Nuhu Ribadu as metaphor Print E-mail
Written by Okey Ndibe   
Monday, 31 December 2007

Nuhu Ribadu as metaphor 

By Okey Ndibe 

One thing is certain about the way Nuhu Ribadu was eased out of his post as chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission: The timing and mode stank. Once, the man was a metaphor for prevarication and selectivity, an anti-corruption czar who sometimes played apologist for a regime that wallowed in corruption. He leaves office as a metaphor of a different regime’s indifference to the crusade to combat graft.   

Three weeks ago, Ribadu’s EFCC arrested former Governor James Ibori, a flamboyant politician who reportedly poured billions of naira of his state funds into Umar Yar’Adua’s presidential campaign. With Ibori’s prosecution set to resume in less than two weeks, and the EFCC needing its wits about it if it is to withstand the kind of legal blitz Ibori’s money can buy, why shoo away Ribadu at this time? Is this part of a larger strategy to dispirit the agency and hand victory to Ibori by default? Is it a way of sending a clear message to Nigerians that the era of even a feigned crusade against graft in exalted places has run its course?  

Both Yar’Adua and his attorney general, Michael Aondoakaa, have hardly concealed their desire to spare Ibori, and to do so at all cost. In ignoring their wishes, had Ribadu taken on more than he could handle? 

In recent weeks, several groups have demanded that the anti-corruption agency probe former President Olusegun Obasanjo. A few days ago, the EFCC finally questioned Iyabo Obasanjo-Bello, the former president’s daughter, who may have traded her filial connection for a lot of lucre. Why did the government risk leaving the impression that Ribadu was removed to avert his move—belated though it may be—against Obasanjo, a man many Nigerians regard, with good reason, as the dean of corruption?  

One heard speculations too that the agency was on the verge of handcuffing some top former officials of the Obasanjo dispensation as well as a few ex-governors who reek of graft. Did a coalition of such elements plot his immediate de-commissioning?  

Like him or despise him, Ribadu deserved a less shadowy, controversial exit. Those who authored his removal have made him something of a martyr in the fight to stem corruption. Deserving or not, Ribadu is now perceived by many as a sacrificial lamb, the victim of a conspiracy wrought by a confederacy of powerful thieves. He has lost a job he no doubt cherished but executed imperfectly, and he has gone away with a heroic luster. On the other hand, those who conspired to remove him, or stand suspected of conspiring, besmirched themselves.  

Prior to his removal, Ribadu was not such a lucky figure. In fact, he had a contentious image. While many gushed praises for the very public and dramatic way he waged a war against corruption, others criticized the selective mode of his operation. Last year, he took to the floor of the Senate and told an astonished nation that fewer than three governors were beyond reproach. He even reeled off a few scandalizing details of what some governors had hauled away. Yet, many critics were disturbed by his coziness with Obasanjo, a man many Nigerians regard, with good reason, as the new dean of corruption.  

I was hardly a fan of Ribadu’s modus operandi. He was steeped in Obasanjo’s third term gamble, and his agency was blind to the billions of naira the former president spent to tempt legislators to okay what would have amounted to a rape of the democratic will. When Mr. Nnamdi (Andy) Uba illegally ferried $170,000 into New York on a presidential jet, Ribadu disappointed many by declaring that no crime had been committed. Under his watch, the EFCC lent itself to Obasanjo’s undemocratic and illegal gambit to exclude some candidates from the polls of April, 2007.  

Visiting New York last September, Ribadu sought to justify his agency’s failure to investigate Obasanjo. He declared that Nigeria teemed with elements more corrupt than the former president. His tacit acknowledgment of the former president’s culpability in corruption was a huge step forward—in view, especially, of his former stance. In the past, Ribadu had contended that Obasanjo was the very epitome of probity. Still, his placement of the former president in the lower rungs of corruption struck me as unbelievable.  

For most of his eight-year tenure, Obasanjo oversaw the nation’s petroleum ministry. He was contemptuous of the legislature’s every bid to ask questions about his stewardship. His proxies ran the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, simultaneously reputed as the nation’s cash cow and cesspool. His acquisition of a stupendous equity stake in Transcorp, a mega-corporation that enjoyed generous receipts of public assets from his administration, remains a scandal begging to be exposed. Obasanjo’s Transcorp deal, if investigated, may well break many Nigerian records in graft and greed.   

Ribadu’s grave missteps cost him many admirers even as his considerable achievements brought him a drove of fans. With his removal, his foes have reason to gloat, but confusion about the portents of his exit has left Nigerians dejected and forlorn. Despite my criticism of his failures—in a sense because of it—I must confess to a feeling of profound unease at the manner of his rustication. The news of his removal cut me to the quick.  

If a compelling public interest was served by Ribadu’s redeployment, then Yar’Adua and his handlers should have pressed the case publicly. They might have argued, for example, that the commission’s leadership needed reconstitution in order to meet the challenge of fairer investigation and more robust prosecution. They could even have contended that Ribadu had betrayed unacceptable selectivity in his choice of targets. If they felt that the man’s style was at odds with Yar’Adua’s much-vaunted mantra of “rule of law,” then they should have come out openly to say so.  

Rather than make a public plea of their case against Ribadu, Aso Rock found a suspect excuse for pushing the man away. In the event, they raised public anxiety that this was a ploy to normalize relations with powerful former public officials accused of grave acts of embezzlement. By all means, remove Ribadu if there was some sound logic to it. But a government that’s doing the right thing should not scurry about in the dark. Right before our very eyes—and under the gaze of the international community—Umar Yar’Adua put on a show of shame.  

In announcing that Ribadu must proceed to the Nigerian Institute of Policy and Strategic Studies (NIPSS) at Kuru, Inspector General of Police, Mike Okiro, took care to emphasize the routine nature of the redeployment. Okiro was at pains to underscore the absence of political considerations in his decision. The police boss’s protestations had the opposite of the intended effect. They pointed us in the direction not of confidence but suspicion. If any scintilla of credibility attached to Okiro’s statement, it was erased two days later. That’s when it was revealed that the police authorities had also dispatched Ibrahim Lamorde, Ribadu’s immediate subordinate, to a course as well. The agency’s two top helmsmen sent away in one fell swoop? 

It was as if, heady with victory, the forces that nudged Ribadu out of the way decided they might as well ensure that no Ribadu clone should be left standing. There were rumbles of more ousters. According to some reports, the objective was to gut the anti-corruption agency, nothing less. At the end of this make-over, the EFCC is envisioned to resemble and act like a toothless bulldog.    

From most accounts, neither Ribadu nor Lamorde knew that they were being considered for training spots. Excuse my ignorance, but isn’t it normal practice to notify officers of the prospect of their selection for training? The police boss ought to proffer some sound justification for keeping both men in the dark concerning their nomination for management training. That, or the secrecy of the whole exercise is bound to serve as indictment.  

The sudden twist in Ribadu’s fate holds profound lessons about the cult of personality that plagues Nigeria’s public sphere. For ill or good, Ribadu succeeded in putting his unique stamp on the EFCC. He was outspoken and occasionally loquacious, a man allergic to working outside of the limelight. His reedy frame notwithstanding, he loomed as a larger than life figure. If many Nigerians feel distraught about his exit, it is not only because they fear that the important war against corruption is being abandoned. A far more serious factor is that, in the popular imagination, Ribadu had become, willy-nilly, synonymous with the EFCC. A concomitant, then, is the idea of the man’s indispensability.  

The antidote to such ideas is the rooting of institutions in firm principles and practices instead of the current dependence on the charisma and gravitas of one or two individuals. An agency like the EFCC ought not to be encumbered by political meddlesomeness of the kind that we witnessed under Obasanjo, and that is playing itself out again.  

In the short term, the biggest loser from all the brouhaha is Yar’Adua, a man whose illegitimacy is compounded by doubts about his legacy. Was he was goaded into imprudent action by those who wangled his questionable mandate or did his removal of Ribadu reflect an instinctive identification with those who loot the public treasury? In the long run, Yar’Adua’s only recipe for self-redemption lies in reinvigorating the EFCC with leaders who will beat Ribadu in every department. Such new leaders must possess the mettle to resist political directives from any quarters as well as rebuff any invitation to serve as the sitting president’s bully boys. Need one add that such a team must have the muscle to stare into the financial affairs of even—especially—an Obasanjo?  




RobotRobot is offline 
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 # 1

var sbtitle2472=encodeURIComponent(Nuhu Ribadu...Read the full article.

Posted by Robot| 31.12.2007 13:00

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K_StationK_Station is offline 
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 # 2

Dear ON,
Good article, but I think your attempt here at 'middle-grounding' is betrayed by the fact that you are so obsessed with OBJ that I wonder if you sleep at night without dreaming of him. You acknowledged that the EFCC arrested and charged Ibori for corruption but in the same paragraph you implied that the EFCC's anti-graft war is "feigned". It seems you want to acknowledge Ribadu's achievement but not any appreciation for the man. We cannot seperate the two as a man without any integrity cannot achieve what Ribadu achieved especially in Nigeria. He stood up for the right cause (he doesn't have to!) when he could have easily compromised and be at peace with the thieving cabal. His integrity and values are rare in Nigeria of today and such a person should be widely praised if only to encourage others that Nigerians appreciate good deeds when we see one. The easiest job in Nigeria is to criticize and condemn; it's time we start appreciating those who at least fail to succumb to the worst in all of us.

Posted by K_Station| 31.12.2007 14:06

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19 guy19 guy is offline 
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 # 3

Criticizing Nuhu for his reluctance to investigate Obasanjo isn't dissimilar to you being criticized by others here for never highlighting Orji Uzor Kalu's sins. We do not live in a perfect world.

Nuhu was encumbered by OBJ in the same way you clearly are by OUK.

Happy New Year.

Posted by 19 guy| 31.12.2007 14:11

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ZanderlexZanderlex is offline 
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 # 4

My assessment is that Nuhu Ribadu has joined the distinguished league of honest men and the finest ever in Nigeria which includes true patriots like Mohamadu Buhari, Murtala Mohamed, Tunde Idiagbon, Chukwuma Nzeogwu, etc. This guy did his best within the contest of the prevailing circumstance at this time. Lets praise him.

Posted by Zanderlex| 31.12.2007 14:11

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Frisky LarrFrisky Larr is offline 
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 # 5

I almost short of words to express my thanks to all three commentators above. You have all placed this hypocritical crocodile tears in its right and deserving place.

Posted by Frisky Larr| 31.12.2007 14:32

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Ebe2Ebe2 is offline 
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 # 6

Okey:

Thank you for managing to cover all the important angles to this story. Your take is spot on. This is not a time to celebrate the supposed indispensability of Ribadu. It is a time to reflect on the motive, method, and effect of his removal vis-a-vis the anti-corruption effort, and to recognise that Ribadu was at once a courageous and incorruptible crusader and a politically compromised, sloppy, selective, and inconsistent crime fighter. Such is the complexity of Ribadu that it is hard not to be nuanced in analyzing his rise and fall. In the end, I am not sure that he did enough or achieved enough success to redeem himself from his pro-OBJ shenanigans. Which is why it is ironical that Yar'Adua's government may have, through this shoddy sack, made it possible for Ribadu to walk away with some luster in the public's eye.

Posted by Ebe2| 31.12.2007 14:33

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Triple PalaverTriple Palaver is offline 
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 # 7


=19 guy;4294976735>Criticizing Nuhu for his reluctance to investigate Obasanjo isn't dissimilar to you being criticized by others here for never highlighting Orji Uzor Kalu's sins. We do not live in a perfect world.

Nuhu was encumbered by OBJ in the same way you clearly are by OUK.

Happy New Year.



GBAM GBAM GBAM GBAM.. Chei.. Ol boy, I can't thank you enough. See pot Okey Ndibe wey dey call Kettle black.

Posted by Triple Palaver| 31.12.2007 14:51

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MrOneNaijaMrOneNaija is offline 
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 # 8

NUHU RIBADU BLACKMAILS NIGERIA, REPORTEDLY STEALS FILES ON OBASANJO

Hopefully, I'll offer my comment on Okeh Ndibe's article later. For now, I'd suggest this rather troubling report for your consumption.



Ribadu Begs Yar’Adua, Blackmails FG

By Wole Olujobi, Wisdom Patrick, Sebastine Ebhuomhan and Rafiu Ajakaye, Lagos
Daily Independent online
Mon, 31 Dec 2007 00:00:00

Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Nuhu Ribadu, may have adopted a two-prong response to the decision by Police authorities to send him on a one-year course at the National Institute of Policy and Strategic Studies (NIPSS) in Kuru, near Jos, Plateau State.

On the one hand, Ribadu has been on the trail of the President, Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, tagging around him to Kano on Saturday, where the latter had gone to attend the wedding of the daughter of the National Security Adviser, Aisha Muktar, and following him to Katsina, his home state, on Sunday. Ribadu’s mission: Seeking audience with President Yar’Adua, with the plea that he would wish to be retired from the Police Force, on condition he is allowed to continue his headship of the EFCC. The EFCC Act allows a retired police officer to head the Commission.

President Yar’Adua did not grant Ribadu audience.

On the other hand, Ribadu is reportedly instigating foreign donors and missions against the Yar’Adua administration, by sending messages to donor agencies requesting them to put pressure on the President to back off removing him from the EFCC or face international isolation. Intelligence reports indicate that the messages were intercepted by International Police Organisation (Interpol).

The reports also allege†that Ribadu has removed from his office all petitions against former President Olusegun Obasanjo, including the one by the Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL), ostensibly to shield him (Obasanjo) from probe. Ribadu faces allegations of acting out the script of Obasanjo, a view strengthened by his failure to probe the former president and his cronies despite a stream of petitions demanding such.

Aso Rock is silent on the plan to send Ribadu on course, but is believed to support the routine exercise, and prominent Nigerians have warned against indiscipline if Ribadu evades the course.

Until now, even as an Assistant Inspector General of Police (AIG), Ribadu has not attended any major police training, and the one in Kuru would be his first.

Talk is in the air that the State Security Service (SSS) has an incriminating dossier on Ribadu, but that its former Director General turned down the demand for his probe.

Ibrahim Lamorde, Director of Operations at the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), is also scheduled to attend another course, alongside other senior police officers, at the Police Staff College in Jos.



Posted by MrOneNaija| 31.12.2007 15:00

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overdryvoverdryv is offline 
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 # 9

Okey once again thanks for a masterpiece. I now know that EFCC was established at the request of some western nations that Nigeria's corruption was impacting on negatively. I had wondered why Obj gave an approval for the birth of this body knowing fully well that his friend, IBB arguably the overlord of corruption could become a victim. It has been bandied in some quarters that Obj himself had N20,000 in his account when he came out of Abacha's gulag in 1998. This was a freudian slip by one of his boys El-Rufai to misinform the public. There was never a time Obj wasnt a millionare since quitting office in 1979. Remember he was one of the key actors of N2.8 billion missing oil money. Except El-Rufai was telling us that the liquid cash he had in Nigerian banks was N20,000. No mention was made of his accounts overseas. If this amount credited to him was true, where did he get the money he donated to PDP shortly after he was conscripted to vie for the presidential candidacy?

To get an insight into the personality of Nuhu Ribadu, it is necessary to look at the characters Obj had surrounded himself with in his eight years in office. A quick glossary shows the likes of Tony Anenih, the Uba brothers, Fani-kayode, Maurice Iwu, Tafa Balogun, Sunday Afolabi, Lamidi Adedibu, Kwakwanso, Iyiola Omisere and others too numerous to mention. Now tell me who among this lot has no scandal hanging over his head? It then follows that Nuhu ribadu cannot be man of integrity for being a trusted ally of Obj. One cannot plant cassava and harvest yams.

I personally blame a man who would come out and fight corruption on behalf of a sitting president. Nigeria is still a primitive country where you dont expect to survive after taking on kingpins of corruption that are in a position to fund execution squads. I have not seen the statute establishing EFCC but I doubt if an EFCC's head is entitled to life protection.
The import of what is happening now is that Nigeria's problem would remain for ages to come. The government of the day has become very arrogant for its disdain for public feeling. What we are witnessing is like a horror movie in progress. These things exist only in moonlight tales. The coincidences in the matter of the moment are too numerous to be left to chance. There is a saying that the witch cried last night and the child died in the morning.
All the things that happened in the anti corruption war as it relates to Ibori have government stamp on them. His fleeing to Ghana and return was at the instance of the Yar'adua regime. It is now clear he has been asked to corporate by cooling his heels in the prison for a while so as give an impression to the outside world that we are fighting corruption. The question now is with the departure of Ribadu and Lamorde, who would take up the prosecution of Ibori? Except the likes of Gani and Umar are brought on board, there is no living Nigerian that can rise up to the occasion.
In the near future we shall be spectators to a theatre of the most absurd. The government may even prime some one to come out and put up a show that he or she would rest until corruption banished from our polity.

The major beneficiary of Ribadu's ouster is Ibori. How else could Ibori be left off the hook with Ribadu around? But we are watching to see the next Odu The only viable solution to the present debacle is an uprising by the masses but that would not happen because of the peculiar nature of Nigeria. This is the time people could have called for a military intervention but the Nigeria military is a discredited class. The conditions that precipitated past coups are not anything near what is happening now. Can one imagine a situation where the system is churning out monsters like Obj and Ibori? You give someone who is a known criminal billions of allocations every month. He co-opt his members of state assembly to approve supplementary budgets that are not used for any physical projects. Now we are being insulted with a claim that Ibori embezzled N9 biilion, an amount that some of his mistresees have in their accounts.

Posted by overdryv| 31.12.2007 15:03

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aguabataaguabata is offline 
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 # 10

EFCC was politicised. If Orji Kalu was a quiet, thieving Governor in Abia State he wouldnt be among the first few to be docked, EFCC was comfortable with OBJ's sanctimonious stance.In our primal urge to lynch these corrupt men we seem to ignore the fairness which if not checked will give room to ethnic/religous sentiments. The people that celebrated Alamesiagh's return weren't dancing because they condoned corruption but because they've rightly or wrongly percieved his ordeal as a political/ethnic vendetta.

Posted by aguabata| 31.12.2007 15:04

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