The chopper went down. Souls perished. Investigations, as usual, have
been ordered. Three days mourning have also been declared. And the
routine blame and counter-blame games erupt among the populations, with
the attendant religious, ethnic and tribal twists to a sad story. This
is the story of Nigeria!
I am neither going to waste my time on needless lingoes of sympathy
nor pour out mundane ‘eye service’ adulation to the departed general
Owoeye Azazi and governor Patrick Yakowa as many Nigerians are wont to.
Rather, I am going to vent my anger, asking the avoided questions that
are begging for cogent answers. The Bayelsa helicopter crash is another
eye-opener to the sordid state of governance in Nigeria; the gross abuse
of public office; the flight of accountability; and the unprecedented
rape of the nation’s treasury going on under President Goodluck Ebele
Jonathan. The crash incident clearly reveals the depth of the plunge
abuse of public office has assumed with tacit the approval, and support
of the current leadership.
Last Saturday, a common aide to the president, Oronto Douglas, buried
his father in his hometown, Okoroba community in Nembe Local Government
Area, Bayelsa State. His father’s burial, a purely private activity,
cost another six lives, NEEDLESSLY! For the purpose of facilitating the
comfort of private guests attending a PRIVATE occasion, a naval
aircraft, a public property belonging to the Nigerian Navy was
impudently converted to personal use, to grease the ‘special ego” of a
presidential aide and his personal visitors. A whole navy commander of
the Nigerian Navy – a senior public officer – was drafted away from the
warmth of his family on a weekend, to render “kabu kabu” services to the
guests of a fellow citizen using government-owned property! While that
unsung navy commander is no more, the same presidential aide who pushed
him to his early grave continues to retain his portfolio, enjoying the
perks of public office. If unchecked, he may still send more naval
officers to their untimely graves, except his relatives magnanimously
postpone their dying and funeral dates.
Without that Bayelsa crash incident, Nigerians would never have known
about the wanton exercise of official indiscretion by political
appointees. That incident presented Nigerians with concrete evidence of
impunity, revealing how national security apparatus and public
facilities are deployed away from the scenes where they are urgently
needed, to venues of private, lavish owanbes and political gatherings.
That is not all. Few months ago, the Nigerian president presented a
bloated budget Nigerians knew would not be implemented. Billions of
Naira were as usual, allocated for the maintenance of helicopters and
aircrafts in the military and naval fleet. With what we know now,
budgetary allocation for the maintenance of these aircrafts and
helicopters is not borne out of any patriotic or good governance
considerations, but merely to ensure that they are functional enough to
meet the “comfy private needs” of high-ranking public officials.
A week before Oronto Douglas’ father’s burial, all roads led to
Otueke, the home of the president for the funeral of his younger
brother. We don’t need anyone to tell us that something similar
happened. Helicopters of the Nigerian Navy, Airforce, military and other
national security formations were ostensibly used to ferry private
guests to the president’s hometown AT THE NATION’S EXPENSE! Emboldened,
or rather enamored of that ludicrous indiscretion, Oronto Douglas
followed suit. But this time around, the consequences were dire.
In many quarters, the names, ‘President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan’
represent unsurpassed CORRUPTION! Although nearly all pasts leaders of
the country are believed to be corrupt, none of them, including the past
military rulers were directly linked to an all-time-high festival of
corruption, as currently witnessed in Nigeria. So beyond the traditional
setting up of committees and investigatory panels, Nigerians are well
aware that these steps are wholly cosmetic, bereft of any real intent to
explore lasting solutions to festering national challenges. In fact,
committees are not only conduit pipes for continued official wastages,
but appear to be the fastest way of “killing” any issue that provokes
public outrage. In Goodluck Jonathan’s “transformation theory”, a “big
man” has to die before grave issues of national importance are taken
seriously. Hundreds and thousands who die on pot-hole infested roads
across the country on a regular basis are undeserving of his protection
and crocodile tears. Only until the federal highways of death claims the
life of a “big man”: a fuel subsidy thief; a PDP chieftain; a
president’s aide; a governor; then the contract to repair the road would
be hurriedly awarded; fake tears shed under the keen watch of clacking
cameras, and stupid committees set up to investigate and offer
recommendations no one needs.
Just weeks ago, Dino Melaye, in his oft-boisterous manner, drew
public attention to the poor state of roads networks in the Niger Delta
region, – especially the popular East-West Road – and accused the
former Niger Delta minister, Godsday Orubebe of corruption. Rather than
look into the merits of Melaye’s claims, presidential and ministerial
aides lashed out at him, calling him all sorts of unprintable names. Had
FG heeded Melaye’s call, perhaps, the East-West Road would have been
fixed, while the over-use of a naval helicopter which caused the
Saturday deaths would have been totally unnecessary! That road,
currently in a sorry state of disrepair, is the major link road to the
South-South states. The wretched condition of that road forced the “big
men of Bayelsa” to resort to using choppers and helicopters, thereby
dispensing a death sentence on poor citizens who commute that road
daily. According to eye witness accounts, when the news of the crash
filtered in, some of the remaining guests opted to travel by road
instead; the same road they refused to repair; the same road they have
condemned other motorists to use at their own peril.
There is no way an Oronto Douglas would convert the nation’s security
apparatus and maritime infrastructure to personal use without the
express approval from the president. That acquiescence makes the
president complicit in the needless death of innocent citizens. At a
time the Niger Delta waterways is ravaged by unparalleled oil theft and
large-scale maritime criminality, the lead agency responsible for
curbing the excesses of sea pirates and oil thievery chose that delicate
period to donate its scare resources and choppers to guests of
an owanbe funeral. In saner climes, the president would have tendered
his resignation by now, and the so-called aide would at the very least,
bow out in shame after he had tendered an unreserved apology in all
national dailies. In addition, a massive shake-up in the Nigeria Navy,
commensurate with the extent of absurdity displayed by its authorities
would have since begun.
Let those who want to mourn, mourn! But this issue does not call for
mourning, but deep introspection into the leadership crisis that has
enveloped this country. It is a time for incongruous characters like
Oronto Douglas to be eased out of government circles for gross abuse of
public office. It’s a time for Niger Deltans to ask the right questions
and speak the truth to its chronically erring leaders. It is the time
for heads to roll in the Nigerian Navy. It is a time for the Nigerian
Navy to conduct an extensive audit of its operations, facilities and
procedures. It is a time for Nigerians to demand accountability from
leaders determined to drive this country to doom. It is a time for
action, a time to unlock all the incredible potential of our citizens to
collectively change the country.
VICTORIA IBEZIM OHAERI
Oronto had no hand in approving that aircraft. Don't forget that one of the deceased is a retired Chief of Defence Staff, entitled LEGALLY to use military aircraft and the deceased governor was equally a VIP. Try and get your facts right.
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