"Who
are the people who wrote petitions against Amaechi and Fashola?
Primarily, they are this same people who are afraid of being probed,"
Prof. Sagay speaks out in explosive interview.
Prof. Itse Sagay
In this exclusive interview with Premium Times,
a professor of Law and the Chairman of the Presidential Advisory
Committee on Anti-Corruption, Itse Sagay, has spoken about the reasons
why President Muhammadu Buhari insisted on having Rotimi Amaechi and
Babatunde Fashola in his cabinet despite massive opposition.
Read excerpt below;
Critics of the present government say they are targeting
only PDP members. That there’s an Amaechi or Fashola who had also had
petitions written against them yet nothing was done to them. What do you
think about that?
Who are the people who wrote petitions against Amaechi and Fashola?
Primarily, they are this same people who are afraid of being probed.
Who thought these two strong men being in Buhari’s government will so
strengthen that government. That the contrast between it and the
Jonathan government will be so strong and that they themselves will be
exposed. Do you think Wike will want Amaechi to be in any government?
He would not. He is so frightened of Amaechi, if he could destroy
him he would have destroyed him long ago. There’s nothing he had not
done to destroy him. With Mama Patience. There’s nothing they haven’t
done. It’s just that the guy is such a clucky, strong, energetic, and
witty fellow that just got himself out of all that. Then they just
cooked up a panel made up of sympathetic, pro-Wike judges who went there
parading themselves in a most dishonourable manner. So it’s nothing to
be taken seriously.
The same thing with Fashola. Some people did not want Fashola to be
in this government and so they just decided that the best thing to do
is to tarnish his name, tarnish his record, which the whole world
respects. From the United States to Australia, to the Middle East, to
even the United Nations, everybody knows that Fashola has the best
record in governance that this country has had since Awolowo.
So they just wanted to destroy all that over night because they
were frightened of him becoming a minister. That’s why I have a great
respect for Buhari. He was unmoved. He was unshaken. He just kept his
cool. And when he now came out, what did he do? He made Fashola the
symbol of his government. Fashola is the number one minister in this
country today. And Transport given to Amaechi is equally important,
because we are talking of railways, highways, aviation, and so on.
Buhari knows what he is doing most of the time. He doesn’t talk much.
But do you think this government’s fight against corruption so far has targeted only opposition elements?
No. It hasn’t. You see, what is happening, I’m a little bit in the
know of this, this government is not going out of the way to look for
people to prosecute. No. They are prosecuting people whose corruption is
jarring them in the face. Corruption that is virtually blocking your
road, you cannot move unless you move it out of the way. That’s the type
of corruption we are facing. Corruption that has crippled this
government now.
So when they talk of corruption of Obasanjo, Yar’adua, all these
people, that we should go back to that, no complain about that. But if
we don’t clear the last five years, the type of corruption we have seen
is mind-boggling and not only that, they are all close. You can see the
way the NSA’s office was turned into a bazaar. Even after Buhari was
elected, they still transferred money, over 27 billion to NSA’s office,
after the election.
We have to deal with those first. How can you now go back to 1960,
to Shagari and so on when you have this low-hanging fruit right in your
face. It makes no sense. So it’s not a question of discrimination. It’s a
question of going after the obvious, the immediate, the most
threatening which has to be taken care of before you move on.