stash (them) away in foreign lands.”
Buhari’s warning
to those who pocketed national funds thrilled Africans as far away as
Zambia and prompted an editorial in The Post newspaper.
“Nigerian
President-elect General Muhammadu Buhari’s message on corruption brings
some hope for that country and our continent,” wrote The Post’s editor
in a piece viewed 1,294 times.
The editorial continued: “We wish
this was the message we were getting from our own President, Edgar
Lungu. But it is not. If there is anything Edgar hardly talks about, it
is corruption.
“What we have in Zambia today is a corrupt
government… This is a government where those in leadership are the ones
getting government contracts. They are the suppliers of government.
Leaders and cadres of the ruling party are the ones doing business with
government.
“If one scrutinises all government contracts, it will
not be difficult to discover that almost all of them have been given to
people connected to the ruling party and its leadership…. When one
criticises such practices, he is seen to be hurtful, frustrated.
“Look
at how quickly those in the leadership of government, from president to
the lowest cadre, become rich! What is the magic? Where is the money
coming from? It is from corruption, from bribes, from selling government
policy. There is no other source of that money other than corruption.”
Africans
surveyed by the group Afrobarometer in 2013 expressed similar views and
many believe the situation has deteriorated in the last decade.
In
the survey of 34 countries, 56 percent of the 51,000 people surveyed
thought their governments were doing “fairly badly” or “very badly” in
the fight against corruption. Only 35 percent said their governments
were doing “fairly well” or “very well”.
Among those most
dissatisfied by official efforts to end corruption were Nigerians and
Egyptians at the top, followed by Zimbabweans, Ugandans and Sudanese,
Kenyans, Malians, Tunisians, Togolese, Tanzanians and South Africans.
from here
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