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Leadership, covetousness and corruption in Nigeria

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The leadership in Nigeria is wealth-crazy; they defiantly and brazenly flaunt unjustly acquired wealth, thereby inciting and planting the seed of corruption in the mind of the followership

By Rev Arize Nwobu

TUE, JANUARY 15 2019-theG&BJournal-Corruption is the ‘’act or effect of making somebody change from moral to immoral behaviour in order to get an advantage or in return for money. It is the lack of integrity or honesty and use of a position of trust for dishonest gain especially of people in authority’’.

The act of corruption is Satanic and is energized by the spirits of pride, ingratitude and covetousness. Pride is unreasonable and inordinate self esteem, personified as one of the deadly sins. It seeks unjust, illegal and godless exaltation, while ingratitude speaks of lack of appreciation or discontentment with who we are or what we have.

Covetousness is extreme greed for material wealth; reprehensive acquisitiveness and insatiable desire for wealth. It is avarice, cupidity or rapacity. Covetousness seeks unjust or dishonest gains in order exalt self and dethrone another. It is an envious eagerness to possess something. The spirit of covetousness blinds man to God’s workings in his life.

Corruption originated in Heaven, through the pride, ingratitude and covetousness of Lucifer, an arch angel, now Satan, who wanted possessions, independence and worship and coveted the throne of God.  He was cast out and down to the earth, but through subtility and chicanery, he deceived and corrupted the federal head of mankind; first, Adam- female (Eve), who later co-opted Adam-male, and their corruption was  imputed into the generality of mankind.

Proud, ungrateful and covetous people have a greater proclivity to steal.  Anything, material or spiritual, acquired through illegal means amount to stealing. And God abhors stealing. He would rather we beg than steal.

Corrupt acts are manifests in all nations, but some nations are more corrupt than others. Not too long, the former Prime Minister of Britain, David Cameron, in a gossip, qualified Nigeria as a ‘’fantastically corrupt country’’, and President Muhammadu Buhari, readily agreed, later, in an interview with SkyNews, though some  analysts criticised him for his simplicity.

The truth about corruption in Nigeria is bare.  Corruption is pervasive and walks on all fours and in all forms. Our institutions, structures, systems and processes have been bastardized and steeped in corruption, even as the ruling class seem to have lost the moral rectitude.

The Chairman, Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption, Professor Itse Sagay, in an interview published in Sunday Sun newspaper of May 29, 2016 berated Nigerian legislators:  ‘’The moral burden they are carrying is just too heavy. I am surprised we have a group of legislators who don’t have shame. Going to buy cars that costs as much as N38 million per unit of cars for themselves in a country where people are finding it difficult to enjoy a meal a day is unacceptable. It is a total shameless abuse of power. It is a lack of restraint in self promotion and self exaltation at the expense of the whole country.’’

Similarly,  Dr Olapade Agoro,  Founder, National Action Council, in the same publication, said, ‘’the leadership of the National Assembly is a corrupt evil. If not, how will a lawmaker be clamouring to buy a jeep worth N66 million.’’

The reasons for pervasive corruption in Nigeria are spiritual, sociological and political. In his book’’ Survey of Biblical Geography’’, the late erudite and internationally acclaimed Bible Teacher and Founding Rector, Faith Theological Seminary, Sango Ota, Ogun State, Reverend Dr Sir Ige Olumide, noted that ‘’through the spirit-directed eyes of Scriptures especially the book of Daniel, we see behind nations and cultural groups, powerful spirit being, demonic principalities, who shape and guide national destinies, traits and characteristics. Their influence is exerted through national idolatories’’.

Continuing, he said ‘’power is the fundamental temptation. The dark princes cluster at power centres like vultures over carnage. Principalities assign their territorial demons to cluster at national and corporate power centres. Demons find ground for their activity through people, thus demonic assignments are determined by the people occupying those territories and the peculiar ground they give to demons’’.

It is evident that a greater segment of the ruling class in Nigeria is under the influence of a malevolent principality which promotes covetousness and stealing. And covetousness pollutes a nation; it retards growth and development, devastates and despoils the poor.

One of God’s conditions to be a leader is to hate covetousness. ‘’Moreover thou shall provide out of all the people able men, such as fear God, men of truth, hating COVETOUSNESS (emphasis is mine) and place such over them to be rulers of thousands and rulers of hundreds, rulers of fifties and rulers of tens.’’ (Exodus 18 vs 21).

God want leaders to be responsible and cater for the poor.  He said, ‘’when the poor and needy seek water and there is none and their tongue faileth for thirst, I the Lord will hear them, I the God of Israel will not forsake them. I will open rivers in high places and fountains in the midst of the valleys, I will make the wilderness  a pool of water, and the dry land springs of water.’’  That points to   the faithfulness and compassion of God.

But, it is through human beings, especially those in positions of authority that God cater for the poor, the reason leaders in wise nations regard and support the poor for God’s sake and for country’s prosperity, while foolish nations, especially in Africa steal from the poor.

Sociologically, corruption is pervasive in Nigeria because of the values upheld by the leadership. Leadership is value-based and influences the followership. A leader is one to show the way, a guide to direct, persuade or precede. The values upheld by leaders permeate the followership.

The concept of leadership relates to the alternative concept of the flag, which is that, if you have to lead a people, you need to raise ‘’something’’ above them.  For example,   Jesus, as it were, raised a ‘’flag’’ of Blue, White and Red colours with many stripes (the colours and pattern adopted for the US flag). In Christian theology, Blue colour symbolize Heaven (where He came from); White, His Purity or Righteousness and Red, Power (in His Blood).  His flag has stripes of Love, peace, compassion, faithfulness, humility, obedience, righteousness, Grace, sacrifice,  Salvation,   integrity, g  power, riches, wisdom, blessings, honour, glory,   empowerment and more.

Jesus raised virtues above mankind and excellently fulfilled His earthly mandate as a leader and made Christians of His followers for a peaceful and better society. But the values raised by the leadership in Nigeria are materialistic and immoral. The leadership in Nigeria is wealth-crazy; they defiantly and brazenly flaunt unjustly acquired wealth, thereby inciting and planting the seed of corruption in the mind of the followership.

Politically, the foundational structure of the country aggravates corruption. Too much power and resources are concentrated at the centre. As the former Vice President , Atiku Abubakar  said  in a press report, ‘’Nigeria is not working as well as it should and part of the reason is the way we have structured our country and governance, especially since the late 1960s.’’

Moreover, corruption festered in Nigeria because of the transgressions of some of our founding fathers in their quest for power, recognition and domination. Through words and deeds, some of them encouraged tribalism and inequity, and ignited an evil consciousness which corrupted the polity in all ramifications.

But, remarkably, the   Right Honourable Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe, was the most broad-minded and detribalized founding father.  And this is with a sense of responsibility. Zik was not ethnocentric; he was holistic. Based on his exposure in the USA, he had a finer mindset of what nation building entail, and genuinely desired and worked for a ‘rainbow coalition’ for Nigeria.

The remedy to corruption in Nigeria is in a vibrant civil activism, determined and sustained value re-orientation and effective enforcement of existing laws. Democracy is a model of governance evolved to checkmate the excesses and stealing propensity of rulers, as God revealed in the Bible (See 1 Samuel Chapter 8 vs 10-18).  ‘People power’ is central to democracy; without it, rulers can steal unrestrained and ride roughshod on the followership.

Law is central to multifaceted development (moral, social, economic and political). As Dr Nwudego Nkemakonam Chinwuba, Senior Lecturer and former Acting Head, Department of Private and Property Law, University of Lagos, and Visiting Scholar, Faculty of Law University of Reading, England, United Kingdom, noted in her work, ‘’Changing Perspectives of Law on Human Evolution:  ‘’Attainment of National Peace and Development Through a Socio-Legal Re-Construction of Patriarchy’’,  ‘’the most fundamental incident or price of development is change; change in the way things are done. Law serves the purpose of providing a structure on which its members may be guided into a normative paradise, bearing in mind the imperfect nature of a human being’’.

Value re-orientation is top priority in the present circumstance. Though it may be an uphill task in view of the depth and breadth of corruption in the system, but it is achievable through a combination of effective law enforcement and innovative, coordinated and reinforced communication strategies.

But it must begin with the leadership and law enforcement agencies.  A society with corrupt leaders and law enforcement agents can never achieve any meaningful development in any ramification -moral, social, economic or political.

Until the psyche of the ruling class and law enforcement agents are straightened, first,  the reign of corruption and its pervasive stench will continue to prevail  to our collective loss.

Nwobu, a Chartered Stockbroker and Business Journalist wrote via arizenwobu@yahoo.com

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Access Pensions, Future Shaping
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