Subsidy Thieves Will Go Scot Free- Obinna Akukwe
                    
The recent clamor for subsidy thieves to be prosecuted is as  illusionary as hoping that Lucifer will betray the Queen of the Coast. I  have reiterated in an earlier piece, ‘Shut Up! Nigerian Government  Cannot Prosecute Subsidy Thieves, those who hoped that subsidy thieves  will be prosecuted will be disappointed at the crash of their optimism.  Recent events have shown that successfully prosecuting those who stole  N1.7 trillion naira that belongs to the Nigerian people under a  fraudulent subsidy regime as revealed by the Farouk Lawan led Subsidy  Probe Committee of the House of Representative reports and the recent  Aigboje Aig-Imoukhede Presidential Review Committee is a mirage and can  never happen.
 
The CBN was first contracted to rubbish the report, later the NNPC  joined fray. Their attempts to discredit the subsidy probe report failed  to impress both the Nigerian people and the Nigerian media. They  changed tactics; the Attorney General of the Federation came with his  own version of the understanding of the report and was short of calling  it an ill prepared document which needs proper reconstruction. Nigerians  ignored him and continued with calls for the prosecution of oil  thieves. The Lawan $3 million dollars bribery scandal came and Nigerians  refused to be distracted from the substance of the matter. Now the  government has directed the EFCC to investigate the reports and  prosecute offenders. That is where the matter will finally die due to  imbecile prosecution.
 
The EFCC have buried different cases of corruption due to  inconclusive investigations or haphazard prosecutions. In some cases  there is deliberate collusion between the EFCC, the suspects and the  Judiciary to encumber the cases so that nothing will come out of it.  What happened in the Erastus Akingbola case where the Judge dismissed  the suit for incompetent prosecution is a case at hand.
 
The only achievement of the subsidy probe is information. This  information will be vindictively handy in the day of revolution or  reckoning when the Nigerian people will reclaim their commonwealth from  the hands of thieving leadership. The second gain is that the thieves  will reduce their tempo and this reduced tempo will save the nation  billions of dollars of hitherto stolen funds.
 
The expectation that Goodluck Jonathan will prosecute the fingers  that fed his presidential election is wishful thinking. During Obasanjo  era, the former president refused to surrender Babangida for  prosecution. The Dr Pius Okigbo Committee report on the squandering of  $12 billion dollar gulf oil windfall disappeared from all public records  during the tenure of Olusegun Obasanjo. All attempts by the Nigerian  people to pressurize Obasanjo to prosecute the Babangida fell on deaf  ears because the later was the leader of the people who dragged Obasanjo  into the State House in 1999.
 
Umaru Yaradua was not able to surrender James Ibori for trial. He  frustrated all earlier attempts by the Metropolitan Police to arraign  James Ibori for money laundering charges. He sent a high powered letter  and delegation from Aoondoaka, then Attorney General and Minister for  Justice of Nigeria to convince the British police that Ibori was a clean  man. Ibori had used Delta State funds to bankroll his presidency with  the permutations that Goodluck Jonathan will be dropped as Vice  President after Yaradua’s first tenure.
 
There is yet no record in Nigeria where a political godson led the  arraignment of the godfather for corruption related matters. Godsons and  godfathers quarrel in Nigeria over control of state resources but their  disagreement has never degenerated to the extent of the godson and  incumbent dragging his benefactor to the courts for fraud related  matters. It is a no go area for Nigerian politicians. Goodluck Jonathan  cannot be an exception. He cannot be different from the tradition that  trumped him up.
 
Goodluck Jonathan would still have won the 2011 presidential  elections without the assistance of the huge funds deployed at the time.  The hawks convinced him that without a huge financial chest, his  presidential dream is finished, and such reasoning commenced the process  of the looting of national treasury unprecedented in the history of  Nigeria. Therefore, the people who used different guise to mobilize  those funds cannot be victimized through fraud related prosecutions.  Funds were mobilized from Fuel Subsidy bills, Pensions, Capital Market,  Customs, Federal Inland Revenue, Ministries, Departments and Parastatals  of Government. The fronts refused to surrender the privilege even after  the elections had been concluded. The presidency preferred to confront  the masses by removal of fuel subsidy than face the blood sucking oil  mafia.http://www.osundefender.org/?p=35478
The earlier this government runs affairs by telling the truth, the  better for all. The opposition Action Congress of Nigeria had earlier  called on President Jonathan to apologize to Nigerians over the subsidy  scandal. This is the best he can do under the circumstances. Let him  apologize to Nigerians for allowing his party men and their friend’s  costly indulgence in endless sharing of subsidy national cake and  promise to block all loopholes whereby such thievery will occur in the  future. Nigerians will likely appreciate an admittance of wrongdoing and  a verifiable evidence of preventing future occurrence than the current  circus show.
The politics of N1.7 trillion naira subsidy thefts is a time bomb  which will likely explode on the thieving politicians and their business  associates in the not too distant future. Equally, the possibility of  Goodluck Jonathan betraying his helpers is rare and such optimism is an  expensive mental exercise. This cartel is so oiled and powerful that  crumbling the Jonathan administration will take them a few weeks and for  a president already frightened by Boko Haram Jihadists, he cannot  afford another battle with the oil thieves.
 
 
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Nigeria. I pray this country grow
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