In an interview with Channels Television
monitored by ENIOLA AKINKUOTU, National Peace Committee member and
Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Sokoto, Bishop Matthew Kukah, speaks
about President Muhammadu Buhari’s anti-corruption war and other issues
There were
talks that some members of your committee had been approached to mediate
in anti-corruption matters. Although you have debunked that, your
committee has said that the Federal Government’s excessive talk on probe
is distracting. Is this true?
Brutally, what you are asking is what I
have heard people say and that is that former President Goodluck
Jonathan has approached us to beg the President. First of all, I am a
priest and anybody is free to beg me to beg someone or to beg God. But
more importantly, there is no way that I or any member of the committee
can be told to go and beg President Muhammadu Buhari for a favour in
anything relating to corruption. His body language does not suggest that
and only a fool would undertake that kind of mission. I think I can
speak for the members of the committee. Before we went to see the
President at 9am on that same day, we spent about an hour with former
President Jonathan. And please let us not lose sight of what has
happened in this country. Jonathan said it and I am sure Nigerians have
heard it that when we met with the Board of Trustees of the Peoples
Democratic Party, they also made it very clear that not all of them were
in support of the singular decision that Jonathan took and I think that
as Nigerians, we must become sufficiently serious and realise that that
singular act is what has kept us as a nation. With all the billions and
trillions in the world coming from the outer space, we would need to
have a nation first. So, I think that even for that singular act alone,
Nigerians must be appreciative of what President Jonathan did.
As
for how this country will move forward, President Jonathan was
eloquently clear in saying that he was not afraid of probe but we are
saying that if you are going to a forest to catch a monkey, you don’t go
blowing a whistle or beating a drum. And I don’t think that we should
be preoccupied with how this probe is going to be undertaken. There are
no charges against President Jonathan or anybody for that matter. And
please let me make it very clear, anybody is free to approach the
committee with any ideas, including former President Jonathan or
President Buhari.
But from your interview with
State House correspondents, it seems your committee is not satisfied
with the manner this administration is going about with its fight
against corruption. Is that right?
Please, let us not forget that the
vice-president of this country is one of the best lawyers I know. He is
also a professor of law. I don’t think people like him can preside over
illegalities. What everybody should focus on is that it might be
Jonathan today, and we don’t have a case against Jonathan on the table.
Even if we do, this public lynching is not going to help anybody. Nobody
knows whether when Buhari steps aside, he might face the same thing.
What we are talking about is that we are not in a military regime, we
are in a democracy and somebody has said there are no probes in a
democracy but only investigations. We are not going to grow in this
nation until we have finished probes. Let us not forget, Abacha has been
dead for almost 20 years and we were promised his monies but some of
the monies have not been recovered, so let us not kid ourselves. Even if
you are going to go into a probe, it is not a substitute for governance
and we are interested in the fact that every sane Nigerian must be
conscious of the fact that it might be another person today and might be
you tomorrow. And I think that we should not become so preoccupied with
Jonathan to the extent that we forget the spectacular benefit that we
gained under his presidency. Politics has ended and now is the time for
governance.
How come all that was reported from your visit to Jonathan was that the treasury looters will soon be brought to trial?
That is simply because the media has its
own prejudices just like the rest of us in Nigeria. There are people in
the media who believe that Jonathan and the PDP and other bad people
should be hounded out of this country or whatever and I have no problem
with that. All I am saying is that if you have a problem, there are
processes for dealing with that. The committee cannot inherit the
prejudices of other people. For some inexplicable reasons, some sections
of the media have made insinuations that impugn on the integrity of the
members of the committee and as I said, I called every member of that
committee to serve on that committee and I know how and why I called
every member. I can vouch for their personal integrity and I know that
they can speak for themselves. But I think it is not fair that the media
should create the impression that somehow we should be out on this
public lynching of people when we have no evidence against anybody.
Are you saying that if things
(probes) continue the way they are, we might lose what we might have
gained with the transition from one government to the other?
Absolutely. I don’t want to say this but
frankly I am quite irritated by the way we are frittering away the
opportunities that God has given to us. When you stand on quicksand for
too long, it becomes impossible to get out. There are not many people in
the world that want Nigeria to succeed. We’ve never had this show of
goodwill before and I believe the rest of the international community
and others must be laughing at Nigeria on how we are conducting
ourselves in this way and manner and how we remain our own worst
enemies. For goodness sake, governance does not foreclose people going
to prison and so on, and I don’t believe that even if you recover all
the monies that have been stolen from us, it will not go the same way. I
think the challenge for me and for those in power is that the APC has
to prove itself. Secondly, let us be faithful with little things so that
we will know what will happen to us when greater things are entrusted
into our hands.
But what has brought this concern to the fore for the committee?
I don’t know; you tell me. Because the
journalists that started this scare mongering about the committee being
approached by President Jonathan is as if we are saying that the
government should not probe. Please, I am well over 60 and I think my
records speak for me. I cannot be associated, by any stretch of the
imagination, with anything dubious or hypocritical. I cannot see how any
member of our committee can be associated with such an attempt. What
will be my gain for example, for saying I don’t want XYZ to be probed? I
am simply saying that it can be me tomorrow and it might be you
tomorrow but for goodness sake, had President Jonathan not done what he
did, let us look across the road and look across Africa and let us see
the tragic situation that we are in in Africa. See what is happening in
Burundi, see what happened in Cote d’Ivoire, see what happened in
Rwanda. When the crisis of transitions meant that people put their
personal interest before any other interest and I think that history
will not forget what President Jonathan did and it is not in our
interest to pretend that even if he stole all the money in the world,
and even if the world is bringing everything into Nigeria, I am not sure
where President Buhari will be, I am not sure if I would be sitting
here, I don’t know where the vice-president or any of us would be today.
I am saying let us keep our eyes on the ball.
It seems what you are trying to
impress on the President is that governance must start. Do you believe
that you haven’t seen anything in the direction of governance?
I think we didn’t all expect that we
would have to wait till September to have ministers and I think that
unless we want to be hypocritical, many of us have openly said that if
this was the fourth time that President Buhari wanted to be President,
and successfully became President, the truth of the matter is that you
would have identified many Nigerians across the board who are fit to do
the job but again it is his prerogative to decide how to govern. But I
am saying that given what we heard the APC said, given the claims that
the APC made, the level of their preparedness, the level of their
decision to change, well, we need that change clearly spelt out.
That change cannot definitely just be a
change of actors. It ought to be a change that we can visible see, a
government that is fully prepared. The elections were concluded and
there was a period of time in-between. Finally, all I am saying is that
we need a bit of action, otherwise, Nigerians will expend their energies
on the wrong things. We still have a lot of battles to fight and I
think we will really need to focus on a lot of the problems that this
country faces and to figure out by way of conversation and policy
direction, where are we heading? Boko Haram may stop tomorrow but I can
tell you that will just be the beginning of the most complex and
complicated problem of trying to fix this country. How all these
problems are going to be solved require a lot of thinking.
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