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Why anticorruption war in necessary

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t is a well-known fact that corruption has a wide range of corrosive effect on societies. It undermines democracy and the rule of law which leads to violation of human rights; erodes the quality of life and allows organised crime, terrorism and other threats to human security to flourish. Therefore, in coming together to tackle the problem of corruption, the gathering of world leaders not long ago identified information as a crucial instrument in the execution of the anti-corruption crusade. It is evident that the growth and development level of the nation have continuously failed to correlate with the quantum of resources allegedly expended over time. Contradictions of abundance of oil money and widespread poverty as well as an affluent few and the majority poor stare us at every turn on the landscape. Nigeria is rated among the poorest countries in the world irrespective of all the hype about her abundant natural resources. More disturbingly, Nigeria is not rated a poor country but one of increasing poverty, in which a lot of resources are allocated to the process of development but misallocated with diminutive results which can be attributed to corruption.

At several times, efforts have been made to avert corruption like that of General Buhari’s War Against Indiscipline, General Ibrahim Babangida’s MAMSER, General Sani Abacha’s War Against Indiscipline and Corruption (WAI-C); President Olusegun Obasanjo’s multi-pronged war on corruption among others. Currently, President Buhari is fighting corruption fiercely and campaigning for Nigerians to believe that “change begins with me”. Despite all these, corruption is widespread; it is vertically and horizontally prevalent and runs from the bottom to the top. In the words of Professor Umaru Pate, corruption is visible at our homes, schools, roads, offices, markets, business practices, political arena; mention any sector of our national life and you can easily point out aspects of corruption common to it. Corruption breeds immorality, impatience, deception, shamelessness, criminal tendencies, cutting corners and institutionalization of mediocrity.  As the great English intellectual, Charles Caleb puts it “corruption is like a ball of snow, once it’s set for rolling, it must increase to it very best”. Apparently, it may interest you to know that the media are very important pillars in the democratic system. Specifically, they play critical roles in anti-corruption war by acting as the watchdogs who maintain surveillance on all sections of the society for collective good and safety. The section 22 of the 1999 Constitution of Federal Republic of Nigeria assigns the media with the responsibility of holding government accountable to the people.

Therefore, in order to fight corruption to the end, we must imbibe the words of Umaru Pate which echo on character training of children and the youth, which probably is the most difficult and most effective approach. Parents should not only ensure that children receive adequate character training, they must be very firm against their children engaging in dubious  acts. Another requirement is to ease those pressures that increase the temptation to engage in acts of corruption. Serious and transparent governance together with adequate attention will increase the confidence of the people and reduce the tendency to cheat in order to make it.

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Aondover Eric Msughter is of the Department of Mass Communication,  Bayero University, Kano.

 

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