Sunday, 22 April 2012

IBORI: What does 50 million pounds really mean?


Guest post by Chima Onoka 

Maxwell lost his wife Ufuoma last December. She was pregnant and started bleeding before her time of delivery. The emergency nurse who attended to her when she was rushed to the hospital rebuked Maxwell for not bringing his wife for antenatal care. But Maxwell could not pay for antenatal care at the time. Though a graduate, he was yet to secure a job 4 years after losing the last one he had. While still trying to recover from the loss, his four year old child also died of malaria. Malaria! He could not buy the prescribed antimalaria drug until it was too late. Since then, Maxwell who lives in Delta State Nigeria has become a psychiatric patient - depressed and suicidal.

This morning though, Maxwell took his bath and dressed well in a way he had not done since his ill health started. He approached me and said;
“I just heard people whispering that my former governor stole money, 50 million pounds... is it true, he asked....what does £50million mean?”
I could not hold my emotions. I told Maxwell that it was true. As for the meaning, I explained it to him in the best way he would understand it given his recent problems.... fifty million pounds means any of these:

  • The cost of Antenatal care for 13.1 million pregnant women based on the costed National Strategic Health Development Plan (NSHPD)...that’s more that the number of pregnant women in the entire south-south region of the country!
  • Cost of Basic health care package for 2.5 million (63%) Deltans based on WHO costed minimum package for achievement of MDGs
  • Essential Health care package for 2.6 million (66%) Delta state citizens based on the costed National Strategic Health Development Plan (NSHDP) for Nigeria
  • One year’s premium for 1.25 million (30%) Delta state residents based on computed health insurance contribution rates for voluntary enrolees
  • Complete package of Child Health Services for 3.8 million children based on the costed NSHDP...that’s more than the number of children in Delta and Edo states!

I told him that if this £50m was available to the people of Delta State, perhaps his wife and child would have been alive. On hearing this, Maxwell, turned and quietly walked away, cursing.....

We will never really know how much the people of Delta state lost to Mr James Ibori during his time as Governor of Delta State Nigeria. What we do know is that he was once one of Nigeria's wealthiest and most influential politicians (for insight into the extent of his influence, read Segun Adeniji's Politics, Power and Death), was arrested in 2010 in Dubai and then extradited to London. What also know  that he was originally charged by the British police of  stealing  £250m over 8 years, and that he admitted and was convicted to 13 years imprisonment for fraud totalling £50m. We also know that Federal High Court in Asaba, Nigeria previously acquitted (yes acquitted)  James Ibori, of a 170-count charge of corruption filed against him by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission.

Picture source: Metro News London.
This story is as perverse as it gets and has received a lot of analysis in both local media and international media but the one aspect that has been most disturbing is the apparent lack of anger amongst the people most directly affected. Before his escape to Dubai and eventual arrest, the former governor was protected from the Nigerian police by people in his home town. After his arrest, the Governor of Delta State said it would be inappropriate for the state government to take a position on a “purely private’ matter. Really???. A year after we were glued to our TV sets watching the Arab spring unfold - this has been very disturbing.

The change we seek will not come - until we are ready to make it happen. We are not ready. Not yet....

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Well told! I mentioned the story of Ibori to a friend living in Kano. He said, "I don't know who that is." I hope someday that Nigerians will not be afraid to stand up to corruption or realise the complacency and fear hurts the whole society. Also, I suspect my friend in Kano state thinks that what happened with Ibori doesn't affect him or his family. I also suspect that my friends in South South think that Boko Haram will not touch their lives directly. Yet both of them will continue to suffer directly, disproportionately and needlessly because of the corrupt and selfish acts of people, like Ibori, who know better and had the ability to use their power as a source of good instead of selfish aims.

Anonymous said...

Well told! I mentioned the story of Ibori to a friend living in Kano. He said, "I don't know who that is." I hope someday that Nigerians will not be afraid to stand up to corruption or realise the complacency and fear hurts the whole society. Also, I suspect my friend in Kano state thinks that what happened with Ibori doesn't affect him or his family. I also suspect that my friends in South South think that Boko Haram will not touch their lives directly. Yet both of them will continue to suffer directly, disproportionately and needlessly because of the corrupt and selfish acts of people, like Ibori, who know better and had the ability to use their power as a source of good instead of selfish aims.

Anonymous said...

Well told and so pleased you made the connection with health and the Ibori story! I mentioned the story of Ibori to a friend living in Kano last week. He looked puzzled and said, "I don't know who that is." I hope someday that Nigerians will not be afraid to stand up to corruption or realise either complacency or fear of disclosure hurts the whole society. I suspect my friend in Kano state thinks that what happened with Ibori doesn't affect him or his family. I got the same puzzled looks when i mentioned Boko Haram to friends in Cross River State. I also suspect that my friends in the South think of Boko Haram as a Northern problem that hopefully will not touch their lives directly. Yet both of them, (just like Maxwell) will continue to suffer directly, disproportionately and needlessly because of the corrupt and selfish acts of people, like Ibori, who knew better and had the ability to use his power to improve society instead of for selfish aims.

SMS For Health said...

People will probably never really understand how much he raped his state.

Uche said...

It is unfortunate that Nigerians have lost the sense of wrong and right and now judge people based on their wealth. Nobody rewards hard work anymore or ask the source of someone's wealth before conferring honours. Thieves are now celebrated and some even elevated to the status of traditional rulers. Most are easily appeased with the crumbs that fall off the tables of these thieves: my stomach, my own; mine alone; without considering the long term implications of these actions.
But the question is if this attitudinal change is due to ignorance or that we are so stricken by poverty to forget ourselves? But it can't be! Most of the people in that court clamoring for his release were well educated and better off: it takes a lot to be in the UK!
The simple fact remains that we need to get back to our roots and essence! We need to find ourselves.It is not a thing for the government to do but for us! These thieves have homes and families! They are well known for who they are and should be treated as such. He is not your brother if he takes what belongs to you all and makes his own, offering you pittances as an excuse!
Thanks to Chima for putting this in a way that the most ignorant can understand.