| Corruption: The problem with the PDP |
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| Written by Levi Obijiofor | |
| Friday, 18 March 2005 | |
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Corruption: The problem with the PDP EXACTLY eight days ago, the leadership of the People's Democratic Party (PDP) announced to the nation that it had expelled two troublesome members of the party in Anambra State, namely the state governor Chris Ngige and his political nightmare Chris Uba. The sacking of Ngige and Uba by the PDP marked the end (or so it may appear) of the long-drawn political arm-wrestling between two political enemies sworn to mutual destruction and the derailment of official government business in the state. For nearly 20 months the people of Anambra State, the direct victims of the entire saga, were imprisoned metaphorically by the tangled business disagreement between Ngige and Uba. That indecent business deal went burst on 10 July 2003. At the end of the meeting of the national executive committee of the PDP at which wide ranging decisions were made last week, journalists asked Vincent Ogbulafor, the garrulous secretary of the party, to outline the cardinal sins committed by Ngige and Uba. Like an automated machine, Ogbulafor wrapped up the sins in 12 words: "It is disrespect for the party's constitution, disobedience to the party's constitution." These were bogus, indeed imprecise words. Without a clear and specific statement on the offences committed by Ngige and Uba, Ogbulafor implied that journalists were free to attach to his tricky words any meanings they could conjure. It was like the PDP couldn't find any acceptable excuse for hanging Ngige and his tormentor Uba. The party really didn't need to sweat to manufacture reasons in order to dismiss Ngige and Uba. On hindsight, Ngige and Uba had nailed their political coffins when they took their quarrel before President Olusegun Obasanjo and confessed how they rigged, manipulated and messed up the 2003 governorship election in Anambra State. In his sanctimonious address to the executive meeting last week, newly crowned chairman Ahmadu Ali invoked the metaphor of healing a wound. He said: "We are called to clear long standing party issues which have held the party from moving forward. You cannot treat an open wound when there is a shrapnel. Let us not shirk our responsibilities. We have rules and guidelines in our constitution. We shall not be afraid to take decisions. No matter how long it will take, it is perfect, it is perfect." Unfortunately, despite the banishment of Ngige and Uba, there is still a huge shrapnel in the wound which the PDP inflicted on the nation and on its self. The PDP leaders have refused to address the question of legitimacy - whether or not the party won the 2003 governorship election in Anambra State in a fair and just manner. Although Ahmadu Ali claimed in his address quoted above that "it is perfect, it is perfect", the PDP leaders' decisions last week were neither "perfect" nor commendable. To make the action "perfect", the PDP leaders would need to admit openly that the party did not win the governorship election in Anambra. This should not be a difficult task. The party's former favoured son Uba had already made it easier for the PDP by confessing to rigging the governorship election in the state. The second "perfect" action to be taken by the PDP would be to order the arrest and prosecution of Uba and Ngige for rigging the election in Anambra. Anything less is sheer hypocrisy. As further evidence that corruption is rife within the top ranks of the PDP leadership, a report submitted by the Olagunsoye Oyinlola Panel had recommended further investigation of some members of the party's national working committee for improper conduct in the political crises in Anambra State. Although the party officials identified in the report were yet to be given an opportunity to defend themselves, the report was as pointedly damning and critical as you can get. The panel reported: "Some members of the National Working Committee of the party are equally guilty of inability to act swiftly, dispassionately and sincerely, owing to divergent interests in the matter. For instance, some members of the National Working Committee were accused of receiving financial inducements to pervert the course of justice in the Anambra saga." This is an act of self-flagellation but it is not something you find often within the perverted politics of the PDP leadership. The PDP is like a terminally ill patient who appears normal outside but inside is slowing succumbing to the devastating effects of a deadly virus. The party will continue to go down the path of infamy as long as the leaders continue to run around in circles with blinkers on their faces. Anti-corruption crusade cannot take hold in the PDP simply because it is corruption that feeds and sustains some key members of the party.
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| Last Updated ( Wednesday, 23 April 2008 ) |
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Posted by Robot| 20.10.2007 09:15