Nigerians elected President Muhammadu Buhari on his promise to lead the charge to eliminate corruption in public life, and move to bring those who “looted” the national treasury to book. This is a herculean obligation for which thecurrent administration must be supported and given both cooperation and the benefit of doubt by the public. I am a supporter of this particular goal of the administration, and I haveno doubts at all that a majority of Nigerians want the books opened and proper sanction meted on those who may be found culpable.There is only one condition: that the process be within the bounds of the rule of law. Otherwise it will be seen as a witch hunt. Recent chatter in fact indicate that the current administration isexploring moves to investigate or probe the lastpresident, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan. And I say, why not? Probe him! Anyone who holds public office must be prepared to submit to scrutiny, and to account for their deeds in service to the nation. There is nothing wrong in investigating aformer president, and if there is material evidence found that the former president engagedin illegal activity, and misused his powers as president, he must be made to appear before thelaw courts and the heavens should not fall. There are two grounds on which to probe the former president: one is, to closely examine andascertain any possible involvement in corrupt enrichment through the authorization of contractsto interests connected directly or by proxy to him; the nature of those contracts and the level of due diligence done in authorizing the power to execute, and any possibility of backhandednessin the form of baksheesh or kickback paid eitherdirectly to him or his proxies in furtherance of his personal interests while serving as president.What does the ex-president own, and how did heacquire these within the period he served as president; and how does his personal worth tallywith his declared interests and worth submitted on the assumption of office to the Code of Conduct Bureau? The second area for which thepresident should be investigated is certainly in the handling of the national accounts as determined by the laws of the federation, and within the bounds of federalism. Did the ex-president break the laws? And if he did, did he hide any material evidence from the National Assembly, which made it impossible for the Assembly to provide as a result, institutional oversight that should have reined-in the president? If he did not hide evidence from the National Assembly, and the National Assembly did not act, to forestall any illegalities on behalfof the nation, what agency of government failedto prevent the execution of any possible illegalityby the president?The probe and trial of Goodluck Jonathan wouldbe good for Nigeria in a number of ways: it will test the very principle of immunity under whose coverage a lot of people have committed atrocities in the name of the nation. A central question that has often exercised the minds of Nigerians is whether anyone who has served as president can be brought, at the end of tenure, to answer to charges for conduct in office covered under the immunity clause. For instance,President Buhari himself refused to appear before the late Justice Chukwudifu Oputa, when he was summoned, during the sitting of the Human Rights Violation and Investigations Commission, also known as the Truth Commission. They did not arrest Buhari for hiscontempt of the judge.There were questions about whether the immunitygranted to his person while in office extends to that process, and whether indeed he could be questioned and countermanded for acts carried out in his official capacity as president, with very wide immunity powers.Former president Jonathan will certainly contemplate his own response, particularly withinthe questions of the immunity granted his person, in the disclosure of certain routine decisions covered by his immunity and the officials secrets Act.It might require the courts to suspend those rights, and it might be a great day for ordinaryNigerians, who have argued for limited immunityfor the office of the president rather than the kind of sweeping immunity which presidents currently enjoy. Probing Jonathan will certainly be a great first step, trying him for misconductwill be a great step forward, were the government’s investigation to find serious evidence linking the former president to personalcorruption.Across the pond, Brazil is going through the same question. Nigeria and Brazil have very many things in common. Aside from being the second largest nation after Nigeria, with the largest population of black people in the world, Brazil has also suffered through many military coups and democratic transitions. The crash in global oil price has also hobbled Brazil’s economy, and there is wide discontent among thepublic. Current president, Ms. Dilma Rouseff, is facing impeachment for manipulating budget figures to boost accounts of public spending to aid her re-election in 2014. Sounds familiar? Well, yes, it is called “budget padding” and the Brazilians are not joking. But more relevantly, her predecessor, Brazil’s former President, the charismatic, populist, Luis Inacio Lula Da Silva isfacing a federal probe over questions of money laundering and alleged kickback received followingthe Petrobras scandal.Petrobras is Nigeria’s equivalent of the NNPC.It too is mired in its own scandals. But the proportion of that scandal, compared with what has gone on with Nigeria’s NNPC will be considered rather mild. Yet former President Lulais being investigated for his role in the scandal while in office; brought to the police station in Sao Paolo and questioned vigorously by state prosecutors. It doesn’t matter that he was a former president.It doesn’t matter that his party is in power, and that the current President wants to protecthim. The process is independent, scrupulous, andoutside of the power of the president to contain,intervene, or even initiate. And why is “a wholeformer President Lula” being investigated by “ordinary Public prosecutors”? Because he is suspected to have received bribes with which he bought a beachfront apartment in the city of Guraja. And Nigerians will ask, “just a beachfront apartment?” Well, yes, just a beachfront apartment. The beauty, and the particular difference between societies that wish to survive, and in which the citizens are respected by their public servants, and who respect themselves is that no one is above the law. There is neither Kabiyesi nor peasant in these matters.A government prosecutor does his work, secure in his rights and tenure to do so; knowing alsothat any misuse of his office for personal and vindictive pursuits, will also earn him serious sanctions. The permission to probe does not come from the president. It comes from the constitution, and that is the difference with Nigeria. Nigerian presidents are given the powerof gods.It must be a transparent process. It must also go further than Jonathan. We must investigate Obasanjo, Abdulsalam, Babangida, and even Buhari himself.The scandalous miasma in the NNPC did not begin with Jonathan. Nigerian investigators mustbe granted the power to examine all books backto 1975, at least, and bring all to probe, and before justice. It is a good thing to probe and try Jonathan. It should open the floodgate, and permit the recovery of Nigeria’s looted patrimony. The revelations of the goings on in the Jonathan administration is shocking and horrendous. But I wager, that there is worse, and we need to bring it all to light. So, yes, let us probe Jonathan.
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