By Emman Usman Shehu
It all started in that garden with its beautiful trees and delicious fruits. An earthly paradise for the couple,
they had just one rule to contend with. They were not to eat the fruit
of a particular tree. It sounded so simple and straightforward. Keep to
that one rule and enjoy an eternity of bliss. Then came the intruder who
encouraged them to discountenance the rule. The couple did exactly what
they were told not to do. Faced with the reality of their decision, the
couple began the blame game. Adam blamed Eve and she in turn passed the
proverbial buck to the intruder, the Devil. Since then, blaming the
devil has become a convenient excuse for wrong decisions, especially
those with catastrophic consequences for which we do not want to take
responsibility.
Nigeria’s Minister of Interior reached for the same
buck passing strategy last week, as he faced the Senate Committee on
Interior. On March 15, 2014, the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS), one
of the parastatals under the Ministry of Interior, conducted a
nationwide recruitment exercise that ended with fatalities. At least not
less than 15 participants died as a result of the stampede that ensued
at some of the venues.
Until he made his appearance at the two-day
public hearing, the Minister had conducted himself with a sickening
arrogance. He kept blaming the deceased and would not apologise for the
shoddy arrangement and scandalous self-serving scam associated with the
ill-fated exercise. The public had hoped that a closed-door meeting
with the President would get all involved in the outrageous mess,
including the Minister, to tow the path of honour. It turned out to be a
misplaced hope. So it was a surprise that on appearing at the public
hearing, there seemed to be a change of attitude on the part of the
Minister.
It is not unlikely that at this point, it had dawned on
him that the decibels of public outage were not receding. The
President’s promise to set up a committee to investigate the unwholesome
incident, the bribery-like offer of employment to three members of each
family of the deceased, offer of appointment to those injured, and
cancellation of the exercise, did not douse public anger. The
President’s actions seemed more like another opportunity for political
mileage than taking far-reaching transformational decisions. The
Minister’s rear-guard action of discreetly monetising some journalists
to give him a good press also backfired as it became public knowledge.
Perhaps the reality sank in when the sordid revelations of an
entrenched manipulative process far-removed from the established conduct
poured out like a river of dross at the public hearing. The Immigration
Service Boss, the Secretary of the Immigration Service Board, and some
Immigration officials opened the dam of nasty and shocking revelations
with the Minister as the Culprit-In-Chief.
Thus when he took his
turn, for once he appeared to have shed his toga of shameless arrogance.
His family, in what can now be perceived as an orchestrated move, cued
him in by offering a public apology. He then spoke of taking
responsibility for the disastrous recruitment scam: “As the Minister of
Interior, under whose purview this unfortunate exercise took place, I
cannot abdicate my responsibility. The buck stops at my table.” Almost
in the same breath, without as much as a pause, he then blamed the
Devil. Even then he has failed to do the next honourable thing, which is
to resign from office.
It really is no surprise that he has not
resigned. The Minister obviously has no plan to do the honourable thing.
Clearly what he did at the public-hearing was simply to reach into the
bag of political tricks and continue with the deviousness that has
become an entrenched habit with public office holders in Nigeria. In one
breath he was claiming the buck stops at his table, but at the same
time he was craftily passing responsibility for all that had happened to
the Devil. A classic sleight-of-hand of insincerity and deception.
This is what leadership and public service have degenerated to in the
country. Leadership demands several strong positive qualities including
accountability, integrity, vision and honour. The Minister’s actions
thus far, consistently provide further proof that our leaders
desperately lack all of the aforementioned qualities.
Accountability
implies being responsible for outcomes of actions, whether good or bad,
because the buck stops at the leader’s table. These decisions most
times are based on a vision to make things better for society, and
propped on the pillars of integrity to ensure every decision is all
about public service and not self-service. In the words of Michael Ray
Hopkins: “Integrity is one of the top attributes of a great leader. It
is a concept of consistency of actions, values, methods, reasons,
principles, expectations and outcomes. It connotes a deep commitment to
do the right thing for the right reason, regardless of the
circumstances. People who live with integrity are incorruptible and
incapable of breaking the trust of those who have confided in them.
Every human is born with a conscience and therefore the ability to know
the right from wrong. Choosing the right, regardless of the consequence,
is the hallmark of integrity.”
It is not only the dead applicants
and their families that the Minister has betrayed by proving to be
untrustworthy. It is not only those who took part in the recruitment
exercise that he has betrayed. He has betrayed the generality of
Nigerians for dismally failing to uphold the trust that comes with his
office as a leader, in this case a Minister.
Whether in public or
private service, whether as leaders or followers and even as
individuals, a single standard of behavior cuts across board. It is not
one standard for some, and another standard for others. It is not one
standard for the leaders and another for the followers. A society that
encourages double standards can only nurture crass behavior. This
mutating culture of crassness is evidence of how low we are sinking.
The Minister’s shameless arrogance and manipulation is not unexpected
given what our society has become. Allegedly a long time political
enforcer (read thug) for the Senate President in their home state, and
most recently the President’s campaign manager in the same state, he has
been rewarded for all his loyalty with a ministerial appointment. In
keeping with our perverted reward system, he is unperturbed about public
outcry, the rule of law, or even the decency that is the foundation of
public service.
He knows too that our descent into clannish
sentimentalism over objective reasoning will work to his advantage. A
fellow clansman and former Minister of Education has already rushed to
his support, stating that the Interior Minister’s resignation will not
bring back the dead. A brazen insult to enlightenment, decency and
accountability.
For the Interior Minister, all that matters is his
political ambition. Having become an expert political enforcer, he has
graduated to minister and sees on the horizon the possibilities of being
a governor and subsequently a senator. This is the choice career cycle.
A cycle that refuses to take into consideration the public service
capabilities of the so-called leaders. In saner societies, the best
cream rises to the top, here it is those spreading the virus of
dishonour.
Whatever the Minister’s religious persuasion, the truth
is that like Adam and Eve, he is directly responsible for his
distasteful actions. It had nothing to do with the Devil. However he may
get away with it because the nation has sold its soul to the Devil.
Culled from newtelegraphonline.com
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