An Exclusive Dailymail report about NIGERIA posted on 9th Aug' 2013
Please take time to read
Nigeria is not quite the most corrupt country on earth. But
according to Transparency International, which monitors international financial
corruption, it is not far off — coming a shameful 172nd worst among the 215
nations surveyed.
Only countries as dysfunctional, derelict and downright
dangerous as Haiti or the Congo are more corrupt.
In theory, Nigeria’s 170 million-strong population should be
prospering in a country that in recent years has launched four satellites into
space and now has a burgeoning space programme.
Moreover, Nigeria is sitting on crude oil reserves estimated
at 35 billion barrels (enough to fuel the entire world for more than a year),
not to mention 100 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.
not to mention 100 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.
It also manages to pay its legislators the highest salaries
in the world, with a basic wage of £122,000, nearly double what British MPs
earn and many hundreds of times that of the country’s ordinary citizens.
No wonder the ruling elite can afford luxury homes in London
or Paris, and top-end cars that, across West Africa, have led to the sobriquet
‘Wabenzi’, or people of the Mercedes-Benz.
Yet 70 per cent of Nigerians live below the poverty line of
£1.29 a day, struggling with a failing infrastructure and chronic fuel
shortages because of a lack of petrol refining capacity, even though their
country produces more crude oil than Texas.
And that poverty is not for want of assistance from the
wider world.
Since gaining its independence in 1960, Nigeria has received
$400 billion (£257 billion) in aid — six
times what the U.S. pumped into reconstructing the whole of Western Europe
after World War II.
Nigeria suffers from what economists call the ‘resource
curse’ — the paradox that developing countries with an abundance of natural
reserves tend to enjoy worse economic growth than countries without minerals
and fuels.
The huge flow of oil wealth means the government does not
rely on taxpayers for its income, so does not have to answer to the people — a
situation that fosters rampant corruption and economic sclerosis because there
is no investment in infrastructure as the country’s leaders cream off its
wealth.
Corruption in Nigeria is endemic — from parents bribing
teachers to get hold of exam papers for their children through clerks handed
‘dash’ money to get round the country’s stifling bureaucracy to policemen
taking money for turning a blind eye.
It is at its most blatant, perhaps, in the oil industry,
where 136 million barrels of crude oil worth $11 billion (£7.79 billion) were
illegally siphoned off in just two years from 2009 to 2011, while hundreds of
millions of dollars in subsidies were given to fuel merchants to deliver petrol
that never materialised.
Whether the country is ruled by civilians or soldiers, who
invariably proclaim their burning desire to eradicate civilian corruption, it
makes absolutely no difference.
The military ruled Nigeria between 1966 and 1979 and from
1983 to 1999, but if anything, corruption was worse when they were in charge
since they had a habit of killing anyone threatening to expose them.
It is estimated that since 1960, about $380 billion (£245 billion) of government money has been
stolen — almost the total sum Nigeria has received in foreign aid.
And that even when successive governments attempt to recover
the stolen money, much of this is looted again.
In essence, 80 per cent of the country’s substantial oil
revenues go to the government, which disburses cash to individual governors and hundreds of their
cronies, so effectively these huge
sums remain in the hands of a mere 1 per cent of the Nigerian population.
Political power is
universally regarded as a chance to reap
the fortunes of office by the ruling elite and its families and tribes.
The most egregious example was President Sani Abacha, a
military dictator who ruled in the Nineties and accrued a staggering $4 billion
(£2.58 billion) fortune by the time he died of a heart attack while in bed with
two Indian prostitutes at his palace in the nation’s capital, Abuja, in 1998.
Abacha’s business associates did nicely, too — one of them deposited
£122 million in a Jersey offshore account after selling Nigerian army trucks
for five times their worth.
Public office is so lucrative that people will kill to get
it. Nigeria has 36 state governors, 31 of whom are under federal investigation
for corruption.
In one of the smallest states, a candidate for the
governorship occupied by one Ayo Fayose received texts signed by the ‘Fayose M
Squad’ — and it was clear the ‘M’ was for ‘Murder’ when they stabbed and
bludgeoned a third candidate to death in his own bed.
By the end of its term of office, the British Government
will have handed over £1 billion in aid to Nigeria.
Given the appalling levels of corruption in that nation, this largesse is
utterly sickening — for the money will only
be recycled into bank accounts in the Channel Islands or Switzerland.
Frankly, we might as well flush our cash away or burn it for
all the good it’s doing for ordinary Nigerians.
See full report with comments here http://www.dailymail.co.uk
hmmmm dis is very true... everyone want to go into politics cos it a national cake, dey can afford to buy houses mortgage free in the UK, while people are suffering in Nigeria, very LUCRATIVE INDEED. All dis aid the British are given where is it going and how are they accounting for it.
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