Thursday, 9 March 2017

“Stealing is Not Corruption”: A Discourse on the Languages of Corruption in Nigeria


Raheem Oluwafunminiyi* and  Famiyesin Michael
Department of History
Adeyemi College of Education, Ondo
Correspondence: creativitysells@gmail.com


Abstract
In 2014, during a live Presidential Media Chat broadcast on national television, a former Nigerian President was credited to have stated that “There is no corruption but mere stealing in Nigeria”. The statement was in response to series of questions and criticisms of his administration’s handling of mind-boggling corruption cases under his watch. While swift attempts were made by the presidency and few other government agencies to downplay the hoopla the statement had generated, it did little to assuage citizens’ concerns about the government’s readiness to tackle both systemic and endemic corruption in the country. A growing trend in the last few decades shows that the political class employ the use of ambiguous languages to downplay the corruption discourse in Nigeria. In time past, bribery or kickbacks were the most common forms of corruption in the country. This has, however, taken a more dangerous turn in recent years with acts of brazen embezzlement and mindless pilfering of public funds among political and public office holders making everyday news. Given the following, our paper seeks to interrogate the languages of corruption in Nigeria. We tend to examine how they continue to encourage the brazen acts of corruption and embolden public office holders to appropriate and misappropriate the commonwealth of the masses. Though the citizenry too are not less culpable in advancing some of these languages which inadvertently creates a fertile ground for corruption to fester, the political class, which our paper beams its searchlight on, appear to employ these languages to consciously defend and institutionalise corruption in Nigeria. We argue that the use of these languages have aided in perpetually stifling the anti-corruption war, reduced the ability to successfully prosecute financial and economic crimes and most importantly, further deepened the crisis of underdevelopment in the country.  







Keywords: corruption, languages, Nigeria, political class, stealing

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