My Blog Search

My Popular Tags

                                                           

My Mini Search

 

My Moon Days

««Oct 2008»»
SMTWTFS
   
1
234
5
6
789
10
11
12
13
14
15161718
19202122232425
262728293031

My Flickr Badge

www.flickr.com
This is a Flickr badge showing public photos from akinnld. Make your own badge here.

Nigeria: The resignation of Adenike Grange

posted Wednesday, 26 March 2008

A new development

The resignation of the Nigerian Minister of Health, Professor Adenike Grange following allegations of graft would elicit much commentary and I would deign to add my own perspective to these interesting developments.

Obviously, the issues here cover the facts, the norms, the traditions, the aberrations and now the whistle-blower albeit an aggrieved one.

The President has spoken

President Yar’Adua had given an executive order ordering all ministries to remit to the Federal Treasury all monies that had not been properly allocated for spending by the end of the year 2007 and it appears the Ministry of Health and its officials flouted that order.

The President of the Federation has executive remit over all that pertains to Nigeria, he is implicitly the Chief Treasurer of the Federation and is crudely supposed to smack the hands of pilferers who try to raid the national till.

The clear fact is Professor Grange failed to follow a simple order from her boss and in the process had already committed an act of insubordination which could very well have embarrassed the President – she most definitely had to go - her resignation could only have been face-saving.

No leader of Chop I Chop

After the President gave the order, he followed up his request by auditing to see if the ministries had complied and found that the Ministry of Health had not fully complied, he definitely was not satisfied with the excuses and the rank disobedience of his appointees and their subordinates – he then requested and obtained the resignation of the appointed officials whilst ordering the indefinite suspension of the salaried officers.

The lesson we can take from this action is that the President has refused to be the leader of the “Chop, I Chop Party” and they who work to besmirch the name and dignity of his albeit illegitimate government would definitely face the music.

Prevailed upon by rotten people

Now, back to Professor Grange, there is a possibility that once she received the order she was prevailed upon but the norms of that institution which probably was steeped in corruption and headed previously by such incompetent buffoons that she found it hard to overcome the weight of their insistence.

Given that, it was still her responsibility to run that ministry and it is merely semantics to try and separate her responsibility from her culpability in allowing illegal actions to take place under her watch.

Bonus for what exactly?

It is quite instructive that the N300 million was to be shared out as a “Christmas Bonus”, there is probably no way how a ministry in Nigeria can really lay out clear performance goals as we have in the private sector for which the achievers could be justly rewarded.

People just have their noses in the trough and look for occasion to run off with funds that should be invested in issues that the ministries are supposed to be concerned with.

If our leaders still have to go abroad for health checkups and treatment, then all workers in the Ministry of Health have to have their pay docked till things begin to change – there is no way that any of them were deserving of any bonus talk less of a blanket Christmas Bonus where the allocations are just the plain daylight robbery of longsuffering Nigerians.

The disgruntled whistleblower

The matter of the whistleblower informing the anti-graft authorities is a welcome development; it shows that the little man in Nigeria now has a place to go to report corruption in public office and expect action to be taken to investigate and bring the people involved to book.

But looking closely at the whistleblower, it does not seem it was an act of altruistic piety but one of disgruntled pique – the allocations which would have amounted to N175,000 to the most junior thieves in this escapade was slashed to N40,000 to bulk up the takeaway of the middle managers.

I do not think we would have many whistleblowers in the future to expose these corrupt practices if everyone feels that they have been adequately compensated to keep their lips sealed, which is sad indeed. 

Irregular alliances

That also is a snapshot of Nigerian partnerships where agreements are made and some influential apparatchik changes the rules of the game with impunity expecting nothing to result of that action – well, the game has changed – if you cheat someone even in an illegal alliance of looting the treasury, the cheated has every right to the “righteous” indignation of getting even.

Dishonest lettered people

Then we look at the names of the people involved, as academic excellence is considered a badge of honour in Nigeria, here we have a two Professors, a Dr. and all the others probably have academic letters of excellence garnered from global institutions of renown – we now know that no matter how much you have achieved academically, it does not proof in anyway that you have integrity, that you understand the responsibility of holding public office, that you are honest, that you are beyond reproach or that you can be trusted with any office.

Just as being religious does not confer godliness if you in and of yourself do not have that virtue after you have been stripped of everything that gives you substance.

Professor Grange is fully responsible

Finally, this allocation was approved by someone in that ministry and the Minister could not have been oblivious of that approval – she might not have shared in the largesse but she failed in her stewardship of her office and allowed the country to be defrauded to the amelioration of undeserving miscreants.

The full force of the law should be visited upon her for her dereliction of duty and hopefully an example shall be made of the issue that nobody should think public office is an opportunity for self-enrichment even if it is dressed as a Christmas Bonus.

Ministers cannot become bystanders to events that take place under their watch in their own ministries, if they cannot control their crowd they should return to their former day jobs. I am not convinced that this represents a sea-change in responsibility when holding public office - but I would say it looks like a start.

To the gallows of public shame with them all – Good job, Yardy!

tags:                  

links: digg this    del.icio.us    technorati    reddit

AddThis Social Bookmark Button




1. Chxta left...
Thursday, 27 March 2008 12:21 am

Someone actually suggested that firing the entire civil service might be a solution to cases such as this one. I am not quite sure, but one thing is certain, the era of chopping is at the least suffering a wane. Until Yar'Adua's successor comes in and ensures continuity before we can cry uhuru.


2. Fake Eye left...
Thursday, 27 March 2008 12:42 am

What can I say?

Prof Grange was my teacher in medical school, and she is held by myself and the entire medical community in highest esteem.

Her laurels are plain for anyone to see - at present she is the world's number one paediatrician (if I may crudely condense her presidency of the International Paediatrics Association); on her silver locks hang experience and years of meritorious service from grassroots level to international pedestals, and scores of well-deserved honours and accolades adorn her scoresheet.

She is every doctor's role-model, mine definitely, and I am sorely aggrieved.

We all are.


3. Akin Akintayo left...
Thursday, 27 March 2008 1:13 am :: http://akin.blog-city.com/

Hello Fake Eye,

I could almost emphathise but another lesson stems from this event, if you have a name that you have earned through dint of hard work and professional excellence and you are called into Nigerian politics, you must ensure everything is done your way to ensure your name is not sullied and besmirched by those who care nothing about who you are.

The bear-pit of Nigeria politics is not a kindergarten for anyone, if you do not stand your ground you will be swallowed up in the morass and the disgraced for you honestly were not involved in.

If you have a name, serve your country outside politics.


4. Ababoy left...
Thursday, 27 March 2008 1:45 pm

I am not one of Yardy's biggest fans, neither have I been convinced with his anti corruption stance. But lately I am beginning to wonder...did I read this man correctly? Maybe I did, maybe like OBJ before him, he is simply handpicking those to throw to the dogs. Is that wrong? Who knows...


5. Kayode Muyibi left...
Thursday, 27 March 2008 6:23 pm :: http://www.nairahost.com

I find it quite amazing that there are people out there that think that hand-picking "visible" corrupted officers in a deep rooted corrupt system is not something to commend.