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On Tuesday the 27th of January, in Lafia, Nasarawa state, President Jonathan said “we are building a country for a digital generation”. Let us ponder on that for a second. That statement rings true, as I cannot imagine any truly patriotic Nigerian that will want Nigeria to remain in an analogue state. That being said, what place does a broom have in a digital society? You will agree with me that brooms are more suited for an analogue society.
Let me
expatiate. One vacuum cleaner can do the work of one hundred brooms and can do
it faster and more efficiently too. The APC and Muhammadu Buhari are
representative of brooms. This is why Muhammadu Buhari keeps saying he will
throw corrupt Nigerians into jail. Now, as a means of fighting corruption, there
is nothing wrong with throwing corrupt persons into jail, particularly if you
follow due process. But will that tactic work in Nigeria today? Yes, to an
extent it will work, just as a broom will work to an extent in sweeping a dirty
house.
But supposing
you try a new and better way? Supposing that instead of just concentrating your
efforts at sweeping people one by one into prison, you use a vacuum cleaner to
clean the house at a faster pace by employing technology that makes it difficult,
nay impossible, to steal?
Prior to the
Goodluck Jonathan administration, there were fifty thousand ghost workers in
the Federal Civil Service. They drained the treasure of about 2 billion US
dollars annually. President Jonathan could have used the broom on them by
unleashing the police and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, to
investigate who and who were collecting these fifty thousand unearned salaries.
It would have taken many hours of investigation, evidence gathering, judicial
process and lawyers to achieve that.
Being the
philosopher king that he is, President Jonathan chose instead to employ
technology to tackle the problem and using the software of the Integrated Personnel and Payroll Information System, IPPIS, this
administration made it impossible for anybody who has not been physically
captured in the IPPIS system, by way of entering his/her finger prints and
biometrics, to receive a salary. And voila! in one fell swoop, all the fifty
thousand ghost workers were excluded and the Federal Government was able to
save billions every year that would have gone on salaries.
Also, it was common
practice for civil servants to mop up unspent votes at the end of the year. The
only problem is that they mopped up these funds into their private accounts
rather than back to the government treasury.
But instead of going
about with a big stick to bash in the head of offenders, the President simply
approved a system that mandated that all payments be made by e-payments rather
than cash and any e-payment that does not come under the sub head of salaries
will shut down the system at the end of the year so that civil servants could
not mop up funds as they were used to.
Take another instance.
Prior to the rise of President Goodluck Jonathan to power, the fertilizer
procurement and distribution system of the Federal Ministry of Agriculture was
one of the biggest avenues for corruption. Contracts were awarded at hundreds
of billions for products that either did not come or were substandard. Moreover,
in the process of distributing the product, a lot of it was diverted and resold
with the government not getting value for money and farmers not being able to
feed the nation.
Enter the Jonathan
administration and the e-wallet system of fertilizer distribution, in which the
Federal Ministry no longer used middle men contractors, but dealt directly with
the manufacturers and the end users of the product, the farmers, and used a
simple text message to connect end user with manufacturer. The manufacturers
simply debited the cost of the subsidized fertilizer from the e-wallet funds
the farmer had on his phone, saving tens of billions and increasing efficiency.
These examples show that
with a broom, you will work harder, but with a vacuum cleaner which President
Jonathan and the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP represent, you will work
smarter!
With a broom, you will
deliver activity, but with a vacuum cleaner, you will deliver results!
It is this broom
mentality that caused Major General Buhari to answer to the question “how do you intend to manage the
economy in the face of dwindling oil price”asked during his Channels TV interview as follows “first we will stabilize the oil market
and run an accountable government”.
Do you
control the price of oil? How do
you want to stabilize the oil market if you do not control the price of the
product and the global supply of the same? This is analogue thinking! This is
broom mentality! That is the mentality that says that you will concentrate on
curing corruption instead of focusing on preventing it when even a nursery
school pupil knows that ‘prevention is better than cure’!
And that is the choice
before Nigerians. Are we going to go with a broom or with a vacuum cleaner? Are
we going to go with an analogue leader or continue with a digital leader?
To make the choice
easier for you, let me ask those who are able to remember how many schools were
built by General Muhammadu Buhari when he was military head of state. The
answer is of course none! But you might say that he only spent twenty months in
office. But what if I told you that in his first twenty months in office
President Goodluck Jonathan built nine new Federal Universities in Ebonyi,
Kogi, Nasarawa, Bayelsa, Gombe, Taraba, Katsina, Jigawa and Ekiti?
So once again, I ask are
we going to go with a broom or with a vacuum cleaner? Are we going to go with
an analogue leader or continue with a digital leader?
Nothing exemplifies
the fact that the world has passed the APC and its flag bearer by than the use
of a broom as their party’s emblem. Yes, it is a fitting analogy for the All
Progressive Congress, APC and its Presidential Flag Bearer, Major General Muhammadu
Buhari (Rtd), but facts will bear me out that a broom cannot do the work of
leadership that is expected in Nigeria today.
Reno Omokri
is Special Assistant to President Jonathan on New Media.
Regards,
Reno.
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