Nigeria, must we
always kill our illustrious sons? It is a question that several persons of
repute, including activist, had asked in the past and the question again took
on relevance in recent days as the hyenas hemmed in what they thought was their
prey and tried to snuff life out of his career. The intended dinner of the
human hyenas was the Governor of the Central Bank, Mr Godwin Emefiele.
The hunting ground of choice was the web pages of Sahara
Reporters, which went to town with the screamer, “CAUGHT ON TAPE: How Central
Bank Governor Emefiele, Deputy Adamu And Top Officials Discussed How To
Cover-Up N500bn Which They Stole From The CBN”. But it turned out the hyenas
were not meant to have Emefiele for dinner, they went hungry. Contrary to the
envisaged endgame, President Muhammadu Buhari handed him another five years in
office. And who would not, considering the superlative outing he had in his first
term? It must be this performance that made his confirmation by the Senate to
be as fast as lightning.
Beyond being re-appointed and being expeditiously confirmed
to continue leading Nigeria’s apex bank, it turned out that the report carried
by Sahara Reporters was the usual hatchet job. The best the report was able to
do was to twist a routine telephone conversation out of context to allege a
theft that never took place while further exposing the shallowness of the folks
behind the news blog and those who contracted them to do the hit job.
The story they put out has been spectacularly rubbished by
the statement issued by Mr. Isaac Okoroafor, CBN’s Director of Corporate
Communications. There is no need to rehash the explanation offered in that
statement but suffice to say the statement exposed the lack of understanding on
the part of those who thought they had caught Mr Emefiele in a compromised
position worthy of breaking news and embarrassing enough to the government to
not reappoint him. The reality, however, is that they only succeeded in
convincing the rest of us how ignorant they are about the way reserve banks
work.
There is the outside chance that these hyenas are not so
ignorant; they know there is no substance in their claim but they were deluded
to expect that Nigerians and their leaders are naïve to the point where they
will rush to crucify Emefiele without first weighing the substance of the
supposed allegations implied by leaking the tape.
Three things stand out in this ugly saga of a failed
blackmail attempt. The first is that the recording points to the existence of
deeply political operatives in all branches and agencies of government. Those
who made the audio went to great length to procure their tainted produce
Whether they bugged or hacked the telephone sets in the CBN
Governor’s office, compromise the internal switch at the apex bank, or deployed
eavesdropping technology to intercept the calls, this is a red flag that public
officials are now persistently under threat from political operatives that are
out to garner information for their own end.
To the extent that Mr Emefiele’s telephone conversation was
in pursuit of legitimate duty, as we now know, the perpetrators of this act
have breached several of the laws of the land and their action can be likened
to an attack on the country.
A second observation is that the kind of concern one can
surmise from the CBN Governor’s discomfort and expressions in the course of the
call showed a man that is passionate about getting his country out of an
economic mess that took long in making. That people connected with the making
of the mess are the ones now trying to make its resolution appear like a crime
in progress is the height of travesty.
Mr Emefiele could have simply act indifferently and cited
the approvals from the Ministry of Finance as a basis to be unconcerned. But
true to his credential as a man that has done much to reduce and now on the
verge of eradicating the famed black hole that swallows national resources at
the CBN, the audio depicted him as greatly agitated about recovery of the funds
that were released to bail out states that failed to be fiscally prudent to the
point of becoming insolvent.
A note must be made of the fact that the irresponsible
behaviour on the part of state governors, which led to this situation, was the
hallmark of the governments that preceded that of President Buhari. State
governors of now, even those that do not belong to the ruling party at the
centre, have learned that there is no longer room for kleptocratic frivolity.
Furthermore, it is one thing to criminally breach the
security of an institution as pivotal as the CBN, publishing the proceeds of
that crime amounts to daring the state. It is like someone stealing clothes
from a neighbourhood and then parading the streets dressed in the stolen items.
Such arrogance comes from the erroneous impression that the state is incapable
of visiting the requisite sanction on the offenders or that the criminal in
this instance is above the law.
With these observations come the steps that must be taken to
prevent blackmailers and criminals from arrogating legitimacy to themselves
should they wrongly surmise that society condones their wrong-doings. It is,
therefore, necessary to clearly define what constitutes desirable
whistleblowing and what amounts to espionage against the interests of the
Nigerian state.
A situation where Chief Executives of government agencies
and other government functionaries are illegitimately wiretapped cannot be
allowed to continue unabated. Today, it is Emefiele, what happens when these
criminally minded people turn to bug the Inspector General of Police and his
key staff while making the recordings available to bandits and kidnappers? Or
how much of this wiretapping have been deployed for insider trading or
machination towards the collapse of the banks regulated by the CBN?
Also, the government must make it a priority to get to the
bottom of this breach at the CBN. The breach and other actions carried out in
its aftermath should be subjected to review by the office of the Attorney
General of the Federation such that those found culpable – individual or
corporate – would be made to face the law, of which there are adequate
provisions.
This piece will conclude on the note of urging Mr Emefiele
not to be daunted by the antics of those that feel pained that the CBN is no
longer the ATM pool for corruption because of the reforms he has instituted
there. Nigerians, who are his actual employers, are happy with his work, which made
them greet his re-appointment with accolades. It’s the views of these employers
that matter and not the perverted indulgence of a criminal few.
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