Director General of the Directorate of State Security, DSS, Lawal Daura accused the acting Chairman of Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, lbrahim Magu of corruption and makes it official by sending his report to both President Muhammadu Buhari and the National Assembly (NASS).
On account of that damning report, the EFCC boss failed to secure the Senate’s confirmation of his appointment.
Perhaps hurting from the inability of its acting chairman to secure parliamentary confirmation of his appointment, the agency accused the now sacked Director General of Nigeria Intelligence Agency (NIA), Wole Oke of corruption and stormed a safe house where a total of N13b in an assortment of foreign currencies are discovered.
Thereafter, the EFCC went on a counter-offensive against the DSS by attempting to arrest the immediate past DG of the agency, Ita Ekpenyong for his complicity in the alleged misappropriation of $2.1b funds set aside for arms purchase by the ousted regime to combat the terrorist sect Boko Haram. The former NSA Ahmed Dasuki warehoused the funds believed to have been applied as campaign funds by the immediate past administration.
Reportedly on the order of Daura, the current DG of the DSS, Ekpeyong was ring-fenced by the agency’s operatives and protected from arrest.
The plot then thickens as a former Assistant Inspector General, (AIG), Isa Misau, now a serving senator accused the Inspector General of Police, Idris Abubakar of corruption for allegedly demanding a bribe from officers in exchange for lucrative postings and abuse of office such as dating a female police officer etc. Since the IGP has vehemently denied the charge, it is currently a subject of litigation.
That’s not all.
The Comptroller General of Customs, Hamid Ali has also alleged that corrupt people formerly domiciled in the Peoples Democratic Party have now mutated and made their way into the control room of power in the current APC led govt.
While the curious and dramatic claim was being digested, the Senate president, Bukola Saraki raised the alarm that the recovered looted funds are being re-looted and it is the reason the authorities in countries having custody of looted funds from Nigeria are reluctant to return same as they are concerned that the funds may be re-looted.
And the alarm by the head of the legislative arm of govt is an echo of the lamentation of Abubakar Malami, attorney general and minister of justice, who had in the course of responding to parliamentary inquiry reported that Abdulrasheed Maina, the accused pension fund looter had turned over to the EFCC, choice properties recovered by him and which the anti-graft agency is alleged to have resold to its cronies and cohorts.
The brazenness of the economic brigandage and the lack of appetite by the govt in power to vigorously prosecute indicted officials who populated the inner recesses of govt make one wonder if Nigeria is not supposed to be a nation governed by the rule of laws as opposed to being a land of people who operate above the law?
Reading through the foregoing plot, anybody who had not been in Nigeria in the past 24 months would be excused if he/she thought that it’s a screenplay for a blockbuster movie, like the good, the bad, the ugly, with the legendary Hollywood icon, Clint Eastwood.
However, the narrative is not a make-believe movie, but an existential reality in our country Nigeria where absurdity would appear to be the new normal.
The DG of DSS, Lawal Daura captured it succinctly when he narrowed down the reason the Nigerian security architecture has become like a house of cards to lack of or poor interagency cooperation.
Permit me to help those not into watching movies to familiarize themselves with the movie titled: House of Cards from which the title of this article is partly derived.
The BBC tv mini-series based on a book authored by Mark Dobbs, alumni of Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, my alma mater is a hit for movie lovers, especially those who cherish political dramas.
The movie exposes the underbelly of British politicians and in my estimation, it now has a parallel in Nigeria.
By all indications, the security agencies’ inspired reality show with Aso Rock villa, Abuja as the main setting, and other scenes shot on locations outside Aso Rock villa such as Foreshore Towers, Ikoyi, Lagos where billions of Naira being pampered with dedicated air conditioning facilities were discovered. Also the residence of the ex-DSS DG in Abuja where the Nigerian version of the movie, Body Guard featuring the veteran actor Richard Gear and the late songstress Whitney Houston was re-enacted, is an equivalent reenactment.
The difference between Body Guard the movie and what played out in the ex DSS boss’ residence in Abuja is that while the subject being protected fell in love with the bodyguard, the opposite is the case in the Nigerian version.
Another significant exception is that instead of featuring politicians, it is full of James Bond-like stunts as reflected by the bubble in Nigeria’s security fiasco which is exposing the underbelly of the country’s spy community ecosystem with its attendant incalculable collateral damage.
For instance, the revelation to the public that billions of Naira are stashed away as slush funds for covert activities is an anathema. So also are the other secretive security activities which are now in the public domain and might have compromising effects on the gathering and sharing of intelligence through activities of reliable sources, undercover operatives and other members of the intelligence community who might have been unduly exposed.
In the midst of the unfolding security services hiatus, what role is the office of the National Security Adviser, ONSA headed by Babagana Mungono, playing?
Ideally, that’s the office that’s supposed to be coordinating all the security functions of govt on behalf of Mr. President.
So what’s going on? From a distance, the NSA who is a retired army brigadier general, strikes me as an officer and a gentleman. Correct me if I'm wrong but I’m yet to meet anybody that has a contrarian view of the general understanding that the NSA is a thoroughbred professional that does not fancy ruffling feathers unnecessarily.
To that extent, l would imagine that he must be working assiduously behind the scene to manage the damage being done to the credibility of the security and intelligence community by the ongoing butting of heads by the various agencies that are supposed to be under his purview. With ThisDay Newspaper
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