Corruption in Nigeria
Washington Post editorial
Wednesday, June 1, 2005; A18
ELECTED TO a second term in 2003, Nigeria's president,
Olusegun Obasanjo, has promised to clean up corruption. He has
shown some signs of seriousness: Investigations have triggered
the sacking of two government ministers, the arrest of a former
police chief and the resignation of the Senate president. But
the key test of Mr. Obasanjo's commitment is oil. Nigeria pumps
3 percent of the world's crude, and oil is the source of the
cronyism that has suffocated Nigerian development since
independence.
In the oil sphere Mr. Obasanjo has made the right noises.
Last year Nigeria was one of four African countries to sign up
to the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, an
international effort to promote the publication of payments oil
and mining firms make to governments. The government has
appointed a Western audit firm to certify that its oil accounts
are accurate; the hope is that published revenue that can be
monitored by advocacy groups and the media will not be diverted
into ministers' pockets. Nigerians even suggest that their new
openness will serve as a model for Africa's burgeoning oil
sector. "I rejoice greatly that Nigeria is and will continue to
be at the forefront of the continent's new transparent dawn,"
Mr. Obasanjo declared in February 2004. The quote is displayed
prominently on the transparency initiative's Web site.
Recently, however, the dawn has been looking a bit bleak.
Some of Nigeria's oil fields are shared with the tiny nation of
Sao Tome and Principe, and the allocation of exploration rights
there smells bad. According to a Nigerian press report, a firm
run by a politically connected Nigerian seems favored to win an
auction over a U.S. contender that bid substantially more;
several other bidders appear to stand out for their links to the
government rather than for their knowledge of geology or
engineering. The first payment generated by this auction process
has been made into a Nigerian bank controlled (again, according
to a Nigerian press report) by the family of the recently sacked
Senate president, a move that violated the anti-corruption best
practice of depositing it in an international bank. Despite
promises of transparency, an exploration contract with Chevron
and Exxon Mobil so far has not been published. The plan seems to
be to release part of it, eventually.
Sao Tome's government has protested the conduct of the
bidding process and demanded a fresh auction. But it's not clear
whether Mr. Obasanjo will listen. The president inserted himself
directly into the argument this month by visiting Sao Tome;
according to one account, his message to his counterpart was to
allow the flawed auction to stand. Mr. Obasanjo is no doubt
under considerable pressure from corrupt elites at home. But if
he wants to change Nigeria's dismal development record, he
should live up to his fine rhetoric.
© 2005 The Washington Post Company