Business
is slow at the moment for Benedict Okafor, who sells luxury cars from a
lot near the port in Nigeria’s financial capital, Lagos.
In
the capital, Abuja, 535 kilometres (333 miles) away, the property
market seems to be in a rut, with the habitual buyers — the monied elite
— staying away.
“I
normally sold five cars every month before” President Muhammadu Buhari
came to power, said Okafor. “But in the past four months I have sold
only one Toyota car.
“I guess rich people are scared.”
Jide
Agboola, a real estate agent in Abuja, also attributed the current
slump in conspicuous consumption to fear: “The fear of Buhari.”
It’s
not hard to see why when Buhari’s promised crusade against high-level
corruption has already snared a series of household names.
Senate
leader Bukola Saraki — Nigeria’s third-most senior politician after
Buhari and his vice-president Yemi Osinbajo — is facing charges of false
declaration of assets.
Godswill
Akpabio, the former governor of coastal Akwa Ibom state, was hauled in
for questioning over claims he had stolen 108 billion naira ($540
million, 475 million euros) while in office.
Sule
Lamido, the governor of Jigawa state in the north, and Gabriel Suswam,
who was governor of Benue state until earlier this year, are also
fighting accusations of graft.
At
the same time, former oil minister Diezani Alison-Madueke, was arrested
in London as part of a British investigation into suspected bribery and
money laundering.
– Stopping the rot –
Buhari’s
arrival in May appears to have given fresh bite to the fight against
corruption, which has plagued Nigeria over decades of military rule then
civilian administration.
Cases
involving top officials that were long thought to have been shelved
have been revived, as he seeks to fulfil his election promises of
stopping the rot in the system.
“As
soon as he (Buhari) came to power, without any direct instruction from
him, the anti-graft agencies went into a frenzy, dusting down cases of
corruption against some past officials which have been long dead in
order to convince Nigerians that they are working,” Debo Adeniran, head
of the pressure group Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, told AFP.
The
move was predictable for many: Buhari’s previous time in power as the
head of a military regime in the 1980s was characterised by his
so-called “War Against Indiscipline”.
“Everybody
remembers Buhari’s antecedents when he was a military dictator,” said
Bukola Daniel, a Lagos-based political scientist.
“He
was a no-nonsense military ruler. The fear of Buhari is now
all-pervading and everybody is careful not to be caught in a corruption
web.”
– Witch-hunt? –
Nigeria’s main opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), however, is crying double standards.
They
point out that the former governors of Lagos and Rivers states,
Babatunde Fashola and Rotimi Amaechi, have both been accused of graft
but are still in line for ministerial posts.
Instead,
the PDP described the anti-corruption drive as a “witch-hunt” against
its members and other “perceived political opponents” of Buhari’s All
Progressives Congress (APC) government.
Party spokesman Olisa Metuh denounced what he described as “the relentless victimisation of our key members”.
The APC dismissed the claim as a “worn-out argument”.
Certainly,
Alison-Madueke’s arrest in particular has underlined to Nigeria’s elite
that it’s no longer business as usual — even if Abuja has denied any
direct involvement.
But Adeniran and others said Buhari needed to go further to avoid accusations of posturing.
Clement
Nwankwo, head of the Policy and Legal Advocacy Centre, a pro-democracy
group, said securing convictions would prove the situation was not just
“rhetoric”.
“The challenge to corruption has to be systematic. That I have not seen,” he said.
“We
also cannot fight corruption with the judiciary we have today,” he
added, explaining the courts were ill-equipped to deal with corruption
cases.
– ‘A few more Buharis’ –
For now, there is a sense that rich and powerful Nigerians — so long accustomed to impunity — are on their best behaviour.
How
long it will last is unclear but social commentator and university
lecturer Samson Olatunde Oduleye said Buhari’s influence could be
decisive.
“If
we have a few more Buharis and emphasis shifts to the root of the
problem — the society — inroads can be made into a sustainable assault
on the malaise,” he said.
“The most effective, non-legal check on corruption is the moral tone of society: societal values.

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