Free advocate for land-grabbers
By Asong Ndifor
When thieves
with skimpy minds are caught red-handed, they most often still deny their
guilt. In court they continue to plead innocent until “proven without
reasonable doubt” , to used the cliché coined by members of “the learned
profession” , even if some are not so schooled.
But “thieves” come in various sizes,
diminutions and definitions. Their operative word is “lie”. We all do tell lies
at one point or the other. We are humanly not infallible. But when a liar is
exposed, he should own up to his misdeeds.
As a press officer in a consulting public
relations firm for a major oil firm in Lagos some years back, there was an oil
spill in one of our client’s drilling wells near a village. We were flown in a
small helicopter big enough to carry only five of us to the site. The decision
after assessing the damage by four of the experts was to keep the accident
hidden from the probing Nigerian press. I asked what would happen if an
inquisitive reporter was on the beat for the story? One of the experts quickly said that: “That
is why you are in the delegation Asong”. My recommendation was that we should
tell the truth and apologize if the cat was let out of the bag.
Back to Lagos, the media plan to tell the
truth was prepared and kept in the locker. A few days after, a reporter called
to get confirmation that there had been an oil spill into the sea at Warri.The
reply was yes, “we are having a press conference in the afternoon in time for
the newspapers to go to press the next day with the true story”.
At the press conference, we explained the
amenities the company had provided in the affected community such as pipe borne
water, clinic and school. Indeed, the community was an integral part of the
company and we apologised for the accident which was beyond our control. The
company was forgiven and it maintained its good corporate image in the
community.
But in a system where the argument of
force and blackmail reign supreme and where thin gods want to burry the truth,
they widen the credibility gap of the entire government. Those involved in the
Fako land scandal whose names need not to be mentioned so as to give them some
iota of importance would have admitted their errors, apologised and
relinquished the land to their rightful owners. But they continue to grope from
one blunder to the other floundering for public support.
A governor
denies in a newspaper interview that he owns no land impounded from the
community. The next day, another newspaper comes out with a graphic site plan
of an acre of land belonging to a man who had sworn he was not also eating the
pudding of rotten tomatoes.
Then some small village chiefs on creeping knees in front of
their administrative “patrons” muster the effrontery to issue a statement
saying “newspapers have been bought over to drag the names of eminent
personalities into mud.”
In that defence of
the indefensible, bleeding with ignorance in the role of the fourth estate of
the realm, the “auxiliaries of the administration” were instead doing more harm
to their “imminent personalities”. They make themselves accomplices if the
various commissions investigating the land scam find their “eminences” guilty.
But for now they only stand accused of “grabbing land”.
CONAC and other anti-graft bodies will conclude their work
and the people, to whom power is derived will know on what side of the law, the
chiefs accusing newspapers of being bought over without saying who is buying;
stand. But if I were to be a devil’s advocate for any of those implicated in
the land scam, free of any legal fees, I would have advised them to return the
land and apologise before the sword of justice strikes with all its
excruciating pains.
POSTSCRIPT: “The fight against corruption will continue to be intensified, without
discrimination and without regard for the social status or political leaning of
those incriminated”- Paul Biya.
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