WHEN
Nigeria dispatched a jet from its Presidential Air Fleet late last
month to fetch Malawi’s President, Joyce Banda, to Abuja, it unwittingly
drew attention to our government’s fiscal recklessness. It was lost on
President Goodluck Jonathan that while Banda had sold her cash-strapped
country’s only presidential jet to save costs, he has, in three years in
office, expanded Nigeria’s executive fleet to 10 aircraft.
Neither the reality of over 60 per cent of the population living in poverty, nor the recent alarming
revelation by the Finance Minister, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, that
government’s revenue inflow had dwindled to a dangerous level, has
persuaded Jonathan to pare down the size of the Presidential Air Fleet.
Instead, it is projected to rise as provision has reportedly been made
to purchase two additional helicopters to ensure the President,
Vice-President, their families, and other top functionaries travel in luxury at public expense.
Banda was in Nigeria to deliver the keynote address at the Global Power Women Network Africa summit in Abuja at the invitation
of Nigeria’s First Lady. To ease her trip to Nigeria’s capital, our
generous government dispatched a jet to pick her from Lilongwe, Malawi’s
capital, and return her home after the event. That is to be expected
since Malawi lacks a presidential aircraft.
Shortly after assuming the presidency in 2012, Banda had taken a
critical look at her country’s economy. Almost 40 per cent of the
national budget came from aid donors, while revenues from its major
exports – tobacco, tea, coffee and sugar – were falling due to lower
global demand and prices. Moreover, the International Monetary Fund and
the World Bank had withdrawn most aid in response to the purchase in
2009 of a presidential jet by Banda’s predecessor, Bingu wa Mutharika,
and his abandonment of an IMF-dictated adjustment programme. Other
donors followed the World Bank/IMF lead.
Besides selling the presidential plane for $15 million, Banda also
sold off a fleet of 35 Mercedes Benz limousines reserved for the
president and the cabinet. She cut her own salary by 30 per cent, among
other austerity measures. Her actions won praise around the world and
convinced the IMF and other aid donors to return with credit and
handouts to back the government’s ongoing painful structural adjustment
programme.
But Nigerian leaders will not sacrifice their own comfort for anything. Even in a rich country like Britain, Prime Minister David Cameron and cabinet members
took pay cuts in response to the global recession and the spending cuts
that the government introduced. Here, our leaders are obsessed with
living in luxury, regardless of the mass of people who are poor, the
lack of infrastructure, mass unemployment and dwindling revenues.
Okonjo-Iweala’s warning that the government may run out of money to pay
salaries by October in the face of massive oil theft and vandalism of
pipelines that have sharply reduced oil production and revenues has not
jolted officials. Neither the wasteful Executive nor the overpaid
legislators are ready to give up their luxurious lifestyles.
But British leaders often take commercial flights and, occasionally,
trains when travelling for state functions. Japan, with its Gross
Domestic Product of $4.52 trillion and per capita income of $36,200, (at
Purchasing Power Parity), has only two aircraft – Boeing 747 – 400 –
for use of the prime minister and the emperor; the Netherlands, with GDP
of $770.2 billion and PCI of $42,300, has two; the British Queen,
Elizabeth II, and Cameron travel on chartered British Airways flights,
despite their country’s $2.32 trillion GDP and PCI of $38,700; South
Africa has just one presidential aircraft with its GDP of $678.6 billion
and PCI of $11,300, though it expects another soon, while Malaysia has
one, but has also ordered a second; but with its GDP of $492 billion
and PCI of $16,900, like others cited, Malaysia is ahead of Nigeria with
a GDP of $450.5 billion and PCI of $2,700.
Given these scenarios, it is high time we ended this absurdity.
Today, the aviation sector is in dire straits. How does one explain that
only two domestic airlines –
Arik, with 23 planes, and Aero Contractors with 14 – have larger fleets
than this one kept for a few at public expense? Over N9 billion is
believed to be spent on the maintenance of the presidential fleet each
year, while the PAF required 47 Nigerian Air Force officers, 173 airmen/airwomen and 96 civilian employees on full time call in 2012.
Nigerians, however, desperately need a government that exists to
serve the people, not a few. Successive governments have demonstrated
incompetence and abused and misused public funds. There should be
minimum ethical standards and decorum in public office. Other developing
nations like Ghana where a former president, John Kufuor, once disposed
of a spare presidential aircraft, retaining only one, should shame us
into prudent conduct.
Jonathan has no excuse to continue keeping 10 aircraft and our
under-performing legislators have no reason to keep approving new
purchases or the billions of naira they appropriate for their
maintenance each year. But, ultimately, it is only when the electorate
shakes off its lethargy and demands accountability and responsibility
from public officials that things will change for the better.
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