Wednesday, July 25, 2012

OKEY NWACHUKWU A SHINNING EXAMPLE, IN A DYSFUNCTIONAL PUBLIC SERVICE

In traditional African setting, tributes are hardly done in honour of the living; this is because most people do not want to be seeing as being sycophantic. However, in very exceptional cases, it is nice to publicly honour whom honour is due, if for no other reason, to encourage other people to follow the part of honour, and to do good whenever they have the opportunity to do so.

The Holy book, Qur’an, tells us that “Good deed brings light both to the heart and to the face. Doing good deeds result in being blessed in one’s sustenance and the hearts of people are naturally attracted to the doer of good”.

On Thursday, 19th July, 2012, Okey Nwachukwu, the Executive Director, News, Voice of Nigeria, attained the age of sixty years, the mandatory age of retirement in the Nigerian public service. Be that as it may, he therefore stepped aside from service. Ordinarily, there is nothing to celebrate about this, as thousands of other Nigerians daily disengage from the public service without any fanfare.

Okey’s noble deeds while in service and his outright dislike for evil is what marks him out for this honour.

In Nigeria today, employees in the Federal Public Service is put at over 1.1million and the country’s Public Sector Employees as at 2011, is said to be in the region of over 2.6million. As small as this sector is, to the country’s population, if properly directed and focused, it could be of tremendous assistance to Nigeria in the drive for economy and social political development. It is a known fact, that no nation develops beyond the capacity of its public service, and there is broad consensus amongst Nigerians today that our public service is broken and dysfunctional. The quality of public servants and the services they provide to our nation are both below expectations. From the glorious days at independence when the best and brightest graduates competed to join the administrative service up until 1970s, our public service is now seen as employer of the dull, the lazy and the venal. What has become most disheartening is the level of mischief and intrigue in our public service, this, no doubt, is forcing out the very few quality minds remaining in the service. We, therefore, need to retrieve our old public service to make it effective, well paid and largely meritocratic, attracting bright people imbibed with a spirit of promoting public good.

My personal experience in the service, shows, that as people approach the pinnacle of their career, vacant positions become very few and competition for these positions become stiffer. At this point, most people who are known to be lazy, dull and could hardly carry out their primary assignments but are well grounded in mischief and intrigue, who also want to be bosses, no matter what it takes, in-conjunction with some senior officers, who have already attained position of authority without merit, will begin to plot how to frustrate out of service anybody they perceive as enemy. Often times, these are people with brighter credentials whom they could hardly compete with under normal circumstances. At this point, all manner of manoeuvres become the order of the day. Heartless, unkind behaviour, intrigues and high level venality will begin to play up. Most often, the first card to be played are ethnicity not competency. The second is “loyalty”, in how much the up and coming officer is willing to co-operate with “management” in plundering the organisations resources. Thirdly, is how much return a junior officer who is posted to hold a lucrative position in spite of his or her deficiencies and incompetence is ready to give to the big “Oga”? Once an officer is not ready to play these games, it does not matter how competent such an officer may be, or how much has been spent by the organisation in the training of such an officer, the officer is forced out. The officer in question is marked for elimination, it does not matter how crudely this is done. The task must be accomplished by all means and whatsoever.

I saw this game being played first hand, to my utmost dismay sometimes between September and December 2009, when I applied for a study leave with pay to do an M.Sc degree programme in Media Enterprise, at the Pan-African University in Lagos. Long before then, it has become obvious even to a blind person, that “the power that be” were no longer in a position to tolerate me, as I was known to be the only senior officer, who could publicly and privately oppose their antics. My colleagues, who were going to benefit from my ouster, were as expected willing and ready to co-operate. But my boss, Okey Nwachukwu, refused to be part of the game plan and watched helplessly as events played out.

I re-called my last telephone conversation with Okey, before tendering my letter of voluntary retirement from the public service. In a clam voice, Mr. Nwachukwu, expressed his disappointment at the turn of events, saying “as far as he was concerned I remained one of his brightest officers”. He continued, “Your case is like the case of a man who had a mental disorder and extreme anxiety problem who sought an advice from a physician dealing with depressions and anxieties. The doctor advised the patient, ‘Know that the world is created as ordained by the Creator. Whatever happens here, even the slightest movement of anything and anywhere, happens by the permission of God Almighty.’ So, why the anxiety and the depression? I know for sure, that whatever, you set out to do after this place; you will do very well and prove yourself”. About three years after my retirement from the service, very many of my former colleagues made up mostly of people from other directorates have called to tell me on phone, “how much they regret my forceful exit from the service, saying “management has at least achieved their aims as no staff has the guts now, to oppose them anymore”. I was shocked beyond words, when a former colleague called me on phone, confessing that he was one of those people who plotted my exit, requesting that I forgive him and others he refused to name, saying that peace has eluded him since he took part in the plot. He stressed that it was God that sent him to me. A wise man says, “Fear the one who finds no helper against you (in your wrongdoing) except God”.

As I reflect on the plea for forgiveness by my former colleague, the words of Al-Mutanabbi readily come to mind: He said “Small things are greatly magnified in the eyes of the small one, and great things are diminished in size in the eyes of the great one.”

Ar-Rashid wrote in his book ‘Al-Masaar’ The Sweet Taste of Freedom, he says “Whoever possesses three hundred and sixty loaves, a canister of oil, and one thousand six hundred dates, then none can enslave him.” And one of our pious predecessors once said: “The one who is satisfied with dry bread and water will be free from slavery except the slavery to Allah, the All-High.” Today, by His special grace, I am totally free from the tyranny of the past, and I am living a peaceful life in retirement. Why should I therefore, not forgive? To err is human and to forgive is divine.

Okey Nwachukwu contributed to the peace I now enjoy today. He indeed gave a good account of himself while in service. Even though, I am sure, he made no money because he served with integrity. He will one day be remembered by other persons for his meritorious service to our country, Nigeria.

Mr. Omonhinmin is a Media Consultant based in Lagos.


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