Erstwhile Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Nuhu Ribadu, yesterday, stated that Nigeria needs to realise its potential and not just change of leadership, noting that the country was suffering from collapsed institutions.
The former EFCC boss who stated this at a mentoring session with corps members in Abuja, likened the country to a man “who sows maize grains yet expects to reap mango fruits,” saying that Nigeria doesn’t need jokers leaders.
According to him, “Our trouble in this country is principally the collapse of our institutions. Our potential is lost in our civic decadence, which stares us in the face wherever we go. We see the decadence in the eyes of the policeman flipping through our particulars; we see the decadence in the eyes of the university registrar demanding bribes to grant or facilitate admissions; we see the decadence in the eyes of every citizen who has lost hope in Nigeria.”
He advised the corps members to be the change agents the country needs.
Ribadu said, “To inspire change you must become something different; do something worthy of emulation, something whose memory even comforts you no matter what.”
“My appointment as chairman of the EFCC, for instance, was to a turbulent task. I had to follow the statements of my previously written will to serve in a country where, there is lack of functional institutions to check mismanagement of public funds and related criminal misconduct. Trust in public institutions had been demolished and perpetrators went about wearing their crimes like badges of honour.
“I was given an appointment to stand in the way of these celebrated fraudsters, without an office and funds to launch my operations. But we went on to form what became a prime anti-corruption body in the country. Our activities are left for history and honest critics of political evolution to gauge and tell of our impact.”
Ribadu who spoke on the theme, “Nigeria: A Generation’s Quest for Home,” the former presidential candidate of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria, said, “What Nigeria needs to realise its potential is, unfortunately, not mere change of leadership.”
“We don’t need anyone from outer space to come organise our polity. What we need are ourselves–our virtues and belief in a collective struggle for good governance.
“What we need are functional institutions; we need institutions that pander to the principle of honesty, that socialise successions of citizens who will extol this principle. We need leaders for whom the sufferings of the masses are immediate concerns, not jokers that insult the yearnings and honest observations of the electorate.”
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