An American Constitutional Lawyer
and author Bruce Fein, has written an open letter to President Buhari which was
published in Huffington post website yesterday. Very interesting letter.
Read letter below
President Muhammadu Buhari
Aso Rock, Abuja Nigeria
Dear President Buhari:
When you visited the United States
Institute of Peace last July, you pledged that you would be “fair, just and
scrupulously follow due process and the rule of law, as enshrined in [the
Nigerian] constitution” in prosecuting corruption.
Such loftiness is laudable. As the
Bible instructs in Amos 5:24: “[L]et justice roll down like waters, and
righteousness like an ever-flowing stream.”
But to be just, the law must be
evenhanded. It cannot, in the manner of Russian President Vladimir Putin, be
something that is given to punish your enemies and withheld to favor your
friends. If so, the law becomes an instrument of injustice bearing earmarks of
the wicked rather than the good.
In the United States, you declared a
policy of “zero tolerance” against corruption. You solicited weapons and other
assistance from the United States government based on that avowal. But were you
sincere?
During your election campaign, you
promised widespread amnesty, not zero tolerance. You elaborated: “Whoever that is
indicted of corruption between 1999 to the time of swearing-in would be
pardoned. I am going to draw a line, anybody who involved himself in corruption
after I assume office, will face the music.”
After you were inaugurated, however,
you disowned your statement and declared you would prosecute past ministers or
other officials for corruption or fraud. And then again you immediately hedged.
You were reminded of your dubious past by former Major General and President
Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida, who succeeded your military dictatorship. He
released this statement:
“On General Buhari, it is not in
IBB’s tradition to take up issues with his colleague former President. But for
the purpose of record, we are conversant with General Buhari’s so-called
holier-than-thou attitude. He is a one-time Minister of Petroleum and we have
good records of his tenure as minister. Secondly, he presided over the
Petroleum Trust Fund, PTF, which records we also have.
We challenge him to come out with
clean hands in those two portfolios he headed. Or we will help him to expose
his records of performance during those periods. Those who live in glass houses
should not throw stones. General Buhari should be properly guided.”
You then swiftly backed off your
zero tolerance policy because you would have been its first casualty.
You opportunistically announced that
zero tolerance would be narrowed to the predecessor administration of Goodluck
Jonathan because to probe further would be “a waste of time.” That conclusion
seems preposterous. In 2012, the World Bank’s ex-vice president for Africa, Oby
Ezekwesili, estimated that a stupendous $400 billion in Nigerian oil revenues
had been stolen or misspent since independence in 1960. The lion’s share of
that corruption spans far beyond the Jonathan administration.
Your zero tolerance policy seems to
come with a squint to avoid seeing culpability in your political friends. A few
examples are but the tip of the iceberg.
A Rivers State judicial commission
of inquiry found that N53 billion disappeared from the Rivers State Reserve
Fund under former governor Rotimi Amaechi. Former Lagos governor and head of
your campaign finance team Babatunde Fashola was accused ofsquandering N78
million of government money to upgrade his personal website. The EFCC has
ignored these corruption allegations, and you have given both promotions: the
Ministry of Transport to Mr. Amaechi, and the Ministry of Power, Works, and
Housing to Mr. Fashola.
In contrast, you have played judge,
jury, and prosecutor in the newspapers to convict former PDP Petroleum Minister
Diezani Alison-Madueke of corruption.
Is this evenhanded justice?
United States Supreme Court Justice
Robert Jackson taught: “[T]here is no more effective practical guaranty against
arbitrary and unreasonable government than to require that the principles of
law which officials would impose upon a minority must be imposed generally.
Conversely, nothing opens the door
to arbitrary action so effectively as to allow those officials to pick and
choose only a few to whom they will apply legislation and thus to escape the
political retribution that might be visited upon them if larger numbers were
affected.”
To investigate or prosecute based on
political affiliation or opinion also violates Articles 2 and 7 of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights. It is unworthy of a great nation like
Nigeria.
Make the hallmark of your
administration justice, not retribution, and you may live for the ages.
I am a United States citizen and
lawyer. I have no political standing in Nigeria. Some might argue that my
speaking about the administration of justice in Nigeria bespeaks impertinece.
But you chose to vist the United States to solicit weapons and other assistance
from my government–a government of the people, by the people, for the people.
The United States government
represents me. What the United States government does reflects on me. I thus
have an interest in addressing the actions of foreign governments that receive
United States government aid.
Sunshine is said to be the best of disinfectants.
Sincerely, Bruce Fein

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