Tamba Morkway-Sossah
http://tambasossah-troubleshooting
zone.blogspot.com
I am positive that the government and the Anti Corruption Commission
(ACC), with an eye to audience-applause, would expect us to give a standing
ovation to the theatrics of its fight against corruption, following the
well-publicised reports of the recent spate of alleged graft cases involving
Sierra Leoneans government officials in and outside the country.
But amidst the shocks and tempests, our world sails serenely on. Why?
Because people have learnt to deal with the issue of graft in high and low
places, with contemptuous ease.
While our gladiators suck the oxygen of publicity into their puffed-up
lungs; like a man pulled out of a smoke-filled room, the people have developed
a healthy sense of perspective; knowing full well that there’s corruption at
the very heart of government itself and such hysterical announcements are just
like a witty scene that makes you chuckle in the stalls.
They know, unlike our leaders who bore you stiff and leave you dozing
with their latest machinations, that for this state of affairs to persist, there
must be something wrong with our system, which those in authorities have not
bothered to resolve, except to cloud over the salient truth, because it suits
their own ends.
Believe me, even if it is not that obvious, the general populace are
aware that the addiction to political popularity can be so potent; so demanding
of control and spin; as well as so expensive as to defy restraint. So they play
the role of a hostage falling for her captor, as they watch those meant to
lead, saying one thing and doing another; erroneously believing that no one
notices.
Let me refresh your memory. How many so called cases announced with
fanfare have ended up nothing but a farce? Lungi coke haul; Fisheries’ mania;
Timbergate; Mayor’s-fete etc. The only successful ones are those without
undertones or which are used as a bait to sate the thirst of expectations and
even among those notched up as hits; the sentences have never been commensurate
with the so-called severity of the offences.
Amidst our growing pains, the blatant corruption, incompetence and
maladministration, while enraging a generation of people that can see and feel,
even if the compromised media cannot, has turned out to be as ego-massaging for
the ruling elites as it is stomach-churning for the impoverished lower strata.
The past cavalier and negligent attitude to corruption by those in
authority has become an eloquent testimony as to why most people’s reaction has
been one of derision and tosh. They have suddenly realised that when it comes
to corruption, rather than force the government to question its own values, it
is turning those in power into demi-gods who ask, like Pilate, “Which of these
men should I release to you?”
This is why the people are no longer delighted in government’s default
position of depthless melancholy for the high-rising graft thermostat; as well
as official pretence of striving for truth under the same flattering colours;
because it is beginning to border on the drivel.
To them, it is no longer enough for the government and the ACC to
trumpet the broken-record refrain of bad apples being weeded out, when the
entire institutions of government already smell like a rotten orchard.
Such warped bid to deflect the awful underlying truth has become as much
use as a candle decoration at a fireplace. Infection cannot be a cure to an
ailment.
Having shielded some of its more powerful allies from exposure and
humiliation, the grandstanding of these latest revelations and the resultant
halleluyah chorus accompanying them, which also coincided with the disclaimer
of a government-appointed Ambassador plenipotentiary in Canada (after months of
eerie silence from the same leadership that appointed him in the first
instance), underline a hypocritical, brazen and tactless, as well as
contemptuous indiscretion of the battle against graft.
The staggering leniency akin to wilful blindness; the media fantasy and
inane blanket coverage of government’s relationship with grandeur; the
perpetuation of myths; as well as our ability to opt for mild filleting of bungling
and corrupt leaders instead of slaughtering them, means that time and time
again they are free to scalp us.And as honesty, especially in the very upper echelon of government, seep into a puddle, because of the deliberate underplay of the greed and madness within it, all that the new revelations have done is to raise questions: Is there a coincidence in the timing of the news of the wave of fraudulent activities? Are we due for another round of checks by donor organisations; like when DFID was due and a spectacle was created with the Afsatu Kabbah road show as smokescreen?
Is a bubble about to burst somewhere and diversionary tactics being put
in place ahead of this? Has it got to do with the recent global junketing; or
the flat-lining economy in the real sector; as well as the dwindling economic
investments? Has the Commercial Bank drama got anything to do with political
witch-hunt and payback time? Oh! One could go on and on…
Whatever it is, the pretentious, incoherent, inconsistent and
implausible attributes of the fight against corruption from an ineffective
anti-graft commission, a meddling executive and the pathetic and inadequate
judiciary, may be a fantastic sleight of the hand every time they are being
played out; but they never really shoot the lights out and hit the target.
Consequently, as ‘stupid’ as he appears, the common man still has what I
jokingly often refer to as ‘native intelligence’ which helps him to decipher
what tales he is being spoon-fed. This is not to say however, that corruption
is being tolerated or accepted as a way of life; even though it seems so in our
society.
However, as long as nepotism, cronyism, tribalism, titanic desperation
and little affinity for truth remains the mantra of our governance and
day-to-day life, the watchman watcheth in vain, no matter the blow-me headlines
and other harebrained homespun equivalents.
The insincerity of purpose that have characterized some of the previous
high profile cases makes the recent announcements, as well as any outcome of
these new revelations, doomed to interpretations; while the judicial handling
of some key cases of the past is giving ethnic colourations to these new ones.
However, let’s let’s turn the issue on its head and we see another
world.The uncomfortable truth is that: if those in power cannot resolve to tow the path of honour; if they cannot show by their words, deeds and actions that they are squeaky clean, the battle against corruption will remain a disoriented and flawed initiative.
President Koroma might appear as one with the courage to dare, but
behind his charismatic demeanour lies the complexities of a man whose
exceptional abilities are torn between the devil and the deep blue sea of our
corrupt socio-political and economic environmen
His simple pledge to ensure a radical change in the way the country was
being run, struck an initial chord with some of us who had become disillusioned
with the reputation of deceit and arrogance associated with the political
class, especially when we talk of corruption in high and low places.
Unfortunately, his dilemma creates a weak leadership which then
reinforces bad management and encourages corruption as a reward for submission.
Having failed to move beyond sterile rhetoric and selective tokenism, his fight
against the high thermometer of graft is the equivalent of putting someone with
lung cancer on a treatment plan of one hundred cigarettes a day.
So, an era that promised so much is fast turning into a trigger for
another bout of navel-gazing as a result of the activities of morally bereft
office holders and lieutenants who run after the gild when the gold is right
under their noses.
As a result, these set of circumstances therefore represent another red
mark against the good-governance credentials of the present administration,
especially the one involving ambassador plenipotentiary, Arthur Porter, (the
government can deny him all they want but it cannot airbrush the truth already
in public domain as well as its association with him) and also, the incident at
the Revenue Authority, NRA.
I repeat without apologies, that people can continue to challenge with
some justification, the continued criticism of the government; but like I’ve
always maintained, you cannot have a tumour and continue to massage it. (We all
cannot continue to be forced to see only the good. There are enough people
doing the cheering of that already.)
We cannot continue to have courts that are not traditionally,
institutions for the dispensation of justice and the protection of society, but
which have become instruments of manipulation in the hands of power wielders;
and expect to checkmate corruption.
We cannot continue to have our political leaders and their cohorts in
the different facets of society above the laws of the land, because they hold
the strings of power and think that spring-cleaning the deck, will be a stroll
in the park.
With the herculean task facing us, those hypnotists charged with leading
us are trying to convince us that selective and regular announcements made with
flourish are the root of our underdevelopment.
No doubt, bad, inept management and corruption are not only rife across
board in the Sierra Leone of today, but they stand as a testimony to the
inter-connected loop of our predicament.
Sadly, along with the plague of sudden, inexplicable wealth, which mocks
those racked by destitution, it is this morbid truth that also ensures that the
vicious circle of poverty keeps the people in check and in awe of those in the
corridors of power.
This is why the display of conspicuous consumption by the rich in the
face of the poor; increased inequality, exacerbated corruption and the
prioritisation of infrastructures over public service and poverty, continue to
make people struggle to class whatever is happening now, as the authentic path
to marinate ourselves in prosperity.
I can hear the collective sound of hearts thudding to the floor as you
glance up and see the latest jeremiad by those who are far from being the
paragons of honesty.
The government may be making a pig’s ear of actually lifting the people
out of poverty but credit to it; it sure has spin sorted out.
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